home.social

Search

1000 results for “maximum_bird”

  1. I just had my morning dose of dopamine.

    Gabriel likes bathing and his favourite bathing tub is in my hands. It's absolutely precious. He waddles into the puddle of water in my cupped hands and cleans his tummy and under wings. He gets his back and neck under the tap, and cleans his face on my hands.

    This is one of my absolute favourite things about keeping a budgie. :birdheart:

    #wetchicken #wetbird #budgielife #budgie #budgiefriends

  2. I used hashtags on #birdsite but not as a means to connect with others. I think the idea here is to use 5-7 hashtags to describe your interests or somehow helps tour profile. Let's give it a try.

    #budgies
    #travelling
    #history
    #manga
    #UselessTrivia
    #foodpics
    #recipies

  3. I was out earlier but it wasn't anything as bad as this and it's gonna get worse. At least outside. We have heat and power. No blackout for us! Yay for a strong #powergrid

    #toronto #winterstorm #canada #blizzard #windy #winterstorm2022 #windgusts #snow #snowstorm

    youtube.com/shorts/bEsQI3eOcF0

  4. @KevvyC62 A shared sentiment.

    There is clearly resentment at the change in regime. I hate that it drove many of us to find a new home. However, this place is better. You can cling to the past or look forward.

    And for those complaining about a lack of free speech, Twitter only had free speech because the site administrators allowed it. Twitter is a privately owned but public platform with its own rules. Like it or not, #Melonusk can determine the rules regardless of the suckage.

  5. can 100 people agree to disagree?

    the poll is open for 7 days. I will also vote but I will not disclose my vote until the poll closes.

    please share.

    #poll #strawpoll #democracy #mastodon #experiament

  6. In light of #Melonusk :twitter: plans to force users to share data with advertisers, I decided to check my old account. It officially no longer exists. The name may appear if it's in relation to other tweets but otherwise it's gone. I'm free!

  7. Good 🌄 morning!

    I woke up to a good email from a cousin of mine who is happy to help me out with #genealogical information. He's even got a few stories to share.

    He even confirmed details I only extrapolated based on dates, locations, and vague memories from my mother.

    #familytree #familyhistory #greek

  8. @atomicpoet

    I'm no fanboy, just a former user.

    I suspect the majority who've departed don't believe in the direction the platform is headed. It's likely to be converted into a toxic cesspool where progressive, dissenting opinions will be "moderated". It will devolve into something that is no longer welcoming for all - outward bullying of minorities. Worse, it'll be #Melonusk 's personal playground. No one likes an unhinged dictator, except individuals who blind themselves to reality.

  9. Let your inner child free for maximum enjoyment 😉 #angry #birds #rovio

  10. Here are my bird results for this year's NZ #GardenBirdSurvey. This is the maximum number of each bird species I saw or heard at one time during the hour.

    60 silvereyes (approximately, seen and calling, at our sugar water feeders and in our flowering Eucalyptus tree)
    20 house sparrows (approximately, seen and calling)
    5 korimako (NZ bellbird)
    4 blackbirds
    2 piwakawaka (calling nearby)
    2 black-backed gulls (flying by)
    1 dunnock (heard calling)
    1 starling

    A song thrush started singing a minute after I finished, so it doesn't get in this year. No kererū this time, unfortunately, although there was one perched in our garden yesterday.

    The Garden Bird Survey doesn't take photos so I'm about to load those onto #iNaturalist. Here are four of them.

    #birds #nz #UrbanEcology #EcologicalMonitoring

  11. NGL, it was pretty awesome to toot that last one while sitting on the couch with @Jillianmarisa, my DS9 cup full of #BirdFriendlyCoffee watching our bird buffet out the window and playing #wingspan. #BirdNerd maximum achievement unlocked!

    #shadegrowncoffee #wingspan #birding

  12. Australian Haiku Society #HaikuOz announcement:

    John Bird Dreaming Award for Haiku 2022

    (Please boost for maximum visibility to #haiku lovers!)

