What’s Up?
The NANPA Town Hall Meeting was much worse than I predicted. Details tomorrow. I did get down to the lake on Tuesday morning in ideal conditions without much to show for my efforts. Kudos to the US Men’s National Soccer Team on advancing to the Knock-Out round of the World Cup by defeating Iran yesterday 1-0. The tension in the second half was unbearable. Young superstar Christian Pulisic was injured as he scored the winning goal in the first half. He managed to finish the half. When he was led to the locker room he looked as if he had survived an horrific car crash. He has already vowed to be on the pitch for Saturday’s clash with the Netherlands.
Today is Wednesday 30 November 2022. This blog post took about two hours to prepare and makes two hundred forty-eight days in a row with a new, educational post just for you. Wherever you are and whatever you are doing, I hope that you too have a great day.
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All images on this card were created by Arthur Morris on the Hooptie Deux at Alafia Banks |
2023 Spoonbill Boat 1-1/2 DAY MINI-IPT: $1199.00.00. Limit: 5 photographers.
A full day on WED 15 FEB and the morning of Thursday 16 FEB 2023: 1 1/2 days.
Two morning and one afternoon photo session (weather permitting) via customized pontoon boat.
For early-arriving folks, artie is throwing in a free afternoon In-the-Field session at a little-known but very active rookery in North Tampa on Sunday 12 February.
We will be leaving the dock in Gibsonton, FL very early for the morning sessions in hopes of photographing a pre-dawn White Ibis blast-off and creating some dramatic silhouettes or pleasing blurs. The morning sessions are planned for the Alafia Banks Roseate Spoonbill Rookery. We have several options for the afternoons including returning to Alafia. We may spend one afternoon on foot at the North Tampa rookery mentioned above. There will be lots of opportunities for flight photography of several species including and especially Roseate Spoonbill. Also likely for flight photography are nesting Brown Pelican, Great Blue Heron, and Double Crested Cormorant, many carrying nesting material. This IPT includes all boat and guide fees, in-the-field instruction from two great leaders, chest waders (feel free to bring your own of course to assure a perfect fit), and three working lunches (Monday thru Wednesday). For the most part we will be standing in mid-calf to knee-deep water behind our tripods. We help you get in and out of the boat safely with your gear. This is likely not the best trip for folks with mobility or balance problems. Note however that some folks opt to stay on the boat to photograph. They usually have lots of chances for flight photography of spoonbills and other species but are almost always pretty far away from the spoonbills that land.
Mid-February is prime time for photographing spoonbills at the absolute peak of breeding plumage. For unknown reasons, the spoonbills at Alafia are much more colorful than the birds that breed at Stick Marsh later in the season. The Hooptie IPT represents an incredible opportunity and I do hope that you can join us. All of the images on the cards were made on the Hooptie Duex during the last two weeks of February, prime time for the spoonies in mega-breeding plumage.
You may hold your spot with an e-mail request. Then, you may either secure your spot by calling Jim or Jennifer at the office at 863-692-0906 and leaving the $599 deposit on credit card or sending your check for payment in full to us as follows with the check made out to:
BIRDS AS ART
Please send it via US mail here:
BIRDS AS ART
PO BOX 7245
Indian Lake Estates, FL 33855
If you call to leave your deposit, you will be asked to mail your check for the balance ASAP. Be sure to give us your e-mail address.
Images courtesy of our guide; copyright 2017 Captain James Shadle (aka Froggie). All of the images here were created at Alafia Banks. Card creation and design by Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART. |
Everybody Wants Spoonbills!
Roseate Spoonbill is one of if not the most sought after avian photographic subjects in Florida. They are generally hard to find and somewhat difficult to approach. They are relatively easy to find at Alafia Banks—heck, you can’t miss seeing them, but even there they can on some days be somewhat difficult to approach. On some days we may be able to get ridiculously close to them. The huge incentive to get out to Alafia Banks in mid-February is the chance to photograph this species at the height of its spectacular breeding plumage…. with long telephoto lenses. A 500 or 600 with a 1.4X TC is perfect for flight.
As above, there will — weather permitting — three boat trips — 2 mornings and 1 afternoon — on this MINI IPT. All to Alafia Banks for spoonbills and Brown Pelicans (with lots of flight photography often with the birds likely carrying nesting material), Double-crested Cormorants, ibises (both Glossy and White) in breeding plumage. Many of the White Ibises will be sporting their spectacular, distended, red, naked (un-feathered) throat pouches—typically larger in the females. In addition, we may get to photograph egrets including Great and Reddish, both in full breeding plumage, shorebirds, and more. There will be lots of flight photography opportunities. Afternoon trips either to Alafia Banks for spoonbills and more or to a more sheltered inland rookery location for a variety of nesting birds. In the event of horrific weather artie will either take the group to Fort DeSoto or will conduct an image review/Photoshop session. This IPT includes lunches on the full day with small group image sharing and review and some over-the-shoulder Photoshop instruction.
