A horse named Bear poses for a photo in the middle of a quiet snowfall while eating his breakfast at a farm in Fenton, Missouri....
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A horse named Bear poses for a photo in the middle of a quiet snowfall while eating his breakfast at a farm in Fenton, Missouri.
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Awards
Action Award
Chatter Award
Legendary Award
Contest Finalist in Show Snowflakes Photo Contest
Featured
Featured
Contest Finalist in Horses Photo Contest 2015
Contest Finalist in Snowflakes Photo Contest
Superb Composition
Peer Award
Top Choice
Absolute Masterpiece
Outstanding Creativity
Magnificent Capture
All Star
Superior Skill
Genius
Virtuoso
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debbie1969
March 11, 2015
Thank you very much, and I'm always thrilled when someone likes 1 of my pics. I love your work, because I learn from everyone who comments. I consider it great guidelines. Thanks again
charlymakrayrice
August 19, 2015
Beautiful ... so reminds me of my last horse, Cinnabar. Touches my soul.
adavies
January 22, 2016
Wonderful capture! Love the snowy scene...and what a beautiful horse!!! Well done!
Same photographer See allBehind The Lens
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Behind The Lens
Location
This photo was taken in our pasture behind our barn. My wife and I have boarded horses for many years on our little farm in Fenton, Missouri.Time
The horses are fed twice a day. This was early morning before both of us had to go to our regular jobs - she is an orthodontist assistant, I am chief photographer for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch news paper. I was throwing hay out to all the outside horses, when great big snowflakes started falling. There was an eerie silence in this beautiful scene. I ran back to the house and got my camera. The horse, named Bear, was startled when I came back and started shooting. He kept watching me while I photographed him. The snow only lasted a few minutes.Lighting
The light was pretty good and the brightness of the snow certainly helped.Equipment
I was using a Canon 1D Mark V with a 70-200mm lens set at 200 because I wanted to compress as much of the snow and background as possible.Inspiration
I usually don't "see" too many photos around my farm anymore because I mostly see all of the work that needs to be done and all the repairs I need to make. But, on this occasion, the beauty of the moment nearly took my breath away and I knew I had to capture it.Editing
No, I am a photo journalist, so I try to keep the image as real as possible. The only thing I usually do to my images is crop them and make them look as close to the reality I saw as possible. We are allowed to color correct and do a little dodging and burning, not much more. Photo ethics plays a very big roll in photo journalism. I've only played with a few of my personal images that are not intended for newspaper publication.In my camera bag
I don't carry a camera bag. I have two cameras, both Canons, with a 70-200mm lens and a 24-70mm lens. It's company equipment, but I try and treat it as if it was my own. I'm usually shooting seven days a week.Feedback
I really like to shoot in weather extremes. Heavy snow, fog, rain - I try to get out there and find something new or different about otherwise ordinary scenes. A couple of my best images came after listening to the evening weather report that said there would be heavy ground fog in the morning. I made sure I was in position before the sun came up and burned off the fog.