    Deadline: 1st March 2023

    Entry Fee: None

    Prizes: The first three place getters will receive an original ink painting featuring their winning haiku by renowned Australian artist and poet, Ron C. Moss. The prize-winning haiku plus those awarded Honourable Mentions will be announced on the Australian Haiku Society website on 1st May 2023.

    Submissions details here: australianhaikusociety.org/202

    Background: The award has special meaning this year in the wake of the sad passing of John Bird earlier this year. John was a highly respected haiku poet who instigated and developed the Australian Haiku Society, bringing together haiku poets from around the country with the mission to encourage and promote the enjoyment of haiku.

    #AustralianHaiku #AustralianPoetry

  13. Birds in the Bluebells

    Bluebell season is in full swing right now. Anywhere I go at the moment there are swathes of bluebells, whether that’s in gardens, along the verges of the Brighton Main Line, or – yes – even along the heritage railway named after them. I love the bluebells. There is little I love more than seeing a massive carpet of them in a field or across the floor of a forest.

    Kit ListCanon EOS R6 Mk IICanon RF 100-500mm f/4.5-7.1 L IS USM Jump to Gallery

    For Christmas my wife bought me an assortment of photography experience days. I’ve already been on one – the photos of which are waiting patiently to be posted – but for my second I discovered that a bird of prey centre near me holds photography workshops of owls amongst bluebells. The idea of beautiful owls – especially any with gloriously contrasting orange eyes – amongst a sea of bluebells was hard to resist. So last week I headed over to the UK Owl and Raptor Centre for a morning of owls and bluebells.

    The setup for the day was pretty simple. There were only three of us attending the session, as well as a bird handler or two, and a professional photographer who was on hand to help out with settings and guidance. We saw four birds, each of which did a mixture of flying and posing, depending on their temperament. And, almost as if they knew me, after the session was over they sent details of the birds with their names and species, which means for once I can state confidently what these birds are. Given the nature of what we were shooting, I exclusively used my super telephoto lens. A quick note on that – throughout this post you will see my aperture changing a lot. Sometimes that was a manual choice, but most of the time it’s because this lens doesn’t have a constant aperture – it’s f/4.5 at the widest zoom, and f/7.1 and the maximum zoom.

    We started with Kofi, a Verreaux’s eagle owl. With them we started out posing.

    1/1600sec, f/5, ISO 3200, 200mm

    The main piece of general advice we were given was to set our shutter speeds pretty high – in Kofi’s case, it was around 1/1600th of a second – in order to ensure that once they flew around, which they were liable to do with little warning, you’d still get a sharp image. This did lead to some reasonably high ISOs, even in daylight (although we were in the mottled light of a wooded area).

    Almost on queue we got some flight.

    1/1600sec, f/5, ISO 4000, 186mm

    Kofi was keen to fly around, hopping between branches and fallen logs, which meant I ended up with some nice dramatic takeoff and flying shots.

    1/1600sec, f/6.3, ISO 10000, 400mm 1/1600sec, f/6.3, ISO 5000, 200mm1/1600sec, f/5, ISO 2500, 254mm1/1600sec, f/5, ISO 2500, 159mm1/1600sec, f/4.5, ISO 2000, 100mm

    Eventually he sat still long enough for a shot of him on a log.

    1/1600sec, f/5, ISO 2500, 254mm

    … but not for long.

    1/1600sec, f/5, ISO 3200, 167mm1/1600sec, f/4.5, ISO 2500, 123mm

    One of the challenges was the mottled light. It looked fantastic, but you had no control over when a bird would land in a patch of light or in shade – or worse, where their head was in shade but their tail was in sun.

    1/1600sec, f/5.6, ISO 4000, 300mm

    In reality though, Kofi spent most of his time flying between various perches, showing off his impressive wingspan.

    1/1600sec, f/4.5, ISO 5000, 135mm1/1600sec, f/4.5, ISO 3200, 135mm1/1600sec, f/4.5, ISO 2500, 109mm

    As you might expect, I found it very difficult to select shots from this bird, who gave so many impressive flybys. Sometimes it was almost a relief to get shots that were out of focus and so easy to cut. There are, admittedly, even more options in the gallery at the end of this post.

