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blackfox



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time for a New Years thread if theres any interest  on here still . all mine taken in poor light with a olympus omd1-mkiii +100-400 lens 

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Bob Bowen



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Brightened my day Jeff. Rain never seems to stop in Somerset of late. Keep the images coming please.

blackfox



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no problem bob. ..weird uploader not working

Graham Whistler



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Happy YY Jeff more good pixs keep them coming!

Iain



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A nice set of pics again Jeff, you have mastered that Olympus.

chrisbet



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It never ceases to amaze me how wide a wingspan owls have.

blackfox



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Cheers Iain , just found out a new focusing trick for stills and video to . No one seems to have sussed it before

Eric



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blackfox wrote:
Cheers Iain , just found out a new focusing trick for stills and video to . No one seems to have sussed it before Any interest/use to us non Olympus users?

blackfox



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No it’s just a hidden switchable menu function to enlarge the target area Eric . There are two methods and the normally used one doesn’t allow a focus box this one does ,ideal for keeping a small bird in eye focus

blackfox



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try this  uploaded from my flickrstream as uploader not working 
the inspector general by jeff and jan  cohen, on Flickr

blackfox



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and another 
flex by jeff and jan  cohen, on Flickr

berry nice by jeff and jan  cohen, on Flickr

Eric



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blackfox wrote:
No it’s just a hidden switchable menu function to enlarge the target area Eric . There are two methods and the normally used one doesn’t allow a focus box this one does ,ideal for keeping a small bird in eye focus There are hidden gems in all these cameras that take time to evaluate their usability for your needs.

Its taken me 3 months to discover I can configure a fn button next to the shutter button to do a viewfinder playback of the taken images on my Sony. Now I don’t need to move the camera away from the eye, just move index finger between two adjacent buttons. :banghead:

jk



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blackfox wrote:
No it’s just a hidden switchable menu function to enlarge the target area Eric . There are two methods and the normally used one doesn’t allow a focus box this one does ,ideal for keeping a small bird in eye focus Similar feature on the Fuji X series cameras.
Very useful feature.

Olympus and Sony seem a bit ahead of Fuji and Nikon with this technology but the Z9 may address this.

blackfox



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Iain



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I'm trying to load pics from flicker but they seem to have changed everything. Any help appreciated.

blackfox



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BB code cut and paste iain 
fields of gold by jeff and jan  cohen, on Flickr

chrisbet



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Just be aware that some photo sites assign temporary URLs to the images which expire, so images may disappear from the forum.

Not sure if Flickr do this but it is always safer to upload the image from your machine using the blue cross in the editor.

blackfox



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chrisbet wrote:
Just be aware that some photo sites assign temporary URLs to the images which expire, so images may disappear from the forum.

Not sure if Flickr do this but it is always safer to upload the image from your machine using the blue cross in the editor.
Which was not working last week hence. I uploaded a couple via Flickr , it’s now working again !!

Iain



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blackfox wrote:
BB code cut and paste iain 
fields of gold by jeff and jan  cohen, on Flickr
That’s what I thought but when I clicked it nothing happened. I restarted the pc and it’s working now so will load some images later.

blackfox



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couple of goldfinch shots through double glazed windows , lazy day shooting from the settee 

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Iain



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Here is a few from this year.


DS5_0373 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr



DS5_0352 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr

Richard_M

 

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I picked up a Nikkor Z 100-400mm lens last week, and on Saturday I took it out for a test run using a 1.4tc on a Nikon Z fc.

The morning was dull and overcast which I felt would be a good test, considering with the TC fitted the lens was f/8. The combo worked extremely well and now I'm wondering if I should sell my 500pf and keep using this setup.

#1 Welcome Swallow


#2 Common Bronzewing


#3 Eastern Spinebill


#4 Black Swan


#5 New Holland Honeyeater



#6 Sulphur-crested ****atoo


#7 Sorry not a bird. It does show the detail with fur instead of feathers. (this image can be deleted if inappropriate)

Iain



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They look clean and sharp Richard.

jk



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Nice images Richard.
What sort of camera to subject distances are you getting for these images.