The 2023 Expanded Winter/Spoonbill Boat/DeSoto 4-DAY IPT: $2199.00.00. Limit: 5 photographers.
The 2023 Expanded Winter/Spoonbill Boat/DeSoto 4-DAY IPT
Bird photographers, especially those wishing to escape the snow, ice, and freezing winter temperatures to the north of sunny Florida, can add two mornings at Fort DeSoto an afternoon at the little-known but fabulous rookery north of Tampa, a second (free) afternoon at that same rookery, to the 1 1/2 days on the Spoonbill Boat. Shared lodging is a possibility that includes watching the Super Bowl at my home on Sunday 12 February and driving over early to DeSoto. DeSoto is one of the very few bird photography hotspots that has the possibility of being great on any day of the year. It is generally superb in winter with lots of wading birds, terns, both species of pelicans, many species of shorebirds including Marbled Godwit, and lots of flight photography.
You can hold your spot with an e-mail request. Then, you may either secure your spot by calling Jim or Jennifer at the office at 863-692-0906 and leaving the $599 deposit on your credit card or sending your check for payment in full to us as follows with the check made out to:
BIRDS AS ART
Please send it via US mail here:
BIRDS AS ART
PO BOX 7245
Indian Lake Estates, FL 33855
If you call to leave your deposit, you will be asked to mail your check for the balance ASAP. Be sure to give us your e-mail address.
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This image was created on 15 January 2011 on a Spoonbill/Hooptie Deux IPT. Seated in at least a behind my lower tripod, I used the Canon EF 800mm f/5.6L IS USM Lens with the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III (at 1140mm) and the EOS-1D Mark IV. The exposure was determined via histogram and blinkies review. ISO 400. 1/800 sec. at f/11 (stopped down stop). AWB at 8:28:40am on a sunny morning. AF Method unknown. Click on the image to enjoy a high-res version. Image #1 — Roseate Spoonbill — mega-breeding plumage preeningYour browser does not support iFrame. |
Memories of My Most Gorgeous Spoonbill Ever
I was sitting on an uphill slope in my waders. As I struggled to frame the shot in what was a very awkward shooting position, I almost fell over backwards into slightly deeper water. I remember thinking, “It would be very embarrassing to drown in 18 inches of water.” Captain James saw my plight, grabbed my waders between my shoulder blades, and, yanking me up, helped me restore my balance. And create today’s featured image. Check out James’ photo of this same bird on his card above.
I have very fond memories of the EF 800mm f/5.6 lens, all ten pounds of it. The minimum focusing distance, just under 20 feet, was superb for the time and was a lot better than the 45 feet of the FD 800mm f/5.6 lens. As you can see by clicking on today’s featured image, sharpness with the 1.4X III TC was just fine. A great number of images on the Top 100 CD were created with this lens. I was amazed to find that the lens is still in production and is in stock at B&H here. I was also amazed to learn that there is an RF version of this lens, the Canon RF 800mm f/5.6 L IS USM. If you’d like to learn the skinny on the RF version, please get in touch via e-mail.
birds as art: The Avian Photography of Arthur Morris/The Top 100
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birds as art: The Avian Photography of Arthur Morris/The Top 100
This e-book was created on a wing and a prayer in less than two weeks–see the “Harebrained Scheme” blog post here–includes the 67 spectacular images that hung in the Ordover Gallery at the San Diego Natural History Museum in a career-retrospective solo exhibition in 2017. In addition, there are an additional 33 images in the spectacular e-book that barely missed making the show.
This exhibition companion e-book makes it possible for everyone to “visit” TheNAT gallery retrospectively and retroactively, and, in addition, to enjoy seeing my then-top one hundred bird photographs under one roof. Each image includes a title, the species name, the location, relevant EXIF data, and an anecdotal caption.
birds as art: The Avian Photography of Arthur Morris/The Top 100: $23 for the professionally produced CD (includes shipping to US addresses only)
Please click here to purchase the CD. As above, your purchase price includes shipping to all US addresses. If you would like your CD signed on the inside cover with a black Sharpie, you will need to place your order by phone and request a signed copy: 863-692-0906. For our Canadian friends we are offering the CD for $28 with shipping to Canada via phone orders only: 863-692-0906. Those who purchase the CD are advised to copy the file to their computers and then archive the CD.
To purchase via convenient download for $20, click here.
Can you say Class Action lawsuit?!
Artie, just interested to know when processing 10+ year old digital files, are you disappointed in any way, or pleasently surprised compared to today’s tech, processing methods (i.e topaz/adobe), and 4k/5k+ monitors?
Not in the JPEGs. But when magnifying the optimized images, it is easy to see the differences in image quality. That said, John Shaw said something like this a long time ago “A sharp image from a 4MP digital camera blows away film.”
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Like looking at an impressionist painting…stand well back…no pixel peeping please!
Just a quick friendly correction: US beat Iran not Saudi Arabia.
Thanks, fixed, and that was one spectacular goal!
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