    Next up was Haze, a barn owl. And, if you look really closely, you might be able to spot her handler.

    1/1600sec, f/5.6, ISO 2000, 343mm

    To be honest, Haze’s flybys caused me a lot more trouble. Time after time my camera struggled to focus, and really the only decent shots of her flying captured by my camera were taken by the pro photographer as she tried to help me dial in settings and figure out why I was struggling. All sorts of settings were changed to try to get the autofocus to play balls, but to little avail. It was only later on, when we were shooting the last bird of the day, that I think I figured out what I was doing wrong: I was framing too wide, giving the autofocus doubt as to what I was trying to focus on. By being overly cautious to not mess up my framing, I ended up missing the shots entirely. I’m glad I figured it out, but it was a bit annoying it happened so late in the day.

    Which is in many ways a long-winded way of saying, expect more shots of this bird posing, rather than flying.

    1/2000sec, f/5.6, ISO 800, 159mm

    The advice we were given when shooting Haze was a faster shutter speed of 1/2000th, because as a smaller owl she moved faster, and to underexpose by at least a full stop to ensure she didn’t blow out as her white plumage moved from shade into the light.

    This next shot is one of the few ones I got of her in a proper flight.

    1/2000sec, f/5.6, ISO 1000, 135mm

    The last time I photographed a barn owl, I found a really good preset that helped bring out the brownish details in their feathers. I didn’t use it much here, because the preset emphasises brown hues whilst dialling back other colours, which robbed the bluebells and green foliage of all their beautiful colour. I did use it once or twice when she landed places where there weren’t too much colour to be lost anyway.

    1/2000sec, f/5.6, ISO 320, 186mm

    I did manage to get a few decent shots of Haze in flight as she took off from spots, including when she took off from the spot above.

    1/2000sec, f/5.6, ISO 1250, 128mm

    It was still tempting to use the preset, even given it turned the lovely spring leaves into something more autumnal. Definitely one that’s more use in autumn and winter. In this next shot she’d flown off into a more distant tree, requiring me to use all of my zoom range.

    1/2000sec, f/7.1, ISO 250, 500mm

    I did not end up with that many shots of Haze, on account of my issues focussing on her whilst she flew.

    Our third bird was a southern white faced owl called Zazu.

    1/3200sec, f/7.1, ISO 8000, 500mm

    Zazu was my favourite of the birds we saw this day. She was titchy, but with light grey feathers and those glorious orange eyes. Being smaller still, the shutter speed went another notch faster, up to 1/3200th.

    For a few shots I couldn’t resist using the same preset as before, sacrificing the colour of the bluebells in order to bring out those lovely eyes.

    1/3200sec, f/6.3, ISO 10000, 400mm

    As you can see, whenever she landed in a shady spot, my ISO crept into five figures. Luckily she often landed in less-shady locations.

    1/3200sec, f/6.3, ISO 2000, 428mm

    It was very easy to get carried away shooting this bird. How could you not?

    1/3200sec, f/7.1, ISO 16000, 500mm

    A few times when she landed on the fallen tree next to her trainer, I broke out the brown preset for some deep oranges.

    1/3200sec, f/6.3, ISO 5000, 363mm

    Whenever she flew, she looked like a dart.

    1/3200sec, f/5.6, ISO 2000, 254mm

    Zazu’s colours – various shades of grey with those eyes – matched perfectly with the bluebells and the brown of the logs she would land on.

    1/4000sec, f/7.1, ISO 2500, 500mm1/4000sec, f/5.6, ISO 6400, 270mm

    As you can see, I decided that 1/3200th wasn’t quite enough, so upped the shutter speed to 1/4000th.

    She briefly landed on her trainer’s hand within a reasonable camera range, so I can give you an idea of her diminutive size.

    1/4000sec, f/6.3, ISO 3200, 400mm

    Zazu was happy to flit between several different spots, giving us some variety in our shots.

    1/1600sec, f/6.3, ISO 1000, 254mm

    Sometimes, he landed in the only little bit of light in an otherwise shady spot.

