About Me

Barrington, IL, United States
I am a amateur wildlife photographer who lives in Barrington Illinois. I will use this blog to display my photographs and share the story of how I captured them. Hopefully, anyone reading this blog will venture outdoors and learn all they can about nature. I am convinced that you first have to learn about something to care about something.

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

New Condo

Here is the new condo. The pics are backwards from what I wanted on here. You can "click" on them to make them larger. I did not carry my tripod over so they are not sharp.


Slate floor in the entryway. Its really beautiful, i'm glad we picked it.
toilet and shower. Our real toilet will be a "dual flush" model. The contractor stuck this one in there so it would pass appraisal but will switch it with our real toilet later.
Upstairs looking towards vanity and sinks. The toilet and shower is to the right and a walk in closet to the left. Its not THAT dark up there, the camera just could not account for the bright lights.
View from kitchen looking towards door (first floor). My "office" is under those stairs. That is where my desk is now only in the unit right across the wall from it.
View from the front door

Friday, April 30, 2010

gobble gobble

Killed a gobbler yesterday. I'll write more tomorrow.






Thursday, April 29, 2010

Great Turkey photos

Last night I had 3 gobblers come into the blind and hang around for about 90 minutes. They never strutted but I did get lots of great shots.

This morning I snuck up to within 15 feet of some gobblers. They were on the other side of a fence and a brush line. I could see their fans and sometimes their heads. I had the safety off and started to squeeze the trigger once but it just was not a responsible shot. There was too much stuff between me and them so I did not. Then I tried to get even closer and spooked them. When you are within 15 feet of several gobblers, do not try to get any closer. LOL

My new sniper suit is awesome BTW. Hopefully I'll get some pics up tonight.


Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Busy but there is hope!

WOW!

In the past two weeks I have been working nearly non-stop. I had to prepare a presentation, travel to Tennessee and give it. Write a 32 page campaign manual for a consulting job that we have and prepare for our biggest event of the year where I'm involved in probably 6-7 different events.

That is in addition to my normal job duties. Yesterday I worked on the campaign manual for 14 hours including being at the office until 3:30 this morning.

But tomorrow I'm leaving for Humansville Missouri and plan on turkey hunting/photography for the next 2.5 days. I wanted to leave tonight but I literally just clicked "send" on that 32 page project. Its in the client's inbox right now and I'm really proud of it.

So I hope I have not bored away any viewers of this blog. Trust me, I'd much rather of been sitting in the woods this whole time.

Friday, April 9, 2010

More macro




I took the redbud while walking across the MU campus the other day on my way home. I took the dogwood blossom in my kitchen. I used a bicycle light to light it from left to right and a flash. I have not even really looked at these. Just converted them to jpeg and threw them up here. I've been too busy to do hardly anything lately.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Fooling around with Macro photography


On the way to work this morning I packed the macro lens. Little did I know the wind was blowing about 20 mph!

I took a few shots. This is one of a dogwood blossom. I tried to focus on the anther.

I think I am going to like macro photography but I need to learn more about it.


Monday, April 5, 2010

Depth of Field and Fighting Birds.....a tough combination



This week I was hoping to get a shot of two male prairie chickens jumping in the air fighting....or at least trying to impress the girls. After watching several of these fights it seems that neither really wants to get hurt or hurt the other one, just look tough for the girls.

Anyway, there is a concept in photography called "depth of field." That is the area of a photograph that can be in focus at any given time in front of and behind the focal point. For a shorter lens, like a cell phone camera or on a point and shoot the depth of field is so large that most people have no reason to even know the term. For larger lenses, the depth of field becomes much smaller. For a lens the size of mine the depth of field is only a couple of inches. This means that I cannot focus on two birds at the same time unless they are both the exact same distance from me. If they are standing at an angle than its impossible.

That would not be a problem because just having one bird in focus during a fight could be pretty attractive. The problem is that they usually jump forward or backwards when they fight, leaving the focal point that I was at and they are FAST. They tend to lay down in front of each other and stare each other down for a few seconds before jumping. Even with that warning I never caught the action when the birds were close enough to make a great photograph. When the birds were a couple of hundred feet away the D.O.F. increases some and it was easier but none of those shots are that great.

Anyway, when I saw the birds face off I would turn up the ISO (what used to be film speed) which allowed me to increase the shutter speed so I could be prepared to capture this fast action without blur. Then I would position the bottom of the frame at the birds feet so I would have room in the frame for them to jump. I also switched the autofocus to "servo" so it would automatically track the forward and backward movement and adjust the autofocus. I still never caught one, darn it!

I still had the time of my life but as I look at these two shots I can't help but wonder about what might have been if I could have gotten them in focus. They are SO CLOSE and they would have been fantastic!!!