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 Snow Geese (Chen caerulescens) wintering at Fir Island on the Skagit River delta, Washington, USA.©2009 Ed Book Canon 1Ds MkII 500mm L IS lens with 2X teleconverter ISO 1000 1/320 sec @ f/16 Peace Tags: -print available-, animals, bird, nature events, pattern, puget sound, sky, surreal, wa, white
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 Snow Geese (Chen caerulescens) wintering at the Skagit River delta, Washington, USA©2009 Ed BookCanon 1Ds MkII - 500mm L IS lens with 2X teleconverter - ISO 1000 - 1/200 sec @ f/16 Peace Tags: -print available-, animals, bird, nature events, pattern, puget sound, sky, surreal, wa, white
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 an almost mature Bald Eagle at Big Beef Creek on the Hood Canal Puget Sound, Washington©2008 Ed BookHelp, my lens is too long and the bird is too close. I didn't have time to take the 1.4X teleconverter off the 500mm lens for this guy. Although this bird looks like a mature, it was still replacing it's immature and ragged feathers. An adult bald eagle wouldn't have approached as close as this guy did, demonstrating a foolish carelessness that may entail a steep cost if it doesn't become much more wary of largest adversary, man. Canon D1s Mk II with 500mm f/4 'L' Image Stabilized lens and Canon 1.4X teleconverter, ISO 400, 1000sec exposure @ f/6.3 (image cropped to about 1/3 full framePeace Tags: -print available-, animals, bird, clouds, kitsap peninsula, puget sound, sky, wa
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 immature Bald Eagle (Aquila Haliaeetus leucocephalus) practices aerial acrobatics©2008 Ed BookToday low tide on the Hood Canal was a minus 2.5 so I went down with my long lens to see what I could record of the Bald Eagles that surely would be feeding on trapped fish as the outgoing tide isolated them in the shallows. I was in luck with a bright day (fast shutter speeds with fairly low ISO) and a contingent of at least a dozen eagles. Most of them were immature with about half of their fledgling feathers replaced with adult plumage. Still displaying adolescent, foolish, clumsy, behavior and flying ineptitude, they're learning though and don't pass by any opportunities for practice. There were a few of us there burning in the sun but anxious to record anything we were fortunate to find. I chatted with a new friend and watched patiently as the eagles sat forever and then launched when we weren't ready playing us. Photographing eagles isn't easy with the long lens (Canon 500mm f/4 'L' Image Stabilized with 1.4X teleconverter giving an effective focal length of 700mm on the full size sensor Canon EOS 1Ds MkII camera). Making photographs consisted of standing with hands on the gimbaled-tripod-mounted camera ready to react and hoping that I could follow the bird's motion. If the focus point shifted off the bird, the lens would quickly shift focus to infinity and the bird would become a blur if even visible. I would have to get the blur lined up with the focusing square to again bring the bird into focus all the while the bird was moving. Concentration was the key and exhausting after a couple hours. I managed to record about 12GB of images and am importing them into Photoshop Lightroom as I type. Working in my office today with two computers, four monitors, ten hard drives all pumping out heat on this probably one of the hottest days of the year. If there's interest, I'll post more from today. Peace Tags: -print available-, animals, bird, blue, kitsap peninsula, puget sound, sky, wa
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"skunked" = no luck, no dice, nada, came home empty handed, zilch, zero (eagles 9 - Ed 0)After an excellent breakfast with Cookie at Barbies on the dock at Seabeck, I lolligagged about at Big Beef Creek a while hoping for some Bald Eagle photo ops... 500mm image stabilized lens with 1.4 teleconverter on a Canon EOS D1s MkII (full frame sensor) and a few eagles but at distance, I didn't produce anything I could use ...except as bad examples here at full resolution - they were 'eagledots' but cropped very tightly here so you could see that there was a bird in the image. Today was dark from heavy overcast and low clouds which had me pump ISO up to 640 (and sometimes ISO 1000) and still couldn't get exposure duration shorter than 1/250 to 1/320 sec. Those speeds may seem fast but considering that the focal length is 720mm, not nearly fast enough to prevent blur - the image stabilization helped some though... 'had it on the 'pan' mode so it only stabilized in one dimension (up/down) so it wouldn't try to correct for panning. This image was (really really terribly) terrible and in it somewhere there was an eagle carrying something tangled in seaweed. It may look like I did 'artsy' stuff with it but the streaks were motion of the background and the overall effect only optimizing for brightness, contrast, noise reduction and some sharpening... any other camera would have produced mush... but this camera was able to give mush with some hints of lumps. (this was while I had the camera in aperture priority mode and the exposure was way too slow at 1/80sec. at ISO 1000 and at f/14 (yeah, an opps on my settings, I should have been at f/5.6 and that would have given me an almost decent shutter speed... but in the moment of panning and trying to find the bird in the viewfinder, I adjusted without thinking and Murphy's law came into effect...) ©2008 Ed Bookmore images of these guys ( here )'but made a couple new friends while waiting for birdsPeace Tags: bird, kitsap peninsula, puget sound, wa
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