A Great Ending to the JAX IPT. And the a1/a9 iii Dilemma … « Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART

A Great Ending to the JAX IPT. And the a1/a9 iii Dilemma ...

Your Call?

Which of today’s two featured images is the strongest? Why?

Canon Lays Off Beloved Camera Guru, Rudy Winston

From the PetaPixel article here. Thanks to blog regular David Policansky for sharing the link with me.

Last week, Canon USA initiated layoffs that affected multiple departments. While the exact number affected was not provided, it is not insignificant and included Rudy Winston, perhaps the most prominent face of Canon’s US-based brand, PetaPixel has learned.

(Rudy) Winston worked at Canon for nearly 30 years as part of its professional products team and during that time was responsible for training Canon’s staff on new products, creating presentations for customers and dealers, leading numerous writing projects, and providing technical assistance to professional and amateur photographers.

As frequent a face as he was for dealers and media — he was a constant presence at product demonstrations and press events — he is more known as one of the faces of Canon’s photography brand online thanks to his regular presence on Canon USA’s YouTube channel which includes an entire section titled “Tech Tips with Rudy Winston.”

“During his career at Canon, he’s had hands-on experience with nearly every Canon EOS camera and lens, and has outstanding working knowledge of everyday use of the EOS system,” Canon says of Winston in a bio on the company’s website. “Rudy has worked in the photography field virtually his entire adult life. Before coming to Canon, he had an extensive career as a freelance photographer, including years of experience shooting professional sports, as well as experience in retail camera sales.”

Everyone who commented was aghast at the news. I wrote,

Hey Rudy, Sorry to hear this disheartening news. Know that you are loved and respected by the thousands and thousands of folks you have helped over the decades, including and especially me. As we both know, after 19 years as a Canon Explorer or Light, I was fired by our good friend Steve Inglima who was in turn fired soon after. Corporate stupidity is sometimes impossible to understand. Maybe they will give you a watch :-(.

I am hoping that this event turns out to be a blessing in disguise for you.

Over the decades, I called and e-mailed Rudy many dozens of times, more recently after the death of the late Chuck Westfall, another Canon tech-rep giant. Even after I switched to Nikon and then to Sony, Rudy was Johnny on the spot when it came to answering my requests for Canon help from folks who had e-mailed me. Rudy was able to answer my camera body questions in detail 100% of the time <em>without ever having to look at a manual
. He truly was a friend and a saint and will never be replaced. This is a huge loss for Canon folks. Much love, artie

While doing some web-surfing research for this item, I remembered that Rudy was on site with me at Bosque Del Apache as we created a series of bird photography videos for Canon. I did a Google search for arthur morris bosque del apache Canon videos and wound up here. I found the four videos immediately. Following many of the links below the video brought back a flood of great memories of my time with Canon. And a few tears as well.

Here is an e-mail from Rudy dated 1/31/2018:

Hi Artie,

Certainly we’re saddened to see a master of the craft of bird photography move on to a different brand after such a long relationship, but we respect you and your decision, and we’re certainly here if and when we can assist you in the future. Personally, it’s always been my pleasure to work with you, and offer whatever assistance I could. You’re a gentleman, and I’m honored to be able to tell my colleagues and friends that you and I are on a first-name basis. I’m sure you’ll continue to get great pictures with your new gear, and I wish you total success with it. At the same time, I certainly hope our paths cross again in the future. Many thanks for the kind words in the blog post where you announced your decision. I appreciate all I’ve learned from you, and will always remember our interactions fondly. All the best, moving forward, and please stay in touch.

Best Regards,

Rudy Winston
Canon USA

If you enjoy a really good backstory (on my years with Canon), you can check out the post that Rudy mentioned here.

Two days ago I tried Rudy on his cell phone but it had been disconnected. It must have been supplied by Canon 🙁

What’s Up?

As I have not unpacked after returning from Jacksonville — I did do a small load of laundry — I am pretty much ready to get on the Auto Train late on Monday afternoon and am looking forward to the three IPTs at Nickerson Beach and my original soul place, the East Pond at Jamaica Bay Wildlife, Queens, NY. If you would like to join me, see the details here.