    1/4000sec, f/7.1, ISO 3200, 500mm

    Although I’ve mostly tried to keep the trainers out of these shots (and to be fair, they did an excellent job of staying out of the way), I couldn’t resist this one as a trainer helped Zazu find a piece of food she was missing.

    1/4000sec, f/7.1, ISO 3200, 500mm

    Soon, though, it was time to say goodbye to little Zazu, who stood in one last little spot of light as her swansong.

    1/4000sec, f/7.1, ISO 4000, 500mm

    Finally it was time for the fourth and final bird, a long eared owl called Eileen.

    1/2500sec, f/7.1, ISO 8000, 500mm

    Eileen also had a decent knack of flying about and landing in patches of light.

    1/2500sec, f/6.3, ISO 4000, 324mm

    Occasionally, quite close.

    1/2500sec, f/8, ISO 3200, 363mm

    It was only when we got to Eileen that I finally got the hang of shooting the owls in flight. As I said earlier, it just required the courage to frame closer to the bird so that the autofocus knew what I was actually trying to photograph.

    1/2500sec, f/5.6, ISO 4000, 300mm

    Although I was obviously mostly after shots of Eileen flying low over the bluebells, giving a nice colourful backdrop, sometimes the shots with the large trees in the background worked just as nicely.

    1/3200sec, f/7.1, ISO 10000, 500mm

    Eileen had no trouble flying. In many ways it was harder to keep her still, she had bags of energy and so was happy to constantly fly up and down the bluebell-strewn area of the wood for us to fill our memory cards. Which obviously gave me the problem in the edit of selecting which shots to keep and which to bin (not that I bin many shots unless they’re a technical write-off – that is, motion blurred, out of focus, or framed so I completely miss the subject).

    1/3200sec, f/7.1, ISO 8000, 428mm

    Which is to say, here’s a lot of flying photos of an owl.

    1/3200sec, f/5.6, ISO 4000, 300mm

    On at least one pass she let out a hoot and I captured her with her mouth open.

    1/3200sec, f/5.6, ISO 4000, 167mm

    The light on Eileen was often uneven – she was probably in the shade in many of the shots above – but sometimes she caught the light.

    1/3200sec, f/6.3, ISO 5000, 363mm

    Occasionally I was able to get away with slightly wider framing to get more bluebells in the shot.

    1/3200sec, f/5.6, ISO 4000, 238mm

    After a while, Eileen was more open to the idea of sitting still for brief moments.

    1/3200sec, f/6.3, ISO 2500, 451mm1/3200sec, f/7.1, ISO 3200, 500mm

    Which also led to some dramatic takeoff shots.

    1/3200sec, f/7.1, ISO 3200, 500mm

    Although most of my shots of Eileen in flight are her with spread wings, because that generally looks better, there is also something quite impressive about seeing her wings in a downward position.

    1/3200sec, f/6.3, ISO 2500, 400mm

    We closed the day with Eileen sitting at the base of a tree, poking her head around. She was, to be fair, a little bemused by the assignment, but eventually we got something workable.

    1/3200sec, f/6.3, ISO 3200, 451mm1/3200sec, f/5.6, ISO 2500, 343mm

    We got one last post in a spot of light and one last flyby, and then it was time to go home.

    1/3200sec, f/7.1, ISO 2000, 472mm1/3200sec, f/5.6, ISO 3200, 128mm

    This experience suitably scratched my itch for bluebells and wildlife. It is a little frustrating that it took me a little while to warm into it but I do feel out of the photography ‘zone’ at the moment for reasons I can’t quite fathom. It did also feel nice to photograph something other than trains, because although I love doing that, I’ve not been flexing my other photography muscles much recently.

    That said, I am pretty pleased with myself that I’ve been able to take the 1,100 photos I took on this day, edit them, select the best (albeit perhaps with not as much selectiveness as I should have) and post them in the space of only a week.

    May is going to start out as a bit of a blue month, because my next post will also feature some sizeable patches of bluebells.

    As ever, although moreso in this post than most, there are a lot more shots in the gallery below.

    #birds #birdsOfPrey #bluebells #nature #Photography #sussex #travel #wildlife