“SLOW” TELLS A BETTER STORY


Nikon D750, Sigma 50-500mm / f4.5-6.3 APO DG HSM, tripod, gimbal head, SB 800 speed light

@500 mm, 1/40 s, f/8, ISO 500

We never had so many Ruby-throated Hummingbirds visit the yard like this year. Especially now, with the juveniles buzzing around, it is very busy at the hummingbird feeders that hang from our porch. Every second day we mix a 1.75 liter bottle of sugar water to keep up with the high demand. We never ever have even been close to this amount. 

After a number of hot and humid days we finally got some much needed rain yesterday and today and the temperatures dropped quite a bit. This is probably another reason that we saw the hummers even more frequently today. With nothing but gray clouds in the sky I decided to stay home after work and aim for some new photos of the smallest bird we have here during the summer.

Nikon D750, Sigma 50-500mm / f4.5-6.3 APO DG HSM, tripod, gimbal head, SB 800 speed light

@420 mm, 1/80 s, f/8 ISO 500

I was asked today if I shoot my hummingbird pictures with a high speed setup. The answer is no, I don’t. Remember, my goal is story telling and that means in most cases I like to show a hint of the environment, even if it is just blurred because of a shallow depth of field, like with these two images from today. The light and the green and yellow color in the background suggest a lush environment, typical for a day in August, and typical for just how it is around here at the moment. On a rainy day there isn’t much light available and using the flash is essential to bring out some colors of the birds. No matter how hard I would try with a high shutter speed of, lets say 1/500 s or even faster, the background would always be pitch-black. And with that there is no story telling…

Another part of the story telling in both photos is the dynamic of the wing beats. You see the wings multiple times and this is how you see the birds when they buzz around. They don’t look frozen. However, there has to be one thing that needs to be sharp to make the image work, and that is the eye of the critter. If the eye is blurry, and believe me that happens more than I like, the image ends up in the trash can of the computer…

NATURE CLICKS #290 - BELTED KINGFISHER


Nikon D750, Sigma 50-500mm / f4.5-6.3 APO DG HSM, SB 800 speed light

I have reported about my desire to get closer to a Belted Kingfisher here in the blog just recently. Well, another visit in the Green Island Wetlands last weekend lead to this shot. I had the SB800 speed light on camera and was working the bird for almost three minutes. As most birds, the kingfisher didn’t care for the flash and was concentrating on one thing only, the fish in the water. This was the last click before it went down like a rocket. I couldn’t see the impact on the water from my location but heard the splash...

NATURE CLICKS #289 - SPOTTED SANDPIPER


Nikon D750, Sigma 50-500mm / f4.5-6.3 APO DG HSM

This is probably a juvenile or at least a noon-breeding Spotted Sandpiper, foraging and feeding between the logs and driftwood along the shore of Mud Lake at the Mississippi. Moments like this are the highlights and the best reason to go out again and again and try to capture the light or freeze the moment of action. A thin overcast made for a subtle light and being at the right place at the right time with the kayak and camera allowed me to make the click. Someone may say this is just luck. Sure, a little bit of luck is part of wildlife photography, but the luck will follow you if you go out and work a location over and over again. If you know a location well and if you are prepared for the shot, the luck will find you...

MISSISSIPPI RIVER STORIES 2015 #7


Yesterday evening Joan was finally able to join Cooper and me for a paddle tour on the Mississippi River and the backwaters of the adjacent Mud Lake area. There is not a single day or night as the one before and I really don’t get tired paddling the same area and looking for the light, wildlife , or what else nature presents.

A juvenile Red-winged Blackbird is not the most attractive bird in the world but if “killer light” hits the little guy between the reeds of the backwaters I can’t resist to make the click. Wildlife photography with natural light as pure as it gets...

I have met the guy on the left before in the Mud Lake area. I believe he runs a business that provides stand up board paddling during the summer. Well, I don’t think it is the worst job in the world… 😊

MISSISSIPPI RIVER STORIES 2015 #6


It has been a while since I have posted under the headline of “RIVER STORIES”, but hey, here is another one…

While leaving the marina at Mud Lake Park with the kayak again this evening, and just after I turned into the main channel of the big river, I saw one of the Bald Eagle adults that call this area home. You can’t have a better start, despite the gray overcast...

The water lilies are in full bloom at the moment and other flowers grow in abundance along the levies and islands in the Mississippi.

No Foster’s Terns today but these adult and juvenile Ring-billed Gulls posed nicely for a shot.

All images: Nikon D750, Sigma 50-500mm / f4.5-6.3 APO DG HSM

This flower is called Marsh Mallow (hibiscus militaris). They can grow up to 7 feet tall. I have never seen them before, although we paddled this area many times during the last few years.