I was glad to learn that first-timer Judy Stepenaskie will be joining IPT veteran Monte Brown on the 1st Nickerson Beach IPT. And I was also glad to learn that Morro Bay IPT veteran Dane Johnson sold his Canon EOS 5D Mark III (converted to infrared) in near-mint conditions with the BG-E11 battery grip (in like-new condition) and a Canon EF 24-105mm f/4 L IS USM lens (also in near-mint condition) for a ridiculously low $799.00 (was $999.00) in mid-July 2024. Kudos to Dane for lowering the price on a difficult-to-sell item.

If you opt to purchase and of the Sony gear mentioned in this blog post, please use one of my affiliate links to earn a free guide or free entry into my Camera User’s Guide E-mail Groups.

Supporting My Efforts Here

If you enjoy and learn from the blog, please consider using one of my affiliate links when purchasing new gear. It will never cost you a single penny. To support my effort here, please order from B&H by beginning your search here. Or, click here, to order from Bedfords and enter the discount code BIRDSASART at checkout to receive 3% cash back to your credit card and enjoy free Second-Day Air Fed-Ex shipping. It is always best to write for advice via e-mail.

In many cases, I can help you save some serious dollars. And/or prevent you from purchasing the wrong gear.

Summer On Long Island

Check out the July and August Nickerson Beach (& Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge/East Pond) IPT offerings here and consider joining us to learn a ton, make lots of great images, and improve your image processing skills.

Price Drops

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV (with Battery Grip)

Price reduced $100.00 on 12 June 2024
Price reduced $50.00 on 20 July 2024

Homer IPT veteran Mark Harrington is offering a Canon EOS 5D Mark IV (57,314 shutter actuations) in excellent plus condition for $899.00 (was $1049.00). The sale includes the front cap, the original product box, the manual and software, the Canon BG-E20 battery grip (a $299.00 value), one battery, the battery charger, the cable, and insured ground shipping via major courier to lower-48 US addresses only. Your item will not ship until your check clears unless other arrangements are made.

Please contact Mark via e-mail at e-mail or by phone at 1-612-308-5776 MST.

What can I say? The 5D IV was my favorite-ever Canon digital dSLR. I owned and used three of them while my 1DX II and a 1DX III sat on the shelf in my garage. A new 5D Mark IV, with its 30.4MP full-frame CMOS sensor, is still in productions and sells new for $$2,299 at B&H. If you have been dreaming of a 5D IV, grab this one save $1,250.00. artie

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV

Price reduced $100.00 on 12 June 2024
Price reduced $50.00 on 20 July 2024

Homer IPT veteran Mark Harrington is offering a Canon EOS 5D Mark IV (30269 shutter actuations ) in excellent plus condition for $849.00 (was $999.00). The sale includes the front cap, the strap, one battery, the battery charger, the cable, the manual, the original box and insured ground shipping via major courier to lower-48 US addresses only. Your item will not ship until your check clears unless other arrangements are made.

Please contact Mark via e-mail at e-mail or by phone at 1-612-308-5776 MST.

What can I say? The 5D IV was my favorite-ever Canon digital dSLR. I owned and used three of them while my 1DX II and a 1DX III sat on the shelf in my garage. A new 5D Mark IV, with its 30.4MP full-frame CMOS sensor, is still in productions and sells new for $$2,299 at B&H. If you have been dreaming of a 5D IV, grab this one save $1,250.00. artie

This image was created on 18 July 2024 at Huguenot Memorial Park on the fourth afternoon of the extended JAX IPT. Standing at full height, I used the hand held Sony FE 300mm f/2.8 GM OSS lens (Sony E) with the Sony FE 1.4x Teleconverter and the ridiculously amazing Sony a9 III Mirrorless Camera. The exposure was determined using Zebra technology with ISO on the Thumb Dial. ISO 800. 1/4000 second at f/5.0 (stopped down 2/3-stop) in Manual Mode. AWB at 8:02:44am on a brightening morning. RawDigger showed the raw file brightness to be perfect.

Zone AF-C AF with Bird Face/Eye Detection performed perfectly. Be sure to click on the image to enjoy a high-res version.

Image #1: Sandwich Tern — adult beginning left turn

Soft-Light Banking Perfection?

