Sunday, March 29, 2015

Botched It

The forecast for this morning was cold and clear. I grabbed the camera and headed to the refuge. The parking lot was still in sight behind me when I saw a pair of immature bald eagles circling overhead. They were aggressively tormenting one another. I had set the ISO for the dark early light but neglected to open the aperture up and didn't notice until nearly the end of the encounter that my shutter speed was way too slow. I botched one of the best eagle encounters I've ever seen. I was able to salvage a few shots, and this is probably the best among them.

Immature Bald Eagles Harassing Each Other
  I lost sight of them and kept walking. I had noticed how slow the shutter speed sounded and selected a more sane f-stop. A few hundred yards later, I saw an immature eagle approaching. I prepared to shoot, and was stunned by the fact that it circled me, twice. It was checking me out.
Immature Bald Eagle
It seems to have some fluffy material on its forehead.
Immature Bald Eagle
After that eagle flew off, I kept walking my usual route. The ospreys were active, but not close. I didn't get much usable material from them. I like this one even though the eyes are looking away; this is a good look at its talons and wings.
Osprey Takes Flight
 I'm usually not interested in herons. I find them boring. They usually fly away as soon as they see me, but this one just stood there, and I liked the way the sun was lighting it.
Great Blue Heron
Small birds, especially the common ones, don't interest me either. Most of the other photographers I see at this refuge seem to seek them though. This cardinal just sat there in great light as I approached, so I took the shot.
Northern Cardinal
 As I walked the shoreline road, I saw several eagles hunting and harassing each other.
Immature Bald Eagle
Immature Bald Eagle

Unfortunately the trees near the shore obstructed my view and I was unable to get any more shots of eagles behaving badly. It was cold, the wind was biting, and more people were showing up. I knew their presence would virtually eliminate the likelihood of more action shots, so I headed out. I usually pass up Canada Goose shots because they are so common here. But this one just stood there looking at me and honking, so I grabbed one shot.
Irate Canada Goose
The eagle nests had no birds obviously there. I presume the parents were down in the nests, out of sight. Often there's one in the nest with a mate nearby, but I saw no mature eagles on this visit. I can't believe I messed the best opportunity up so badly. I think I'm going to have to read up on how to use one of the new camera's presets so I can be sure to get everything ready in one step.

Sunday, March 22, 2015

A Nice Walk

I had a nice walk in the park, with a few bird sightings. This was mostly to get some exercise and work with the new camera. The bald eagles are still tending their eggs or hatchlings.
Bald Eagle in Nest
This parent hides in the nest, with only the occasional head shot possible. I can hardly see it in the viewfinder because the Fish and Wildlife Service blocked the road to establish a buffer zone and I had to keep my distance. It's so tiny in the picture that I can't tell that the bird is there except for the way the yellow beak stands out against the bark or sky background. This is an aggressive crop. The ospreys were also out, building nests (with really long sticks) and hunting. This one stared at me.

Osprey Stares at Me
And this one flew right over. The sky was overcast and the light was poor, but I was able to recover a lot of detail in post processing. I'm always a sucker for light shining through feathers, and this shot has a lot of that in the bird's tail.

Osprey
I like the new camera, a lot. The high ISO performance is sweet and the higher pixel count lets me crop a lot before getting unacceptably soft.

Sunday, March 15, 2015

Eagles and Ospreys

Again eager to use the new camera, I went out first thing this morning after a dreary day of rain yesterday. I had the place to myself. Initially it was pretty dull, with the exception of a pair of beavers swimming along the shore who made the slap/splash. Then there were some eagle passes, obstructed by trees. Then I saw a group of eagles approaching over the water and I was able to capture this one.
Immature Bald Eagle