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Iain wrote:
They look clean and sharp Richard. Thank you Iain, I was very pleased with the performance of the lens.

Eric



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jk wrote:
Nice images Richard.
What sort of camera to subject distances are you getting for these images.
Thank you Jonathan.

Obviously they varied and all of these are crops, some more than others.

#3 Eastern Spinebill would have been the closest at around 5mtrs, where this Pink-eared Duck would've been around 25mtrs


Graham Whistler



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More super pixs thank you Richard,Jeff and Eric

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More super pixs thank you Richard,Jeff and Eric

Eric



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Eric



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We had a touch of CoRvid 19 last week.

19 Corvids on the back lawn. 

By the time I grabbed the camera there were only a few left. 

Here’s a couple….



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Iain



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Wish my corvid (covid) would disappear that quick. o.O

Eric



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Iain wrote:
Wish my corvid (covid) would disappear that quick. o.O There weren’t as many today…so only CoRvid 9. But they came a little closer…




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Eric



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Iain wrote:
Wish my corvid (covid) would disappear that quick. o.O Have you got the dreaded lurgy?

blackfox



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a couple of places I frequent are dark woodland pools and I tend to suffer from having to use high i.s.o values in the winter with my main lens a olympus 100-400 f6.3 .. the other day my mate was selling up his nikon gear due to switching to sony and I knew he had a 300mm f4 af-s with a dodgy focus motor ,  I have now bought it complete with a nikon to MFT adaptor . and although manual focus its proving to be a winner couple with the olympus i.b.i.s and good focus peaking im getting some nice sharp shots with it as below . M/F HANDHELD .

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chrisbet



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There is a lot to be said for using manual focus, rather than letting the camera decide what to focus on and getting it wrong more often than not!

Iain



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Eric wrote:
Have you got the dreaded lurgy? Yes, over the worst of it now but banging my head against the wall waiting to get out.

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From my wander around a local reserve this weekend using the Nikkor Z 100-400mm with 1.4tc on Z fc body

#1 Tawny Frogmouth chick


#2 Golden-headed Cisticola


#3 Red-browed Finch


#4 Rainbow Lorikeet


#5 Australian Reed-Warbler


#6 Black Swan on take off. I needed a faster shutter speed


#7 Red Wattlebird


#8 Purple Swamphen

jk



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Really like the picture of the Golden-headed Cisticola.
The weather in Melbourne is my preference for bird watching...... hot.
UK weather is not conducive to me wanting to sit in dark, cold, damp places where you are more likely to get trenchfoot than a decent picture!

Eric



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I was going to ask Richard what that blue background was :lol:

Richard_M

 

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jk wrote:
Really like the picture of the Golden-headed Cisticola.
The weather in Melbourne is my preference for bird watching...... hot.
UK weather is not conducive to me wanting to sit in dark, cold, damp places where you are more likely to get trenchfoot than a decent picture!
I was lucky with the Cisticola, it landed on some reeds near where I was standing.

If you have been watching any of the Australian Open, it has been hot and humid of late. Although we're currently having a couple of days of stormy weather.

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Eric wrote:
I was going to ask Richard what that blue background was :lol: I feel for you all during the winter months. This is why I go out photographing native orchids and fungi during Autumn and Winter.

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I decided to have a go at photographing Grey-headed Flying Foxes (Fruit Bats) skimming the water. It was so hot, 36DegC, I didn't stay too long. The bats are fair moving as they skim the water. Gives me an excuse to go back again.

The Z fc and 100-400mm struggled at times getting the subjects in-focus before they skimmed the water as they came out of the trees. Also the 5fps just wasn't fast enough. If I get a Z 9 I will endeavour to try it again. 

Flying foxes skim rivers, creeks or lakes to get their bellies wet, then lick the water off their fur during hot days to cool down.

