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brettania ![]() Admin Group ![]() Dyxum factotum Joined: 17 July 2005 Country: New Zealand Location: Auckland Status: Offline Posts: 20650 |
![]() Posted: 18 January 2008 at 05:08 |
To start a new series off, here are two shots of the New Zealand Tui.
![]() ![]() And the story about these pics as originally posted in Open Views.... These photos were extinct, not the bird. I have been moving files about on my various hard drives and found some pics from my early days with the 70-200 SSM that for some reason I had never processed. (I think it was because I had a theme in mind which they were not part of.) The huia is an iconic New Zealand bird. One authority says: "The Tui is the one endemic bird to have survived and even thrived in the presence of humans on these islands. They have entered our national consciousness like no other New Zealand bird, not even the Kiwi whom we rarely see or even hear these days. The Tui has become very much an intimate part of our daily lives, whereas so many other birds have languished and died out or stayed away in the deep bush and shunned our presence." The tui looks black but in the light has green, bluish-purple and bronze colouring, lacy collar of white filaments and white throat tufts, black legs and curved black bill, white wing bar. They are the dominant honey eaters in New Zealand, aggressive and pugnacious, and will chase other Tuis and other birds, especially Korimako, the bellbird, from their feeding territory. They fly at great speeds, the wings whirring characteristically, the loud and noisy flying caused by a notch in the eighth primary that makes the wing tips flutter. It was with great joy that I recently discovered that the house I recently moved to is part of the patch of a relatively young tui. For more info go to New Zealand Birds and do listen to its song by clicking the link there. So, two bird shots that may have become extinct had it not been for my computer housekeeping. You don't know how excited I feel, as my "local" has always avoided me. |
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camelriders ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 31 December 2005 Country: United States Location: South East Status: Offline Posts: 2434 |
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Sandhill Crane, Florida:
![]() Black Swan, Florida: ![]() Wood Stork, Florida: ![]() Osprey, Florida: ![]() |
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Regards,
Bruce. |
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kankushok ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 21 August 2007 Country: United States Location: United States Status: Offline Posts: 850 |
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a100, a77, 16-50, 70-400, Tokina 400, Tamron 90mm, F43
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maskedman ![]() Groupie ![]() Joined: 15 June 2006 Location: Canada Status: Offline Posts: 112 |
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Red-Tailed Hawk
Great Horned Owl Snow Goose Bald Eagle with American Coot Dunlins Brian Edited by maskedman - 19 January 2008 at 04:18 |
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ponz ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 22 November 2007 Country: United States Location: Kansas City Status: Offline Posts: 1058 |
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I posted this elsewhere on the forum and realize it's no biggie. A sparrow in my back yard:
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Frankman ![]() Emeritus group ![]() Knowledge Base Editor Joined: 02 July 2006 Location: Australia Status: Offline Posts: 6916 |
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Nice work guys. A great start to a new series. Here are a few I've taken lately:
Magpie: ![]() Magpie lark (mudlark): ![]() ![]() Frank |
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RosieA100 ![]() Emeritus group ![]() Moderator emeritus Joined: 27 October 2006 Country: Australia Location: Melbourne Status: Offline Posts: 4824 |
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This pigeon was sitting on the fence and as I chatted with the neighbours I snapped some pics - it was very tame!
![]() Trying to catch these Lorikeets in flight (successfully) is an art I haven't managed to master!!! YET ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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a700,a100
16-80Z, 50/1.7, 70-210/4, 75-300G SSM, 100-400APO, 15-30, 28-300, 90 macro, 19-35, 100/3.5, Lensbaby Composer |
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pegelli ![]() Admin Group ![]() Dyxum Administrator Joined: 02 June 2007 Country: Belgium Location: Schilde Status: Offline Posts: 33799 |
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@ RosieA100 : I think your first LIF is great. Can you crop a bit more so the landing one is on a golden mean point, or is this already cropped max ?
(btw LIF stands for Lorikeet In Flight ![]() |
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You can see the April Foolishness 2021 exhibition here Another great show of the talent we have on Dyxum
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RosieA100 ![]() Emeritus group ![]() Moderator emeritus Joined: 27 October 2006 Country: Australia Location: Melbourne Status: Offline Posts: 4824 |
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Thanks pegelli - none of the pics were cropped so no problem... this was the best looking of the ones I tried 10x15 was too tight as was 13x18 so this one is 20x25 (and sharpened a little)
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a700,a100
16-80Z, 50/1.7, 70-210/4, 75-300G SSM, 100-400APO, 15-30, 28-300, 90 macro, 19-35, 100/3.5, Lensbaby Composer |
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pegelli ![]() Admin Group ![]() Dyxum Administrator Joined: 02 June 2007 Country: Belgium Location: Schilde Status: Offline Posts: 33799 |
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@ maskedman: ![]() Did you use some special PP blurring effect around the edges to put more emphasis on the eyes, or is this just the way it turned out with DOF and corner sharpness fall-off. What lens did you use ? |
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You can see the April Foolishness 2021 exhibition here Another great show of the talent we have on Dyxum
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ponz ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 22 November 2007 Country: United States Location: Kansas City Status: Offline Posts: 1058 |
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My 10 year old Congo African Gray:
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maskedman ![]() Groupie ![]() Joined: 15 June 2006 Location: Canada Status: Offline Posts: 112 |
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@ maskedman: ![]() Did you use some special PP blurring effect around the edges to put more emphasis on the eyes, or is this just the way it turned out with DOF and corner sharpness fall-off. What lens did you use ?[/QUOTE] pegelli, Thanks for the compliment! This Great Horned Owl was injured and unable to return to the wild. She is used for educational talks. I just cropped the photo a little ... the photo is otherwise straight from the 7D. I used the 100-300mm APO D at 300mm. Glad you enjoy the photo! Brian |
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maskedman ![]() Groupie ![]() Joined: 15 June 2006 Location: Canada Status: Offline Posts: 112 |
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pegelli, Thanks for the compliment. This photo was cropped in PS. The rest is straight from the 7D with 100-300mm APO D @ 300mm, f11. This owl was injured and unable to return to the wild. She is now being used in educational talks. Glad you enjoy the photo! Brian Edited by maskedman - 21 January 2008 at 23:40 |
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eccles ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 20 August 2007 Country: United Kingdom Location: Bristol Status: Offline Posts: 998 |
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Today's snaps. The tits were taken with Sigma 400mm f5.6 telemacro, fast becoming my favourite lens. The success rate with these little birds is quite low but when the SSS locks it can give excellent results. The bluetit is quite heavily cropped.
The pigeons were taken with a big beercan. Great tit ![]() Bluetit ![]() Wood pigeons: "Not today dear, it's not Spring yet." ![]() |
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