Low and Slow

BirdPhotographers.net

Help Support BirdPhotographers.net:

James Shadle

Co-Founder
Joined
Oct 21, 2007
Messages
5,108
Location
Valrico, Fl
View attachment 121323

Low and slow - patiently moving forward.
It will get you close and not stress your subject.

Both images with 600mm lens, both full frame. It only took 21 minutes to get an image of my subject fairly large in the frame.
 

Attachments

  • lowslow.jpg
    lowslow.jpg
    227.6 KB
Great points on working a subject. Often we see something attractive and fire away or get close,.not really close enough for the strong shot. Nice reminder there Capt.,, to be patient and stay low and photograph nature at there eye level - not ours.
 
Thanks for the tip. Very nicely done. I just got the 500 L II and use a 7D body. Any tips on hand holding the lens? Or is it best to use a tripod/monopod? I have been using the 100-400 L prior to this.
 
Thanks for the tip. Very nicely done. I just got the 500 L II and use a 7D body. Any tips on hand holding the lens? Or is it best to use a tripod/monopod? I have been using the 100-400 L prior to this.

In the water - tripod! A tripod also helps reduce fatigue when staying on a subject for an extended time.
I find hand holding works best when used in short bursts for action photography.
 
Maybe in the EXIF data? Some cameras do store this information.

I guess you would use quite a different approach strategy if your subject was more active (e.g. passerines) ?
 
Maybe in the EXIF data? Some cameras do store this information.

I guess you would use quite a different approach strategy if your subject was more active (e.g. passerines) ?

Great point, your dead if you photograph passerines (unless in a blind) this way!
American Avocets are not the typical, approachable "Florida" bird (they are migrants :S3:).

First image 246' my last image in the series, 65'.

PS I found KUSO exif viewer to read the data.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top