Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/06/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Doug - Fascinating. Makes me feel I know the hawk myself - a pretty amazing statement from a city guy who's idea of wildlife is pigeons, squirrels, rats a roaches. ;-) Now I feel I know enough to say, and mean - "amazing shot!" Thanks for taking the time to write this up. Dick >re: http://www.wildlightphoto.com/birds/accipitridae/coha05.html > >Jim Christie < jim.christie at sbcglobal.net> wrote: > >> I just saw your Cooper's Hawk shot. Wow, what a neat shot. It is very >> crisp >> and sharp. Looks like the DMR really performs well. I presume you had to >> hike in to find the hawk and I presume you used a tripod. Great picture! > >Richard S. Taylor wrote: > >> I wonder, too, if we really understand how difficult your work is to do. >> >> Maybe if you included a subtitle along the lines of: "Shot # 241 out >> of 243 that afternoon after waiting a couple of hours in a chilly >> drizzle with my feet freezing and my back aching for the damn bird to >> settle down and the sun to come out and finally get low enough to >> produce the modelling I was after," you'd get more reaction. ;-) > >OK so I need a better story: > >I've been getting to know this particular hawk for a few years now >(and his SWMBO). Each spring they've nested within a few hundred >yards of the previous year's nest so they haven't been to difficult >to find. Each year they also have an area where they like to hang >out off the nest, generally within 200' of the nest tree. I stay >away from the nest because predators can pick up my scent trail if I >were to visit the nest itself. > >The first year I could barely get within range with the 560mm lens >before they'd leave; get too close to the nest tree and it's bye-bye >scalp. The second year they still kept their distance when perched >but when I'd first arrived in the area they do a couple of fly-bys >while I kept my scalp completely entangled in dense brush, but after >a few minutes it was safe to emerge from the thickets. > >This year the male barely even looks up when I arrive in the area - >maybe a half-hearted fly-by a few yards away, then he thinks no more >of the bearded dude with the clicking machine on a stick. > >Over the years the equipment I've used has evolved along with the >birds' response to me. I soon learned that tripods and dense >understory don't mix. I frequently have to move the camera ever so >slightly as the hawks hop along their perches because of the dense >growth in this forested area: getting a clear view of the hawks is >not easy. The monopod & shoulder stock are MUCH more suited to the >terrain, but this setup's slow shutter speed limit can be a problem >in a dense forest. I tried a 400mm f/2.8: the lens required the >tripod, and the DOF was much to shallow at full aperture, the huge >front element freaked the birds out, and I destroyed a shoulder >lugging it around in the forest. High-speed films seemed the only >answer at the cost of grain and high contrast. > >The DMR has solved the film speed problem. It's high ISO >performance is far better than same-speed film, and the DMR's >dynamic range offsets the high-contrast light under the forest >canopy; I can also dial back the ISO as light requires, something I >could do with film only by carrying several camera bodies. > > Walt Johnson wrote: > >> There is nothing wrong with getting up close and personal. The most >> important thing is to make sure your subjects feel your respect for >> them. They are not elements of the composition but rather human >> souls. Some are better than others but when treated well they >> generally respond well. > >This paragraph of Walt's sums up my experience with the Cooper's >Hawks. I had allowed them time to get to know me and they learned >to trust the Leica-toting guy in the camo coat because I walked >quietly, respected their nest space and generally demonstrated that >I was not a threat. > >The male hawk responded last Sunday in a manner that suggests that >Walt was writing about him: he flew to a perch about 20' away from >me just above eye level in an area where I could get clear views >with good backgrounds. Unfortunately the lighting was crap: mixed >in with the deep shade of the forest canopy there were spotlights of >direct sunlight through gaps in the canopy. I waited for shadows to >move so that the bird and his perch were completely shaded (high ISO >but no big deal with the DMR); this took a half-hour or so. During >this time the hawk was completely relaxed, as you can see because >he's resting on one foot. Remember I'm still only 20' away, talking >quietly to the hawk, fiddling with the camera, re-adjusting the >monopod's footing. I made about 60 or 70 exposures, 2/3 DMR, 1/3 >SL2 & Provia 400F. Once I'd made enough exposures I thanked the >hawk and put the cameras down. A few minutes later he flew to >another nearby perch. All true. > >So what you see in this photo is the result to date of hundreds of >hours in the field, countless equipment/media experiments, and above >all treating my subject with respect. > >Doug Herr >Birdman of Sacramento >http://www.wildlightphoto.com > > >_______________________________________________ >Leica Users Group. >See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information