#1


#2


#3


#4


#5


#6



#7

Richard_M

 

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I went birding prior to photographing the Flying Foxes

Nikon Z fc with 100-400mm plus 1.4tc

#1 Sacred Kingfisher


#2 Dusky Woodswallow


#3 Willie Wagtail 


#4 White-naped Honeyeaters 


#5 Yellow-faced Honeyeater


#6 Eastern Rosella

blackfox



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couple of stonechat shots from mid week olympus omd1-mkiii and 100-400 lens hand held 

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Graham Whistler



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Super quality Jeff!

Iain



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Lollypop on a Stick.

DS5_2065 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr

blackfox



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couple from yesterday at the local N/R .. while posting the woodpecker to flickr last night I noticed on my stats that I have now exceeded 10 million views in total ,so feeling quiet chuffed 

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Graham Whistler



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Two young GS Woodpeckers: Sony A1 600mm lens 1/640sec f10 ISO2000

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Iain



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Nice shots Jeff and Graham.

blackfox



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linnet and little egret from last week 

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jk



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Might close to that little egret Jeff.

Nice shots but you need to get some spray colour on those drab UK birds as they look very dreary compared with the Australian ones.
:lol:

Iain



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A Red Kite and a Buzzard.


DS5_2713 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr



DS5_2705 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr

Iain



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A Willow Tit in the sun.


500_3298 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr

Eric



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What a lovely shot, of an infrequently seen (around here), beautiful bird.

Iain



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Eric wrote:
What a lovely shot, of an infrequently seen (around here), beautiful bird. We are lucky to still have two places where they are about with Marsh tits in the same locations to cause some confusion.

blackfox



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couple of recent water rail shots 

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Graham Whistler



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Jeff more nice ones, I have only once seen and photographed one, well done catching that. Sory now new pixs from me had a very busy time after storm power flash in mains took out my computer. New one now in place with nice upgrade but bank is lower by £2500!!!! Insurance no pay "Act of God"

Eric



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see post 62

Iain



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Eric wrote:
Eric, I take it you were speechless about Grahams insurance not paying for the PC. :lol:

Iain



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Graham Whistler wrote:
Jeff more nice ones, I have only once seen and photographed one, well done catching that. Sory now new pixs from me had a very busy time after storm power flash in mains took out my computer. New one now in place with nice upgrade but bank is lower by £2500!!!! Insurance no pay "Act of God" Something needs to be done about insurance companies finding any excuse not to pay out

Eric



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Iain wrote:
Eric wrote:
Eric, I take it you were speechless about Grahams insurance not paying for the PC. :lol:
I tried several times to post my comment but it was blank each time…….weird.

I was actually complementing Jeff on those super photos of the Water Rail. I’ve never been close enough and without reed /scrub obscuring view to even consider a photo.  They were excellent.

Iain



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Eric wrote:
I tried several times to post my comment but it was blank each time…….weird.

I was actually complementing Jeff on those super photos of the Water Rail. I’ve never been close enough and without reed /scrub obscuring view to even consider a photo.  They were excellent.
They are. Again I’m very lucky to have a site that they show quite well.

jk



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Graham, have you asked them to prove that it was an act of god and not some other action?
If it was an act of god then surely you can raise a legal case against this god person for negligence and the insurance company should foot the legal fees.

Another reason to spend no money with them.

Graham Whistler



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Evening Fkight in Chichester Harbour this evening. Sony A1 with 200mm lens

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Eric



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Reading a magazine and sipping my coffee I was suddenly rudely interrupted with a huge bang on the patio doors. Obviously a bird strike but not the normal glancing blow. This was a full pelt collision. I saw the dove fall amongst the pots on the patio so leapt up to see if it was stunned. 

There stomping on it was a beautiful Sparrowhawk. I instinctively waved the magazine at the bird hoping to save the dove. Despite being only 3 feet away from me the hawk glowered at me indignantly and took off with the dove under slung. The hawk dropped it in the border then swooped round and through the bushes (remarkable agility) to land on the dove and continue stomping.