On Thursday morning past, we had some decent sunrise color and then enjoyed mostly cloudy-bright conditions for the rest of the morning. Again, I went with my favorite new flight rig, the hand held 300mm f/2.8/1.4X TC/a9 iii combo. I chose 124 very good flight keepers from about 6,000 images. With the science-fiction like AF that I dreamed of for years now a reality, the standards for what makes a great image of a flying bird keep getting higher every day. The soft light perfectly illuminated the underwing detail of the tern’s fully spread wings and tail justan instant before the bird in Image #1 began to turn left and away from me. The a9 iii’s 120 fps is a huge plus when photographing flight and action.

Image #1 was cropped from a horizontal original with a bit of canvas added above and below.

This image was created on 19 July 2024 at Huguenot Memorial Park on the last morning of the extended JAX IPT. Standing at full height, I used the Robus RC-5570 Vantage Series 3 Carbon Fiber Tripod/Levered-Clamp FlexShooter Pro-mounted Sony FE 600mm f/4 GM OSS lens with the Sony FE 1.4x Teleconverter, and The One, the Sony Alpha 1 Mirrorless Digital Camera.. ISO 800. The exposure was determined by Zebras with ISO on the rear wheel: 1/4000 second at f/6.3 (stopped down 1/3-stop) in Manual mode. RawDigger showed that the exposure was dead solid perfect. AWB at 7:49:30am on sunny morning.

Zone/AF-C with Bird-Eye/Face Detection performed perfectly. Click on the image to enjoy the high-res version.

Image #2: Royal Tern with Cutlassfish — flight pano crop

Flight Pano Crop

With a south wind and clear blue skies, our last morning offered the best sunny flight photography of the entire extended IPT. As I had been using the tripod-mounted 840mm/a1 combo at sunrise, I stuck with it as the flight photography developed. Sandra Calderbank did well working off the tripod with her 600mm/a1 rig. Steve Shore hand held the same outfit for a while and then went to the tripod topped by a Levered-Clamp FlexShooter Pro. As he recently got back into bird photography, he was having trouble shooting flight on the tripod. He ran back to the car and grabbed the 300mm f/2.8/1.4X TC, slapped his a1 on it, and went to work. Shooting flight off a tripod is a skill that must be learned and practiced.

The a1/a9 iii Dilemma

Assuming that your camera body is set up properly and in the hands of someone with a modicum of skill, the a1 produces raw files with superb image quality (at a not shabby 30 fps). And the AF system ain’t bad either. The a9 iii files are about half the size, a9 iii AF is surer than a1 AF, and its 120 fps capture rate is unmatched and provides four times as many flight poses and wing positions as the a1. Which is best for photographing birds in flight? Whichever one you have in your hands.

Flight Photography Tip

If you are lucky enough to photograph at a tern colony and you see a bird coming in with a nice prey item, understand that they may have trouble finding their chick or chicks on the first pass. They will often fly a wide circle and return to try again. When the bird in Image #2 flew in, I called it out. When it did not recognize its chick, it flew out over the ocean. By following it in flight, I was able to shout out its return several times before it finally landed and unloaded a nice shiny breakfast.

Processing Tip

The Remove Tool did a wonderful job with the specular highlights on the fish. Learn how to use this great, relatively new Photoshop tool (and tons more) in the Digital Basics III Video Series. Volume II coming this September.

Image #1: Unsharpened 100% crop of the Royal Tern with Cutlassfish — flight pano crop image

a1 Image Quality and Crop-ability

Simply put, a1 image quality and the ability of sharp a-1 image files to stand up to huge crops cannot be matched by the a9 iii.

Join me to photograph Black Skimmers, Common Terns, American Oystercatchers, and more!

The Summer 2024 Nickerson Beach 3 1/2 day Terns, Skimmers, & Oystercatchers IPTs

Nickerson Beach IPT #1: July 29 – August 1, 2024. 3 1/2 days: Afternoon session on MON 29 July through the full day on THURS 1 August, 2024: $2099.00. Limit: 6. Openings: 5

Nickerson Beach IPT #2: August 5-8 2024. 3 1/2 days: Afternoon session on MON 5 August through the full day on THURS 8 August, 2024: $2099.00. Limit: 6. Openings: 5.

