Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/11/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Sunday mornings are my time for wildlife photography, and for the last several Sundays I've been visiting Ancil Hoffman Park, a wilderness area in the floodplain of the American River in Sacramento County. This park is the scene of last spring's Turkey and Telyts adventures first reported here on the LUG. For much of the summer the turkeys' activities were under cover as hens brooded their chicks and kept them hidden from predators. Now that the daylength is once again similar to spring, the males are gobbling and displaying, but with reduced fervor and no attention from the hens. The resident Mule Deer, OTOH, are most active and visible in the fall as the bucks gather and keep their bands of does, and defend their herds from interlopers. It has been Mule Deer, particularly the bucks, that I've been after with my ever-present Telyts. The deer are not diurnal animals. Whether they're nocturnal or crepuscular I don't know but what I do know is that by the time the sun is much above the horizon the deer have bedded down for the day in dense thickets. Ordinarily I hate using a tripod but shutter speeds of 1/15 sec generally are not hand-holdable with a 400mm lens so accepting the hassles of the beast was better than missing the photos I wanted. My experience this morning with the tripod in dense underbrush did nothing to change my opinion of the evil contraptions. As I carried it, weeds grabbing the distant end of the tripod's leg made it swing unpredicatably in to trees or bushes, and as I untagled the thing I'd be knocked off balance or step on a branch hidden under the grass and find myself sprawled on the ground or in a bush with tripods and Telyts landing under or on top of me. So much for the stealthy approach. I missed several photos while getting the tripod stabilized on uneven ground or while fighting weeds pulling on the legs as I spread the tripod for stability. In comparison, the Leica shoulder stock is a stroke of genius. Having gotten the tripod set up I did manage some photos. The lens of choice is the 400mm f/5.6 Telyt with Televit rapid-focus device. Not only is this lens a half-stop faster than the f/6.8 Telyt, but the Televit is (IMHO) much easier to use on a tripod than the f/6.8 Telyts. For a film box I used the Leicaflex SL, not only for its continuously-variable shutter speeds whit manual exposure control, but also for the viewfinder. A number of years ago I was talking with Helen and Cecil Rhode, wildlife photographers in Kenai, Alaska. Cecil claimed (and I agree) that the SL's viewfinder is hard on the film budget. The view is so fantastic that each view through the camera seems so dazzlingly new and fresh that the index finger's reflex is to make another (and another, and another...) exposure. Last weekend I found the main herd's favorite hangout; got several photos of a couple of small bucks sparring with each other, and caught sight of the buck I wanted photos of. Today I found the big buck and used more film. Photographing large mammals not the same as photographing birds. For one thing, I hardly ever get the belly-view shots with mammals that I get too often with birds. For another, there are few birds that can actually injure me. My approach has been to act like a prey species: be aware of everything around me, don't stare, no sudden movements. Before I work much more with testosterone-loaded antlered animals I GOTTA LEARN THEIR BODY LANGUAGE!!! These guys walked within 20 feet of me, and though they didn't exhibit any threatening behavior, if I had accidentally said anything treatening or insulting I could have been seriously injured. I've been chased before (see moose photo on my website) and it's not much fun. The 400 + Televit worked very well. I'll post a message when I've gotten these photo on my website. Doug Herr Sacramento http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/telyt