The dove was clearly dead as it fell like a stone from the hawk grip landing upside down. So I resolved to let nature continue and went for the camera.

Taken at an angle (to make things worse) through double glazing in poor 12,800iso light, it was never going to be really sharp. But I stupidly didn’t check the shutter speed ….1/100th for a ducking and plucking bird was a little sloooow.  

Unfortunately before I could change speed, the hawk had enough of being watched and took off with his meal into the woodland, leaving me with the feathers …….which Jan insisted I had to collect up before she was ‘going out there’.  

Nature can be brutal. 




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jk



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Not so bad for a Sony wundercamera! 
Well caught Eric.

I think that you are very lucky to have 'doves that act as bait' for the sparrowhawk.
All I get here is the three buzzards who circle over looking for rabbits stupid enough to be out in the field in daylight. 
I can see rabbits in the field in the summer mornings and evenings but seldom if ever in the day.

Eric



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jk wrote:
Not so bad for a Sony wundercamera! 
Well caught Eric.

I think that you are very lucky to have 'doves that act as bait' for the sparrowhawk.
All I get here is the three buzzards who circle over looking for rabbits stupid enough to be out in the field in daylight. 
I can see rabbits in the field in the summer mornings and evenings but seldom if ever in the day.
Shoot one…that will get the buzzards and kites down. :lol:


Alternatively Hercules says you can borrow some of his rabbits as decoys……




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To be honest I don’t know why I bother shooting through dirty double glazing (haven’t cleaned it for 3/4 weeks) in dull weather. It’s not so bad if you shoot straight through the glass but at any angle is an extra quality loss. That said it always scrubs off some of the IQ from any camera, but the Sony seems to suffer from artefacts that need more post processing …..not a good recipe for dull weather work.

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Not too bad through double glazing, a nice Sparrowhawk although the dove might not think that. :lol:

jk



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Looks like those rabbits are sensible and staying out of clear sight.  Best stick to the edges.

Eric



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jk wrote:
Looks like those rabbits are sensible and staying out of clear sight.  Best stick to the edges. Says a lot about my wife.
A proclivity for statues of rabbits and naked men. :lol:

Eric



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Iain wrote:
Not too bad through double glazing, a nice Sparrowhawk although the dove might not think that. :lol: Although I thought I heard it chirp “who’s a pretty boy?” one last time. :lol:

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Good Sparrowhawk shot Eric we had one do the same with a woodpigeon three days ago. This is another of my Little Owl shoot from last year A1Sony.

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Graham Whistler



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Titchfield Haven yesterday with Sony A1 and 200-600mm lens.

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Iain



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Trying to get used to the Sony way of working. A Bullfinch, not a easy bird to get the eye on but the Sony has not done bad.


DSC00298-Edit by Iain Clyne, on Flickr

Eric



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Eye recognition for birds works ok but will always struggle with black birds (or black headed) and black eyes. 

There is often insufficient delineation between the two shades of black. 

If the bird turns its head to gain a highlight you will see the camera lock on much better.

chrisbet



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Can anyone identify these?



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Graham Whistler



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Chris not enough detail but my best would be a House Martin? Eric or Jeff may do better.

Iain



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chrisbet wrote:
Can anyone identify these?



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Graham is spot on Chris, it’s a House Martin.

chrisbet



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Thanks - they only settle on that wire for a few mins and by time I have the nikon they have gone! I guess they are on their migration flight.

Iain



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chrisbet wrote:
Thanks - they only settle on that wire for a few mins and by time I have the nikon they have gone! I guess they are on their migration flight. They are just starting to arrive depending on where you are in the country. I've just seen my first one this week.

chrisbet



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It will probably take our 2 another week to fly the 1000 miles to you!

Eric



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Winds from SE next few days, should be an influx.

Don’t know why again, I got another blank post that I cannot edit.o.O

Iain



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A Jay form today with the Sony A9 and 200-600 at 600mm.

 

DSC01518 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr

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A Red Kite in a very bland sky and a male Chaffinch looking for a mate.