Join me at Nickerson Beach Park this summer to photograph Black Skimmers, Common Terns, and American Oystercatchers. The trip is timed so that we should get to photograph tiny chicks as well as fledglings. There will be lots of flight photography including adults flying with baitfish and mole crabs. Creating great images of the chicks being fed is a challenge but I will do my best to help you toward that end. We will get to photograph a variety of breeding behaviors including courtship, sitting on (incubating) eggs, chick feeding, and more. We may get to photograph pre-dawn and early evening blastoffs. There is generally great afternoon skimmer flight photography that includes frequent midair battles sunny days. And with luck, we might even see a few tiny chicks in addition to fledged and flying young. We will also get to photograph the life cycle of American Oystercatcher. This will likely include nests with eggs and small chicks, young being fed, and surely a few fledglings.

Nesting Piping Plover is also possibly. There will be lots of gulls to photograph; most years I am able to find a few lesser black-backeds of varying ages in addition to the Herring, Ring-billed, and Great Black-backed Gulls. You will learn to identify and age the various gull species. There will likely be some Willets feeding along the surf and with luck we might get to photograph a handsome juvenile or two. In addition to the locally breeding shorebirds, we will likely get to see some southbound migrant arctic-and sub-arctic breeding shorebird species such as Sanderling, Semipalmated Plover, and maybe even Red Knot.

Clockwise from upper left around and back to center: Black Skimmer pair with chick; Black Skimmer fledgling skimming; Black Skimmer with large needlefish; Black Skimmer large chick; Black Skimmer fledgling taking flight; Black Skimmer adult with killifish; Black Skimmer adult landing near nest; Black Skimmer in midair chase; and Black Skimmers at dawn in the red light district.

Activities

Morning sessions will run from pre-dawn till about 9:00 or 9:30am, roughly 3 1/2 hours. Afternoon sessions will run from 5:30 till sunset (assuming that entry policies are as they were in 2023.

Many folks head home feeling that while our time in the field was fabulous and productive, that the working brunch sessions were even more valuable. During image review you will learn to select the best images from several thousand made with your 20- and 30 fps (or 120 fps!) camera bodies. And we will process a few images and distribute the screen capture videos for you to learn from after the trip. And all IPTs offer follow-up image critiques.

Change your life: sign up for this IPT today. Please shoot me an e-mail if you would like to explore the possibility of renting some Sony gear (including an a1) from me.

Clockwise from upper left around and back to center: Adult American Oystercatcher foraging at sunrise; Adult American Oystercatcher posing on clean sand; predawn skimmer flock blur; Black Skimmer large chick; Black Skimmer landing at nest on cloudy day; Black Skimmer large chick; Black Skimmer sunrise group blur; Black Skimmer adult with Atlantic Silversides; juvenile Semipalmated Plover, and photographer with oystercatcher family.

Some of What You Will Learn on a Nickerson Beach IPT

  • 1- The basics and fine points of digital exposure; how to get the right exposure every time after making a single test exposure (or before if you are using SONY gear).
  • 2- How and why to work in Manual mode (even if you’re scared of it).
  • 3- How to approach free and wild birds without disturbing them.
  • 4- Lots about bird behavior and how to use that knowledge to help you create better images.
  • 6- To spot the good and great situations and to choose the best perspective.
  • 7- To see, evaluate, and understand the light.
  • 8- To design pleasing images by mastering your camera’s AF system.
  • 9- And perhaps most importantly, to evaluate wind and sky conditions and understand how they affect bird photography. You will learn where and when to be (and why).
  • 10- More than you could ever imagine.

Clockwise from upper left around and back to center: Black Skimmer pair with chick; Common Tern landing at nest with small baitfish; large Common Tern chick on pristine beach; American Oystercatchers courtship flight; Common Tern with pipefish; Common Tern fledgling; American Oystercatcher on eggs in high wind; American Oystercatcher nest with three eggs; and Black Skimmer midair battle.

