Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/12/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]James >>When I shot some mama Longhorns with new babies, we stayed in the pickup truck and used a long lens!! No meaner animal..jh<< I have a great deal of respect for animals, wild and domestic. I grew up on a farm. Rode bulls for a time. After one ride at the Junior Nationals in the Cow Palace in Daily City, CA I got a little too cocky. I turned my back on the bull for a split second. I recall flying through the air. Next thing I knew I was looking up at a paramedic on my way to SF General. No major injuries. Only a concussion. My Mom saw a photo of me that ran in the Chronicle. I was upside down and my head was higher than the 8' railing. That ended my brief rodeo career. I milked cows one summer. (After which I was more than eager to attend college). The owner of the dairy was a huge man, 6'7" and 260 lbs. He was trying to trailer a Holstein bull, but seemed to be safely out of harms way. In the blink of an eye the bull literally pulverized him. He broke countless bones. The owner was lucky to be alive. He was hosptialized for 3 months. He still walks with a cane. Several years after that I was doing a photo assignment for the California Milk Advisory Board. The AD at J. Walter Thompson wanted one shot that would have required me to get precariously close to a Holstein bull; not the most cooperative of subjects. I gave up and told the AD where to stick it. One more nail in the coffin of my commercial photographic career. Semi-domestic animals are bad enough. I've seen pictures of people getting up close and personal photographing wild animals and it makes me cringe. I accidentally cornered a badger once. Scared me to death. Even little animals deserve utmost caution. Like many photographic endeavors, knowledge of the subject is more important than knowledge of the camera. As far as I know, a camera won't turn on you. Animals are great subjects, though. Dave