Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2011/09/22

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Subject: [Leica] IMG: White-tailed Ptarmigan
From: philippe.amard at sfr.fr (philippe.amard)
Date: Fri, 23 Sep 2011 07:05:31 +0200
References: <21528201.1316724978171.JavaMail.root@mswamui-cedar.atl.sa.earthlink.net>

Beautifully told and photographed - happy to see you back with warm  
feelings Doug

Thank you for it all.

Amiti?s
Philippe

Le 22 sept. 11 ? 22:56, Doug Herr a ?crit :

> The White-tailed Ptarmigan is an alpine grouse which can be found at  
> the highest elevations in western North America.  Like other  
> Ptarmigans, the White-tailed Ptarmigan is a master of camouflage,  
> resembling the rocky alpine tundra in summer and changing to white  
> in the winter.
>
> I found the Ptarmigans after many years of searching in several  
> western states.  In Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, US  
> Highway 34 goes up to an elevation of almost 12,000 ft where the  
> Ptarmigans live.  One location in particular is a good bet for  
> finding Ptarmigans: Medicine Bow curve, a bend in the road where the  
> Medicine Bow mountain range is in full view.  From the parking area  
> one must hike a trail that eventually fades away, down a slope to an  
> area sheltered from the mountain winds, but not so far that you fall  
> over a cliff to the snow fields below.  Once you reach this general  
> area, luck is what you need to find the birds.  They might be nearby  
> but you'd never know it until you nearly step on it and it walks away.
>
> As luck would have it, after a few hours of searching I found a pair  
> of Ptarmigans no more than 20' away as they were feeding on the  
> alpine vegetation.  As I watched, both birds completely vanished!  I  
> was certain they weren't hidden by terrain, I hadn't seen them fly  
> away, I hadn't glanced away even for a moment, but they vanished!   
> Scanning the area carefully I noticed that two of the rocks were  
> more rounded than the others, almost as if they were worn down in a  
> stream bed... but this was at nearly 12,000 ft elevation, the  
> nearest stream was thousands of feet below.  It was when one of the  
> rocks got up and resumed feeding that I re-found the birds.
>
> http://www.wildlightphoto.com/birds/phasianidae/wtptar00.html
> http://www.wildlightphoto.com/birds/phasianidae/wtptar01.html
>
> Maneuvering for good lighting (and not falling over the cliff) I  
> heard a peeping sound nearby and after a few befuddled minutes  
> looking for the source I found a nearly-grown Ptarmigan chick at my  
> feet.
>
> http://www.wildlightphoto.com/birds/phasianidae/wtptar02.html
> http://www.wildlightphoto.com/birds/phasianidae/wtptar03.html
>
> I then began to see more rounded rocks, some merely resting and  
> others that had been feeding all along.  I had hit Ptarmigan  
> Jackpot!  There were at least 16 White-tailed Ptarmigans within 25  
> feet of where I was standing.  With every step I had to watch  
> carefully to be sure I wasn't going to disturb a bird.  I then began  
> kicking myself for packing light, with only the R8/DMR and 280mm  
> Telyt.  No extension tubes, no shorter lens!  While laying on the  
> tundra for a low camera angle several of the Ptarmigans walked  
> within a few inches of me, much too close to focus on.
>
> Despite being chilled to the bone from sub-freezing temperatures,  
> the leg cramps, the blasts of wind, the thin air that had me  
> struggling to form a complete sentence, this was almost paradise:  
> alpine tundra, sun and clouds playing peek-a-boo, an occasional  
> Peregrine Falcon or Golden Eagle overhead and an elk's bugling  
> drifting up from the valley below, surrounded by ptarmigans at arm's  
> length.  Outdoor adventures rarely get any better than this.
>
> Technical stuff: I had stuffed every DMR battery I own into an  
> inside pocket of my parka to keep them warm.  The R9/DMR was in sub- 
> freezing temperatures for about 4 hours and I expected to run out of  
> battery power long before filling the memory cards, but my  
> precautions were unnecessary because after a few hundred exposures  
> and long after I had become numb from the cold, the DMR showed that  
> the original battery had plenty of power remaining.  The only  
> equipment failure was the QR clamp on the monopod's tilt head which  
> kept un-twisting from the head.  An upgraded QR clamp is now in the  
> mail.
>
> This, along with the adorable cashier at the Ft. Collins Whole Foods  
> store (I leave this to your imagination), was easily one of the most  
> memorable events of my 3-week road trip.  All comments welcome.
>
> Doug Herr
> Birdman of Sacramento
> http://www.wildlightphoto.com
>
>
>
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In reply to: Message from wildlightphoto at earthlink.net (Doug Herr) ([Leica] IMG: White-tailed Ptarmigan)