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Black-capped Chickadee



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Flying to feeder in front of our house.

Flying to feeder in front of our house.
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jlappen crystalbright lorraine25 brookejaeimpey Alizka_13 wilsonwine9 SSKOKSAL +11
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jirfren GentleSoul444 MotherNature mdb123 skyglider63 NKORIAKOS MarkoG
Jaw Dropping
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Magnificent Capture
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All Star
bradnel KristinaOers SusiStroud
Outstanding Creativity
Offshore50 john_arsenault

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Anything Birds Photo ContestTop 10 rank
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8 Comments |
lesdob_1834
 
lesdob_1834 January 24, 2014
Vety nice shot, keep feeding:)
phyllisjmorrow PRO+
 
phyllisjmorrow January 24, 2014
W*O*W!!!
TinyTurtle
 
TinyTurtle March 29, 2014
Absolutely amazing!

I have a similar shot of a Parus major, but yours is better.

Thanks for sharing!
DVallas
 
DVallas November 21, 2014
Great capture...been trying to capture these quick critters without success. Wonderful job.
CWphotos5
 
CWphotos5 February 18, 2015
What an amazing capture!!!
anjavanderdonk
 
anjavanderdonk November 13, 2017
Awesome!
Twilightgirl Ultimate
 
Twilightgirl January 13, 2018
Great chickadee shots. Would love to know how you get such a crisp action shot. I find them tricky, but I must admit I don't often use a tripod. Good job!
AvigayilPhotography
 
AvigayilPhotography February 22, 2018
Superb shot! I love bird pics with the bird's wings fully out. :)
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Behind The Lens

Location

My flying bird photos were taken in the yard in front of my house in November when the weather in New England was getting cold and the birds were looking for food. I took down our regular bird feeder and replaced it with a small camouflaged feeder on a tripod. I set up my camera and lens facing the bird feeder. This was my target where the birds could land and where I could focus on the birds.

Time

The sun was low in the sky and it was cold. The angle of sunlight was best in the morning between 10:00 A.M.-12:00 A.M. This was the warmest part of the day when the birds were most active.

Lighting

I used available light. The action was stopped using a fast shutter speed with help from a high ISO. I had to have the sunlight at my back which forced me to face my house. The background in the photo is natural stained wood siding. I would have preferred a natural background of trees or yard, but the trees in November were bare making the background too dark and the branches too distracting. Facing the house was my only option.

Equipment

I used a Canon 7D DSLR with a Canon EF 200mm f/2.8L USM lens, on a Gitzo tripod. I used a Vello Wireless remote shutter. The camera was in the manual focus setting, where focus was set on the feeder and the area around it. I wanted the line of flight from a nearby azalea bush to the feeder to be in focus as the birds flew towards the feeder. Exposure for this photo was 1/2000 sec f/5.6 at ISO 800. The camera was set at the continuous burst setting.

Inspiration

After looking at photographs of flying birds taken with a camera on a tripod and a bird flying, or landing on, a target feeder on another tripod, I decided to create a similar set-up to get captures of flying birds in my own yard. I wanted to see if I could stop the motion and catch a bird in flight.

Editing

I used Lightroom 5 Develop Module for processing the photo. I used the crop tool, plus basic, detail and effects sliders to make adjustments to the photo.

In my camera bag

I own a Canon 7D (when I feel like carrying a good quality telephoto lens), Canon SX50 (for just about everything since I now prefer carrying a small light weight camera), Ricoh GX100 (my favorite for macro work since it has a built in flash with a reduced setting for subjects that are close to the camera), Canon EOS M2 (to use with my EOS Remote app), and a Ricoh G600 (for underwater and fantastic snapshots). I have Canon lenses EF-S 17-55mm f2.8, EF-S 60mm f/2.8 macro, EF 200mm f/2.8L, EF 300mm f/4L IS, 400mm f/5.6L (my easiest to handhold telephoto lens) and a 500mm f/4L IS (older model). I own two Gitzo tripods, Wimberley Gimbal head, Wimberley Sidekick, and a RRS Ball Head. I have a CamRanger app that I use with my Canon 7D.

Feedback

My advice is to keep trying, keep pressing the shutter until you get the photos you want. Sometimes a photographic project will not be as easy as you think, but you can be surprised by excellent results. For my project I set up a small bird feeder in front of my house. I attached a small glass dish to a tripod and covered the sides of the dish with dried flowers, attached a small branch to land on, and covered the tripod with camouflage cloth. The birds landed on nearby perches before flying towards the dish on my tripod. I pre-focused on an area near the feeder and had the camera set on burst speed. When I saw a bird leave a tall nearby azalea bush, or nearby trees, I pressed my remote shutter and held it down until I saw the bird leave the feeder. I took thousands of photos on three different days. Most frames were empty and had no bird. Each day I would delete hundreds of empty frames. The fast flying birds would often enter and leave the camera's field of view before I could press the shutter, but sometimes I did press the shutter fast enough. Because many birds were leaving the azalea bush, or flying from the nearby woods, at the same time, many birds interacted in the air above the feeder, or on the feeder. Interesting behavior was captured in the sequence of images. In the images I could see a bird's acrobatic behavior during flight. Behavior I could not see with my naked eye. I needed a camera to stop the action. I was surprised by how many birds flew upside down, or pushed off upside down from the feeder when another bird was landing. My flying bird project took effort and patience, but it was worth it. By continuously shooting for hours, during the best sunlight conditions, I obtained exciting photos of bird behavior and flying athleticism..... a choreography of motion.

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