NATURE CLICKS #288 - FOSTER'S TERN


Nikon D300s, Sigma 50-500mm / f4.5-6.3 APO DG HSM

Our dog Cooper and I took a kayak trip on the Mississippi River this evening again and it felt once more like entering “wildlife paradise”. What else can you call it, if you spot during a one and a half hour tour four Bald Eagles, three Great Blue Herons, numerous gulls, pelicans, geese, ducks, blackbirds, muskrats, and turtles? This is all amazing and wonderful in the warm light of the evening sun, even if we have seen all these species many times before. 

To make a great trip perfect I discovered five Foster’s Terns sitting on logs stranded in the mud of a river bank. I have never seen Foster’s Terns here in Eastern Iowa before (only in the Bolsa Chica Wetlands in California). They were not far from a group of Ring-billed Gulls. While the gulls took off when we got closer, the terns just stayed, even when we drifted by within six feet distance. At that time the D300s was still in a waterproof bag behind my seat but the dauntless behavior of the terns made me paddling around them into a position where the light was in my favor. I took my old camera on the water and its DX sensor made for a 630 mm equivalent, with a focal length of 420 mm set at the Sigma 50-500.

I wrote before how difficult it can be to shoot with the long lens handhold from a kayak, especially if it is windy as it was this evening. I shot several bursts in continuous shooting mode and almost 200 clicks later I still wasn’t sure if I nailed it. Well, the keeper rate wasn’t too bad and finally I had quite a few images to choose from.

The photos were made on the Mississippi, just outside of the Mud Lake area, north of Dubuque, Iowa. I have seen and photographed Caspian Terns in this area last year but this is the first time that I had a sighting of a Foster’s Tern. There is still a little doubt about my identification of the species. For instance the Common Tern looks very similar, but after checking several sources I believe these were Foster’s Terns. If you are a birder or nature friend who can confirm this or have a better suggestion, I would love to hear from you.

NATURE CLICKS #287 - EASTERN KINGBIRD


The Belted Kingfisher (see yesterday’s post) and the Eastern Kingbird use sometimes the same trees and bushes when they perch and look out for food. Although their diet is totally different. They both prefer branches or trees that hang over the water or are at least near to it. While the kingfisher mainly preys on small fish that swim near the surface of the water, the Eastern Kingbird is a large flycatcher and feeds on insects and fruits. Quite often they return to the same perch after pouncing for food on the ground or on the water surface.

Last night I witnessed the take over of a tree by a kingfisher. It was actually used as a perch by a kingbird but there was no doubt who had the longer bill and ruled the area. The Eastern Kingbird took off immediately…

This shot was taken at 6:22 pm last night and the sun was already getting low. However, because of its intense power at this time of the year I had a hard time to contain the highlights. I had dialed in -1 EV for exposure compensation already but still had to bring down the highlights in post process to make this image work. This is a simple task in Adobe Lightroom or Adobe Camera RAW but I usually don’t fiddle around with tones and colors in my wildlife photography. Well, sometimes there is an exception to this self-imposed rule. I really like the gesture of this Eastern Kingbird in the photo and that’s why I show it to you today… :-)

CLOSE, BUT STILL NOT CLOSE ENOUGH


Nikon D750, Sigma 50-500mm / f4.5-6.3 APO DG HSM

A gorgeous summer day with low humidity and a nice breeze fueled my desire to go down to the Green Island Wetlands for some wildlife watching this evening. This is the closest I have ever been to a Belted Kingfisher. If you are an avid reader of my blog, you may remember that this bird is high up on my “most wanted list”. They are extremely skittish and it is really not easy to get close to them. A water canal between me and the bird limited a closer approach and I finally cropped the picture in post process. I’m not there yet with the kingfisher, and the bird will still remain on the “most wanted list”, but I’m not unhappy about today’s shot...

NATURE CLICKS #286 - GIANT SWALLOWTAIL


Nikon D750, Sigma 150mm / f2.8 APO EX DG HSM

It’s hot and humid, and believe me, I don’t need any other excuses for not going out shooting. Well, but I couldn’t let this opportunity pass by. I have not figured out yet what the larvas of the Giant Swallowtail feed on, because they prefer citrus plants and their relatives, but we must have something around here they like. The Giant Swallowtail has been a common visitor in our yard for many years.

The photo isn’t the perfect shot. I cropped it a little bit on the right hand side because I had the butterfly dead center. This isn’t a crop due to not being close enough to the subject but more for esthetic reasons. With other words, I still have the full amount of pixels available for my subject (so I can still print without any loss in detail) but the aspect ratio of the image has changed from 2:3 to 4:5.