DSC02145 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr



DSC02028 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr

blackfox



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thanks to being able to contact iain on another forum I have now found you all again photos will follow shortly

blackfox



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heres a few sandwich terns on a rock as the tide rises 

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blackfox



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and a couple of approachable birds over the last couple of months a confiding water rail and a friendly wheatear

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Iain



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Nice shots Jeff.

blackfox



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couple from yesterday . I recently bought a  NIKON 300mm f4 AFS lens off a friend due to the focus motor being broken ,got it for a song .apart from the motor its in pristine condition .. and having had one when I used nikon I took a chance .. using it on the olympus via a adaptor means using MF  but the olympus focus peaking aid is the best I have ever used and I can even do b.i.f with it . so heres a couple of sample shots of a dipper at the waterfalls both MF-handheld- focus peaking 

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jk



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Good shots Jeff.
Like the new logo as well.

Iain



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That lens seems to work fine Jeff.

blackfox



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Iain wrote:
That lens seems to work fine Jeff. Very pleased with it Iain ,I can even get b.i.f with it .. the olympus AF version circa £2000 this one cost me £105 .. and I was able to test it before buying . Tbh it’s a toss up between the AF 100-400 and this one each has there uses and both focus really close , now need to find a cheap Nikon fit 1.4 t.c

Iain



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Tawny Owl Chick. Not the best photo due to big crop.



DSC03676 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr

blackfox



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I got one last week too

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Iain



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blackfox wrote:
I got one last week too

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Not the easiest to get. I’m lucky we put up two boxes and both have been used for the last three years.

blackfox



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trying out some menu/setting  changes on my olympus 1-mkiii to enable better b.i.f shots it seems to have worked quiet well to ,photos below

blackfox



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Iain



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blackfox wrote:

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They look good Jeff.

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-Looking good Jeff!

Iain



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A swift, this was a big crop as it was a distance away, but the Sony has caught it and in focus. Just testing the limits of this camera lens combo. The black dots are fly's.



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jk



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Nice catch Iain.
What sort of distance and what focal length?

Iain



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jk wrote:
Nice catch Iain.
What sort of distance and what focal length?
It was at 600mm the distance I'm not sure, its a big crop.

blackfox



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little egret in flight .. olympus 1-mkiii +100-400 handheld .. so = to 800mm 

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chrisbet



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Looks like a kingfisher to me ...

Graham Whistler



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Feeding birds in a smaller garden is not always good news. My trail camera as reported in past posts  pick-up rats from time to time but this is another story see my u-tube footage from 3 nights ago: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sFMmg2p9dVM

Iain



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Now its time to set up the flash lights and camera and get some pics Graham.

jk



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I say get a decent cat or a terrier that will sort out the rats!
Badgers will get rid of your slugs and snails.

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Badger was still there again at about 2.00 am we put up a red flashing scare flashing light but Badger just looked at it and carried on eating. This poor chap perhaps is just back from Ukraine or maybe badger or fox had a go? We are about to stop bird feeding now let the youg learn to find their own. We start again in Oct.

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blackfox



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some sandwich tern shots from this week . olympus omd.1-mkiii +100-400 hand held 

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Graham Whistler



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Shoot in the woods yesterday. All with Sony A1 with 200-600mm lens plus x1.4 most at ISO 3200 but gt Tit was at 5000 ISO

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blackfox



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some  shots of black necked grebes last week taken in the rain . private reserve on a island with gated access . massive crops on these shots but there that rare its worth it 

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More from above shoot. The A1 can be pushed very hard in poor light this is shot at ISO 6400! Noise free A3 pin sharp print as processed in Camera Raw latest Photshop. 1/400sec f9  Lens 600-200mm plus x1.4 hand held.

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blackfox



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a swallow down the estuary over high tide yesterday ,not easy 

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Iain



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A Kestrel taken with the Sony A9 and Sony 200-600mm.



DSC04984 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr



DSC04994 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr

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Looks like it is working for you too Ian. That 200-600 Sony lens is very good value for money, pin-sharp but a tiny bit too heavy for long handheld walks!

