Thursday, May 10, 2018

You Don't Always Get The Shot

For every three shots I publish to my website, I probably take 150 or so shots. I cannot decide if that means I'm not very good or if I am way too picky about what I will publish. I am hoping it is the latter, but I think the truth is about the 80/20 rule. Most of the time I am very picky and sometimes I'm not very good. What really hurts is when presented with a potentially great shot and I miss it.

I remember when I first received my current camera. Like a big kid at Christmas, I took it out and I was at a park in Jupiter, Florida, and saw a raccoon swimming toward an island. It was right in front of me and it was one of those once-in-a-lifetime shots. I focused and fired off several shots and thought to myself, "I can't wait to see those when I get home!"

Well, I arrived home and uploaded the camera images and all the shots I had taken were nearly all black. It was like I was shooting in the dark. I learned two things that day. The first was to always check the in-camera replay so I can get an idea of what the shot looks like and more importantly, I spent a week watching every tutorial on the camera I could get my hands on.

I love taking action shots of animals and birds in motion. I have gotten pretty good at it. But in the past and still once in a while, I get so excited about what I am seeing that I do not breathe and make sure I fire off good shots. There were a lot of lost opportunities.

My wife always says that if I was successful on everything I see, then I would not have anything left to shoot for or--if you will--lust after. Perhaps. But there is always something new such as different behaviors, angles, light and so forth.

Still...every time I am in the field or in a blind, or sitting in my chair, I will mess up at least a few times. I have a lot of improvement in me still.

The bottom line is that in all honesty, for every great shot I take, there will be others with wings cut off or necks and heads or the focus or light will not be right. For my skill and experience level, it is part of the photography life. What really hurts is when I only had one shot to get it right because of movement or whatever. There was no second chance. Just to show you what I mean, check out this photo below of a beautiful shot of a Zebra Longwing Butterfly. It was gorgeous and the light was right...and I only had one shot and blew it.


Wednesday, May 9, 2018

The Baby Crane

One of the reasons we moved to this complex in Stuart, Florida, was because the first time we came to look at the place, two Florida Sandhill Cranes walked across the parking lot right by our car. We have come to love those two cranes and even named them, "Ike and Audrey." As you'll probably learn as we go along, my wife and I name pretty much name all the critters we see most often. Three months ago, much excitement ensued as we noticed that Audrey had laid two eggs and the couple were roosting at the nest in the little marsh behind our building.

Ike and Audrey are wild animals. They are not pets but they have come to trust me and often walk right by and sometimes stop to say hello wherever I am set up for the day to take pictures. But now they were going to have babies! How exciting!

Cranes incubate their eggs for 32 days, so we anxiously waited it out. Finally about two months ago, one of the eggs hatched. We were proud craneparents. Sadly, the second egg never hatched and was eventually abandoned.

The little baby crane we called, "Bailey," and it was so small and fluffy. It was a little ball of fluff with long legs. Two days after it was hatched, Ike and Audrey took the baby on its first walk (around the perimeter of the marsh).

The days went by and the walks got longer and Bailey started to grow. It was subtle at first, but after a few weeks, it had tripled in size. It was still fuzzy and dependent on his parents for food. It often sat in a shady spot while Ike and Audrey foraged. For the first month, Bailey had stumps for wings and no tail.

All that has changed and after two months, Bailey has gotten so large so fast. Nearly as tall as its mother now and feathers are starting to replace fuzz. The wing feathers were the first to come in. And then the tail and now all over. From what I've read, Bailey will stay with its parents for ten months and then be turned away to an intermediate stage. Bailey will not find a mate and continue the cycle until it is two years old.

I have chronicled the birth and development of Bailey in pictures from egg until now. It has been such a joy that I will never forget. I cannot wait to do it again next year! Here are a progression of those pictures. Enjoy!


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Friday, May 4, 2018

Ike and the Limpkin

My wife and I tend to name animals we see a lot around the complex where we live. There are too many to list at the moment, but all these animals are wild but reside around where we live.

There is a family of Florida Sandhill Cranes. We first met the "husband" and "wife" over a year ago and after seeing them often, we named them "Ike and Audrey." Recently, the couple had a baby that we named, "Bailey." Bailey was sooo cute and was this little hunk of fluff with long legs. He is probably six weeks old now.

Ike is very protective of Bailey and is constantly on watch. They are used to me, so they do not pay me much mind. But if you are a threat, you better watch out for Ike!

The other day, I saw a Limpkin, which is a large wading bird with wonderful designs in its feathers. It has a long neck, long legs and loves to eat snails. The Limpkin was right beside a thicket by the stream. I headed over there with my camera.

I caught some nice shots of the Limpkin and then noticed Ike come steaming over even though the Limpkin would never eat Bailey, especially since Bailey is now almost the same size as the Limpkin! Besides, Ike's family was over 200 yards away at the time!

Between me and Ike, the Limpkin was not going to hang around to see what happened and went into the thicket below the shore level and hid in the heavy brush. I wanted to see if I could get a few more shots of it and gingerly worked my way into the brush. I found the Limpkin and managed a few shots and decided I had enough of mosquitoes buzzing my head and branches sticking into me and backed out.

When I turned around, Ike was standing there, staring at me. He was no more than three feet away and it was SO comical. He was looking at me like, "Did you get it?" or "Did you chase it off?" I laughed and said that it's still in there and it wasn't going to be chased off. That wasn't good enough for Ike and he just kept bobbing his head at me.

Finally, he must have sensed that it was all okay because he joined his family and they took off across one of the lawns. What follows is an image of the Limpkin before it went into the brush and of a butterfly that was also in the thick brush once I got in there. Photography Prints Sell Art Online

Welcome to the new blog for Natural Florida Photography

Greetings!

My name is William and Natural Florida Photography is me. I specialize in nature photography with my earlier work coming from Maine and most of the last couple of years' images here in Florida. Birds and other wildlife, wildflowers and wetland scenes are my specialty and with my images you can buy prints, stationary, phone covers, beach items, bath products, bedding, home decor and even yoga mats! I am no stranger to blogging and have blogged on various subjects since 1995! I hope you enjoy this one.

I will basically talk about my experiences while taking my images and I promise not to bore you with what equipment I used or the F-stop or ISP or other such things you won't care about. What you will care about is the images and whether or not they come to life for you.

If you would like to see the full measure of my photos, you can click here. Thanks and stay tuned!