Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/12/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Someone recently asked Doug Herr about telephoto lenses for photographing animals. This got me to thinking about my experiences over the years. After giving it some thought, I'm surprised to find that a great many of the wildlife photographs that I value the most were taken with relatively short lenses and most often taken with an M Leica rather than with Nikon F's or Leicaflexes. Perhaps these are simply the photographs that bring back the most pleasant memories. I remember a charging black bear in Yellowstone where all the people around me scrambled to get to safety by piling into the open door of a motor home. I held my ground with my trusty M2 and Rigid Summicron and the bear stopped in time to allow me to take his picture. I remember a camping trip with my family on Mt. Mitchell in North Carolina where my son had set out some freshly made pudding to cool. A chipmunk (called a boomer in NC) began to eat the pudding much to my young son's dismay. I captured the little bandit in a close-up with an M3 and 90 mm Elmarit. His little tongue and teeth are sharply captured on Kodachrome. High up in the mountains of Colorado I found a pair of ravens perched on a ledge overlooking a valley far below. The ravens posed for my 135 mm Hector with the valley in the background. Passing from British Columbia to Alberta we spotted a black bear cub alongside the road. After carefully checking that the little tike's mother was out of the neighborhood, I photographed the cub trying to hide behind a 3" sapling with a 90 mm Elmar. Outside Jasper, Alberta we found a herd of elk in a meadow. The light was fading fast but I wanted to photograph the elk calves romping wildly in exuberance after being kept under tight rein by their mothers all day. A new 180 mm APO Summicron would have been perfect but I used what I had and it came out great.... 90 mm Summicron-R at f/2.0. I've taken photos of bear and other mammals with long telephoto lenses but they don't seem as important to me as those that allowed me to get up close and personal. I won't continue to bore everyone but I wanted to point out that successfully photographing wild animals is sometimes simply a matter of getting close and that you don't always need specialized equipment to bring back a trophy. Bud