Iain



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Graham Whistler wrote:
Looks like it is working for you too Ian. That 200-600 Sony lens is very good value for money, pin-sharp but a tiny bit too heavy for long handheld walks! Having come down from a D5 and 300mm f2.8 with tc the Sony kit is almost half the weight so I can manage it for now Graham. Might be different in a few years time.

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These arethree of Eric's Sony A1 high ISO and quite big blow-ups he wanted me to process in Photoshop. I did my normal work on the RAW files including some noise reduction but after crop are much as the files he sent me. I know he would like to have some comments please?

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Iain



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Graham Whistler wrote:
These arethree of Eric's Sony A1 high ISO and quite big blow-ups he wanted me to process in Photoshop. I did my normal work on the RAW files including some noise reduction but after crop are much as the files he sent me. I know he would like to have some comments please?

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They look good, sharp, nice colours I like them.

Eric



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Just a little background regarding Graham processing my files.

Since swopping to Sony I have come to realise that the raw converter in Affinity photo for iPad isn’t doing a good enough job. 

Unfortunately Photoshop for IPad is woefully pruned down (they’ve even left out a sharpening option !!!) so I am considering ditching the iPad (I hear Robert laughing) and reverting to more traditional editing machinery that takes the full fat Photoshop.

Graham kindly volunteered to process some images from a recent outing to enable me to compare the performance of the two packages.

There is no comparison!  Grahams work has convinced me I need to spend more money :doh:  to get back into main stream computing/photo editing. 

As an example of how the two packages handle and process raw files here is a huge sectional enlargement of the courting couple, to show the harshness of Affinity for iPad, compared to traditional Photoshop….


Affinity photo….







Photoshop…



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Graham Whistler



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Another of Erics I have worked on for him. Whole image and crop so as you see big blow up. Worked again in Photoshop as above Eric took this with 832mm lens 1000 ISO 1/2000 sec f9

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Eric



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Graham Whistler wrote:
Another of Erics I have worked on for him. Whole image and crop so as you see big blow up. Worked again in Photoshop as above Eric took this with 832mm lens 1000 ISO 1/2000 sec f9

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What the exif doesn’t tell is that I was leaning out of a caravan window, totally off balance and got this one shot before it winged it.

Theres a bit of a halo around the swallow, Graham?

Graham Whistler



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Yes Eric just a bit too much USM my fault. These two pixs from Chichester Harbour yesterday Sony A1 and 200-600mm lens. 

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Avocets in Farlington Marsh yesterday. Sony A1 with 840mm lens including the x1.4. 

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Dunnock in the garden we also have young Greenfinches and Goldfinches no pix of them yet.

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Fight! Fight! Two Kingfishers having a go at each other.


DSC05865 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr



DSC05866 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr

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Well caught Ian, super photos both are female.

blackfox



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a very confiding cormorant taken while on holiday in dorset .olympus 1-mkiii +100-400 handheld 

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Eric



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blackfox wrote:
a very confiding cormorant taken while on holiday in dorset .olympus 1-mkiii +100-400 handheld 

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Absolutely exquisite, Jeff.

Is that a big crop or were you quite close?

jk



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Iain wrote:
Fight! Fight! Two Kingfishers having a go at each other.


DSC05865 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr



DSC05866 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr
Great capture Iain.  So well done.

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Jeff amazing detail well done!

Eric



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Young Yaffle

Late evening visitor to the darkest corner of the garden :banghead:

8000iso due to low flat light and a heavy crop. 
Tried to get closer by hiding in bushes…….and got gnat bit for my trouble. :whip:

This wildlife photography is a(literal) pain.



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Good capture and noise still not too bad at 8000 ISO

Iain



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Nice capture Eric even at the higher iso.

Iain



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A juvenile Chiffchaff  taken on a Sony A7r iii.


DSC00808-Edit by Iain Clyne, on Flickr

Eric



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Iain wrote:
A juvenile Chiffchaff  taken on a Sony A7r iii.