NATURE CLICKS #285 - EASTERN TIGER SWALLOWTAIL


Nikon D750, Sigma 150mm / f2.8 APO EX DG HSM, SB 800 speed light

It seems that every year is slightly different from the one before if we look at the numbers of particular butterflies. In 2010, 2011, and 2014 I took many photos of the Tiger Swallowtail, while 2013 I didn’t get a single shot. The same is true for other species, one year we have them in abundance and other years we can hardly find them. This year is another good year for the Tiger Swallowtail. We have seen them quite often, and not just here on our bluffs above the Little Maquoketa River Valley.

It is not easy to make a sharp photo in the heat of the day. The butterflies are very active and change location constantly. The chances for a good shot are higher in the evening, when temperatures come down and the swallowtails spend more time on a particular flower for feeding. This beautiful female Eastern Swallowtail was very cooperative this evening and spent quite some time on our Purple Coneflowers. 

The combination of the NIKON D750 with the SIGMA 150 mm, f/2.8 macro lens is my preferred gear for this kind of photography. It is my first time that I shot a swallowtail butterfly in full frame (FX) and I enjoy the challenge to get physically closer to the subject. No picture will make it into the “keepers” if a crop would be necessary to make it halfway decent. Yes, we can talk about improving our photography all day long, but if we don’t do the most obvious, I think all talk is pointless…

NOISY GANG


I realized the chirping noise coming from one of the nest boxes in our front yard is a lot louder than usual as soon the first light of the day appears early in the morning. It’s the place where the House Wrens currently feed their second brood. Well, both nest chambers, first and second floor, have a nest and it looks like that two females and one male House Wren feed the offspring in both nests. As my photo proofs, the size of the meals gets quite big already and pretty soon it will be quiet around here again. 

We had wrens nesting every summer since Joan and I lived here. Providing opportunities to built a nest became mandatory for us and we have never been disappointed yet. It is a wonderful way to enrich your life! The House Wrens eat insects, lots of them, but there is not much we can do to support these efforts. Hanging nest boxes around our house has helped to make some birds coming back here after the winter every year. Each species that may use a bird house may have different requirements regarding the size of the box or how big the diameter of the hole has to be. Have a look what is in your backyard or on your balcony, study about the birds you see, and draw your conclusions. It’s easy, you can do that too!!

SAILING AND SOARING IN THE EVENING BREEZE


Nikon D750, Sigma 50-500mm / f4.5-6.3 APO DG HSM, at 85 mm

The Mississippi River is a great place for all kinds of recreation and during the summer many people use it for fishing, paddling, or just running their speed boats. Seeing a sail boat with all sails set is not an everyday occurrence and the puffy clouds on the Wisconsin side of the river made for a nice background.

Nikon D750, Sigma 50-500mm / f4.5-6.3 APO DG HSM, at 420 mm

The guy handled his boat actually very well in the evening breeze. The photos were made just below lock and dam #11 in Dubuque, IA and the river is here only about 400 meters wide.

Nikon D750, Sigma 50-500mm / f4.5-6.3 APO DG HSM, at 420 mm

The soaring pelican may explain why I had the long lens on the camera during the little walk with our dog Cooper along the river. Unfortunately this was the only one we had within shooting range. Including part of a cloud was key for this image.

FROM GREEN TO GRAY


Nikon D300s, Sigma 150mm / f2.8 APO EX DG HSM

The Gray Treefrogs are able to camouflage themselves from gray to green or vice versa, depending on the substrate they are sitting. This one was about to change quickly its color  after I found it under the tarp that covers our kayaks. Making the picture with the frog hanging on the orange or blue plastic boats, well, this is not what I really like. Putting the frog onto a tree stump gives it a much more natural setting. Being fast is key because these frogs are nocturnal and like to hide again. The photo doesn’t necessarily tell much about its size. I was pretty close with the Sigma 150 mm, f/2.8 macro lens and with a 1:1 magnification ratio you can easily fill the frame with this probably about 35-40 mm long critter.

NATURE CLICKS #284 - INDIGO BUNTING


Nikon D750, Sigma 50-500mm / f4.5-6.3 APO DG HSM

I wrote a few days ago about that we haven’t seen the same numbers of certain birds, especially warblers, as last year. This is also true for the Indigo Bunting, a regular summer resident here in Iowa. They usually visit our bird feeders sometimes during the summer but this year I have seen the species only once so far in the front yard.

This photo was made last weekend in the Green Island Wetlands and before I was able to locate the bird I heard its singing efforts , which sounds really beautiful. 

Blue is my favorite color but Indigo Buntings are actually black. It is the diffraction of light through their feathers that make them look blue and this explains why males can appear in many different shades from turquoise to black (source: iBird Pro app).