Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Chen caerulescens (snow goose) redux



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Here are a few more shots from the 'goose shoots'. Be sure to expand full post to see the rest of the images. Also, try and zoom in on the central goose in the image above. You can clearly see an aluminum leg band on this birds left leg.

Nikon D300, Nikkor 300mm f4, f6.3 1/2500 ISO 320, matrix meter, +1/3 exposure comp, AWB






Nikon D300, Nikkor 300mm f4, f5.6 1/1600 ISO 200, matrix meter, +1/3 exposure comp, AWB



Nikon D300, Nikkor 300mm f4, f8.0 1/800 ISO 250, matrix meter, +2/3 exposure comp, AWB



Nikon D300, Nikkor 300mm f4, f5.6 1/1250 ISO 250, matrix meter, +2/3 exposure comp, AWB



Nikon D300, Nikkor 300mm f4, f6.3 1/2000 ISO 320, matrix meter, +1/3 exposure comp, AWB

Friday, March 27, 2009

Chen caerulescens (snow goose)
















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Snow goose (chen caerulescens)

Well, when you go out to photograph northern harriers, and they don't cooperate, you go ahead and photograph the tens of thousands of snow geese that have been squawking at the top of their lungs for the last 3 hours.

Every year an enormous population of lesser snow geese from Wrangle Island in the Arctic Ocean north and west of the Bering Strait spend the winter foraging on coastal marshes and agricultural land in western Washington.

This gaggle was moving from a nearby farm field out to raft in Puget Sound, presumable for the night, as they were still rafting in the Sound when I returned an hour before sunrise the following day. Here, they paused for an hour or so in this marsh at the Nature Conservancies' Port Susan preserve, until a Bald Eagle flyover sent the flock literally exploding into the air. It is a sight and sound that is difficult to describe. It is thunderously loud and the sound is made up of tens of thousands of wing beats and voices. It is literally awe inspiring to be standing underneath it...desperately hoping you don't get pooped on.

Nikon D300, Nikkor 300mm f/4, Nikkor TC-1.4E II teleconverter, f25 1/15 ISO 640, spot metered, +.3 exposure comp.

Over the last few weeks I have shot these geese several times, Always sharp and fast so it stopped the action. None of these shots conveyed the feeling of standing there. Finally it occurred to me to slow the shutter down a ton and stop down for some extra depth to pull in the still-stationary birds on the waters. This way the motion shows in the sky with just enough detail in the birds on the water. Still, there were dozens of shots that were trash due to hand holding shots that were this slow. This was the one I thought had the best balance.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Falco peregrinus


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Peregrine falcon (falco peregrinus)

The fuzzy little dots in the background are a very lucky mixed flock of ducks. They are lucky because one of their former comrades is very likely the source of the nice big crop bulging out on the white "throat" of this peregrine on the Skagit flats.



Nikkor 300mm f4, Nikkor TC-1.4E II Teleconverter, F5.6 1/6400 ISO1600, spot metered, +1 exposure compensation.