DSC00808-Edit by Iain Clyne, on Flickr
Excellent. You are certainly getting good results with the A7r iii

Iain



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Eric wrote:
Excellent. You are certainly getting good results with the A7r iii It produces good images of static subjects and some moving but if there is too much movement, like BIF, I find the A9 is far better. The one surprising  thing I found with the A7r iii is how capable it is at high ISO considering it has 42mp.

Iain



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A cheeky Chaffinch to get things moving again.


DSC07341 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr

jk



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Iain wrote:
It produces good images of static subjects and some moving but if there is too much movement, like BIF, I find the A9 is far better. The one surprising  thing I found with the A7r iii is how capable it is at high ISO considering it has 42mp. Modern sensors dont behave like the first, second generation sensors, the new support chipsets are designed to minimise high ISO noise.    Most modern last two or three years will happilywork at 12800 ISO and look like Nikon D2X at ISO 800.

Iain



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jk wrote:
Modern sensors dont behave like the first, second generation sensors, the new support chipsets are designed to minimise high ISO noise.    Most modern last two or three years will happilywork at 12800 ISO and look like Nikon D2X at ISO 800. Thats right Jonathan. You used to think twice before going to 1600 iso even if you needed too.

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Iain wrote:
A cheeky Chaffinch to get things moving again.


DSC07341 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr
Which camera are you using on that shot, Iain?

Eric



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jk wrote:
Modern sensors dont behave like the first, second generation sensors, the new support chipsets are designed to minimise high ISO noise.    Most modern last two or three years will happilywork at 12800 ISO and look like Nikon D2X at ISO 800. But little has been done to lift the bar on noise free ISO.
The D3 would return noise free images at 3200 outdoors….and then fall off a cliff.

I know a lot of people want to use 12800 but I would be happier if they had improved on lower iso. Noise free at 5000 would be more useful.

jk



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Eric have you tried Topaz DeNoise AI v6.x it is really excellent?

Iain



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Eric wrote:
Which camera are you using on that shot, Iain? This was with the A9 and 200-600mm

Iain



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I think this Buzzard has been watching the Karate Kid.


DSC07874 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr

chrisbet



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He had better check his undercarriage is down and locked before landing ....

Eric



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jk wrote:
Eric have you tried Topaz DeNoise AI v6.x it is really excellent? Not available on ipad.

Maybe in the new year ;-)

blackfox



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a pair of little egrets having a fight on the local sea marsh ,taken while taking the dog for a walk olympus 1-mkiii +100-400 hand held .. unfortunately I still had the camera set for static shots of the red arrows at a local airfield they were using as a base for Rhyl airshow . but got the shots


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Iain



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A Willow Tit from yesterday.



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Iain



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Another bump for this thread. A female Marsh Harrier that came in close, well the closest I've ever had one.


DSC00304 by Iain Clyne, on Flickr

blackfox



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couple from last weekend ,been laid up for a few weeks due to a bad fall up in the welsh mountains . smashed my face and leg up badly so only just getting out and about again 

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Iain



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Glad you’re recovering Jeff and nice pics.

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Jeff some good pixs again glat you are up and about again. Studio portrait with electronic flash of a tame friendly Barn Owl.

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jk



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Jeff, sorry to hear about your fall.  Glad you are recovering and getting out again.
Take care.

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T^awny Owl from the same studio shoot using pro studio flash and a friendly tame Owl.

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Iain



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Those are nice Graham. The setting looks very natural.

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Titchfield Haven this morning could not stay long as parking meter took my £2 and would not give me a ticket. Redshank with 200-600mm lens and x1.4 on the A1. 

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Iain



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That’s good with the TC on Graham.

blackfox



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the threads need updating this is a 2023 image . I tried but it wouldn't have it 

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blackfox



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couple more from the same session , now have upgraded camera body to the olympus E-M1X  which is a twin processor job with built in bird i.d software the tracking works extremely well to 

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