Immature Bald Eagle
Then this one came along.
Bald Eagle
The flights were out over the water and the sun back-lit them, but I was able to bring some details out. There's an island visible from shore where I frequently see eagles and ospreys perched in the trees. There were several eagles in one tree, and while I watched one of them took off and hunted over the water. Then the other eagles attacked the hunter.
Eagle Drops Fish
This was at the far end of my lens' reach and the detail is poor, but I like the composition with the two birds and the falling fish. I was shooting just hoping to get something useful. I couldn't tell much about what was happening in the frame because it was just so far away. Aggressive zooming and cropping showed the falling fish, and the fight continued.
Fighting Eagles
Again, very far away. One eagle is upside down, talons up, and I can make out water drops in the air along with what I think is a fish in the air between the eagles and the branches of that dead tree. While this was going on, I kept hearing two eagles loudly screeching at one another near me. I couldn't see them, but I knew they had to be close. When the eagle fighting was over, I walked toward the sound, and there were two mature eagles in a tree, obscured by branches, and they both flew away before I could photograph them. Walking on, I spotted this osprey eating its breakfast.
Osprey with Bloody Fish
When the osprey flew away, it was because an eagle approached.
Bald Eagle
There were several more osprey overflights, and I think this shot is my favorite.
Osprey with Fish
This bird just flew around looking at me, with one talon grasping the fish and the other streamlined back below its tail, and that big yellow eye looking at me.

I like the new camera.

Saturday, March 14, 2015

Trying the New Camera

UPS delivered my new camera on Wednesday and I've been anxiously waiting for a chance to use it. The sky was overcast Friday after work, but I decided to go shooting anyway. What better test than dull skies to see what the camera can do?

The first thing I noticed was that the ospreys are back. I saw several pairs on platforms, and there were several overflights with ospreys carrying sticks as they are busy building nests. Wandering along the shore, there was little to shoot: no eagles at the shore-side eagle nest, no eagles camped on the tree with the osprey nest where I've had so much good luck before, no hunting events over the water.

I'm usually not interested in herons, but I wanted to shoot something, so I got a few photos of herons to at least have something to inspect when I got home.
Heron
When I reached the other eagle nest, there was clearly a parent sitting on eggs, but it was barely visible and its mate was nowhere to be seen.
Bald Eagle in Nest
This is a very aggressive crop, with only a modest bit of clarity dialed in. Eventually I started seeing more ospreys and I had a chance to get some shots of them.
Osprey in Flight
Bad light, distant bird: Just the kind of test I wanted. I had cranked the ISO up to 800, which let me shoot at f5.6 and 1/1000. That would be noisy on my old camera. I brought the shadows up, turned the blacks down, used noise reduction, and cropped to get the photo above. Not a keeper, but I'm pleased with the wing feather detail I was able to get and the sharpness, even after a pretty severe crop.

I heard a helicopter coming closer, and I got this shot.
VH-3 Sea King (sometimes called Marine One)
The marines were on a training flight. Again, not a great photo, but it gave me a chance to practice. It looks like 1/1000 is a good shutter speed for photographing a helicopter: The fuselage is sharp; the rotor tips are blurred.

I was getting tired, so I decided to go home after a disappointing outing. I turned a corner and this eagle was perched ahead. I approached slowly, trying not to flush it, maneuvering to get a clear shot through branches.
Bald Eagle
This is a moderate crop, with the shadows (dark feathers) turned up and noise reduction. It just sat there gripping the branch with one talon. The other talon is just barely visible above.

Not great photos, but I can experiment with them. I wanted to see how far I could go with the cropping before reaching unacceptable quality.
Bald Eagle
This is a pretty severe crop, with modest noise reduction and shadow lightening. I like the feather detail in its white head and dark body. Here's one more aggressive crop.
Bald Eagle
When it flew away, I botched the capture. I clearly need more practice with this camera. The lessons for this camera: it crops well, it's quiet (the old one sounds like a machine gun in comparison), and the noise level in low light is much more acceptable than with my old camera.

Rain today. Bummer. I'll try again tomorrow when the forecast is much better.

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Frozen

After a month of distractions and bad weather keeping me from photography, there was finally a good forecast. I went to the refuge and started walking. The roads were mostly crusted over with ice and snow; footing was slippery and loud (crunchy ice). I got to the shore and found the bay frozen over. There were geese and terns walking on the ice and congregating around the very few open water spots. As the tide moved the ice, it popped and cracked. Every few minutes, it shifted and groaned and creaked. Here's a panorama I took with my phone.
Frozen Belmont Bay
I walked along the shore and did see some eagles. The photographs are no better than others that I've posted previously, so I won't add them here. It was hard to get close to any birds at all: crunching footsteps alerted them and scared them away. I flushed a couple of eagles that way.

The Fish and Wildlife Service finally blocked the road next to one of the eagle nests. Standing behind the barrier, I could just make out the head of an adult that was in the nest, presumably sitting on eggs. Its mate came by and perched in the tree for a while. The other nest near the water was vacant; I don't think that one will produce any eaglets this year.