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Bird Photography   -   Page   19
Nikon DSLRs and Lenses for bird photography  Rate Topic 
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Posted: Thu Jun 28th, 2018 11:22
 
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Iain



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Eric wrote:
Iain wrote:
One form yesterday.

Again the head doesn't look sharp on the forum.


I reckon it terned it's head.:lol:
:applause:

 




Posted: Thu Jun 28th, 2018 12:02
 
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Graham Whistler



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Twany Owl with young from yesterday. D850 with 80-400mm lens. It was quite late evening, 3200 ISO lens at f5.6 1/200 sec.

Attachment: Tawney1475.jpg (Downloaded 42 times)



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Posted: Thu Jun 28th, 2018 13:55
 
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jk



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I think he is fishing for compliments!
:lol:
Nice one Iain.



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Posted: Thu Jun 28th, 2018 14:13
 
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Iain



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It's getting worse

:lol::lol:

 




Posted: Fri Jun 29th, 2018 01:32
 
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Graham Whistler



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Three Little Owls, D850 again very late evening and 3200 ISO need I say more this made a noise free A3+ print.

Attachment: _DSC1386.jpg (Downloaded 37 times)



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Posted: Fri Jun 29th, 2018 03:56
 
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Eric



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I am a bit peed off with our feathered friends.

Spent a couple of hours in 28deg walking 6km around a meandering boardwalk through reedbeds yesterday and photographed.....a coot and a heron. Oh I did get half a Reed warbler as well.

Think I saw, for a millisecond, a pair of bluethroats chasing each other. Heard a grasshopper warbler, crept up on it ....and it flew off before I could raise the camera.

All the reeds were too high and dense to enable cameras to focus through. So I lost some lovely reed bunting and Sergie poses.
:needsahug:



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Posted: Fri Jun 29th, 2018 05:30
 
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Graham Whistler



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Eric sorry about that often the way you do best in your own back garden and you live in best bit of UK for birds! I'm off on Sunday to Ravenglass for a weeks filming on the little railway but will take a Nikon D500 just in case!



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Posted: Fri Jun 29th, 2018 13:33
 
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Iain



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A Sedge Warbler that was nesting very close to where I took this and feeding young.

Attachment: Web8.jpg (Downloaded 38 times)

 




Posted: Fri Jun 29th, 2018 13:48
 
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Eric



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Graham Whistler wrote:
Eric sorry about that often the way you do best in your own back garden and you live in best bit of UK for birds! I'm off on Sunday to Ravenglass for a weeks filming on the little railway but will take a Nikon D500 just in case!

Hope weather holds for you.



On a positive note, Ive just been told by Mike (whom you met) that my tree creeper is a short toed treecreeper common in Europe but different to the one we get in the UK. So that's a new tick for me as well!:thumbs:

I thought it's bill looked very large but not being up on these sort of distinctions any more, I assumed it had a big 'beak'...because it was french.:lol:



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Posted: Fri Jun 29th, 2018 13:51
 
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Eric



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Iain wrote:
A Sedge Warbler that was nesting very close to where I took this and feeding young.

Nice sedgie,Iain

The grasshopper warbler was close enough to get that sort of shot but was behind the leaves like you have on the left. The D500 preferred the leaves to the warblers eye between them, for some reason. :lol:

One repositioning move and it was gone. :whip:



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