There are a bunch of them in my garden. Them, green- and goldfinches.
Very nice photo again, thank you for sharing your process and stories with your pictures!
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There are a bunch of them in my garden. Them, green- and goldfinches.
Very nice photo again, thank you for sharing your process and stories with your pictures!
We get goldfinches but no chaffinches or greenfinches. I don't think there is enough woodland for them, mostly farmland, but there are a lot of teasles, which the goldfinches love for their seeds.
I would love to see any pictures you have of the greenfinches, they are such beautiful birds.
Glad you like it ๐
This is the only photo i have of any of the finches, luckily it's a green one:
My longest lens is an old manual Nikon AI 100mm (on a m43 camera) and it's too far away for when they're sitting in the tree really. They don't come to the feeder no more since i made it harder to reach for the parakeets. I am thinking about getting a longer lens though.
*sorry i have no better photo ๐
You're doing very well with that setup, I am impressed ๐ And thanks for the photo.
I love that feeder as well, a great idea ๐ I'm not sure I wouldn't just have a parakeet feeder if we got them regularly lol
I mean.. it still is a parakeet feeder, they just don't stay longer than a couple minutes and only one at a time. Really i just don't want to anger the people living below me with my feeders. There's also one feeder the parakeets can reach downstairs in the garden, but i don't think it gets refilled much since the parakeets found it.
They still hang out in the tree right in front of me every day, last two weeks a couple's been shagging pretty much every morning. They're also trying to build a cave (two actually) in the insulation of a house opposite me. Now that the sun comes out sometimes, their colors really start to glow, so nice.
@AchtungDrempels @EvilTed too many big lenses. All bird habitats will be gone but everyone will own a 800mm $25k lens. Birding is not 100% about photography. Crazy to see hundreds of monster lenses looking at a zoo escape owl.
Yeah i'm certainly not going to buy a 25k lens, haha. But a bit longer than 100mm would be nice maybe.
There are many habitat restoration projects where I live. You can visit hundreds of hectares of fens and woodland within a few K's of my home, and many more are created each year. It's not all doom. I was a birdwatcher for decades before I picked up a camera to photograph wildlife. It was a way to remember some of the beautiful things I had seen, photography for me doesn't replace the bird watching, it's an addendum.
A nice brown looking finch.
I'll see if I can find one that is a better peach colour lol
What a charmer! Thanks for sharing as always ๐
You're very welcome.
Fantastic picture. Thanks for also talking about shutter speed. It's true that your keeper rate might go down with lower shutter speeds, but IMO it's better to try taking the photo with a slower shutter than not taking one at all.
Thank you ๐
It was about this time I bought my Nikon D850 which, for many reasons, has much superior noise control than the Nikon D7200 I took this with. However, image processing technology has moved on so much that I find myself less concerned with noise now than ever before. I think, if I was taking this shot today, I would probably shoot at ISO 2000 on the D850 to give me the extra shutter speed. What I really need is f/4 500mm ๐
It's certainly true that newer sensors allow you to push ISO much more than in the pas and that FF can go further than a crop sensor. This makes it a lot easier to keep shutter speed up. I just wish that people didn't claim high shutter speeds are the cost of entry for these types of photos.
You hit the other nail in the head - fast glass makes a world of difference.