The Details

We will be on the beach very early to enjoy sunrise. The morning sessions will run about 3 1/2 hours. Afternoon sessions will begin at 5:30 and run till sunset. There is never a set schedule on an IPT — we adapt to the conditions. On cloudy mornings with the right wind, we may opt to photograph till 11:30am or so and skip the afternoon session. That especially when the afternoon weather is looking iffy.

There will be a Photoshop/Image Review session before and after brunch (included) each full day. That will be followed by Instructor Nap Time. Each of these IPTs will run with only a single registrant as I do not like disappointing anyone. The best airports are JFK or Islip (if you have lots of Southwest points). Once you register, you will receive an e-mail with lodging information. Do know that it is always best if IPT folks stay in the same general area (rather than at home or at a friend’s place a good distance away).

Folks attending this IPT will be out in the field ridiculously early and stay out late to take advantage of sunrise and sunset colors; this is pretty much a staple on almost all BIRDS AS ART Instructional Photo-Tours. Doing so will often present unique photographic opportunities, opportunities that will be missed by those who need their beauty rest and those who need to get home for a proper dinner. I really love it when I am leaving the beach at 9:00am on a sunny morning after a great session just as a carful or two of well-rested photographers are arriving … We may be getting our feet wet on occasion, especially in the mornings, but those who wish to keep their feet 100% dry can do so.

Your $699 deposit is due now. Credit cards are OK for that. You can register by calling Jim or Jennifer during weekday business hours at 863-692-0906 with a credit card in hand. Once you leave a deposit, you will receive an e-mail with your balance statement and instructions for sending your balance check. Those who wish to pay for the trip in one fell swoop via check may do so by making the check out to BIRDS AS ART and then mailing it to BIRDS AS ART, PO BOX 7245, Indian Lake Estates, FL 33855. You will receive a confirmation e-mail with detailed instructions, and clothing and gear advice right after you register. Please shoot me an e-mail if you plan to register or if you have any questions.

IPT veterans and couples or friends signing up together may e-mail for discount information.

Join me on the COMBO IPT this coming August to photograph adult and juvenile shorebirds at the East Pond at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge, Queens, NY.

Clockwise starting from the upper left back to center: juvenile Lesser Yellowlegs; adult Semipalmated Plover; fresh juvenile Semipalmated Sandpiper; fresh juvenile Least Sandpiper; fresh juvenile Stilt Sandpiper; fresh juvenile Short-billed Dowitcher; worn, molting adult Semipalmated Sandpiper; worn, molting adult White-rumped Sandpiper; and juvenile (left) and worn, molting adult Greater Yellowlegs.

The Combo IPT — East Pond, JBWR/Nickerson Beach: August 17 – 20, 2024. SAT August 17 through the morning session on TUES 20 August 2024. 3 1/2 days: $2199.00. Limit: 6. Openings: 5.

Join me for four mornings at the famed East Pond, Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge, Queens, NY (conditions permitting) to photograph southbound migrant shorebirds and for three afternoons to photograph beach nesting birds. The window for photographing juvenile shorebirds in fresh plumage is very narrow and this trip will of course get you to the right spot at the exact right time. You will learn to identify and age the shorebirds and to photograph them (at ground level). I will gladly share everything that I have learned during the 46 years I have been visiting the pond. Heck, I started late. After too many years of mismanagement, the gate valve at the north end of the East Pond has finally been repaired properly; water levels should be perfect this summer. If it is not, we will spend our mornings at Nickerson.

Afternoons (and mornings as well) at Nickerson Beach Park are superb in mid-August for photographing Black Skimmers, Common Terns, and American Oystercatchers with young of all ages. There will be lots of fledged chicks by mid-August, lots of flight including adults flying with baitfish and mole crabs, and excellent chances to photograph both chick feeding and predation by gulls. The Great Black-backed Gulls see the young skimmers as potato chips. We should get to photograph the evening skimmer blastoffs. On hot sunny days, there is still great afternoon skimmer flight photography that includes frequent midair battles.

There will be lots of terns (mostly Common Terns) and gulls to photograph; most years I am able to find a few Lesser Black-backed Gulls of varying ages in addition to the Herring, Ring-billed, and Great Black-backed Gulls. You will learn to identify and age the various gull species. There will likely be some Willets feeding along the surf and with luck we might get to photograph a handsome juvenile or two. In addition to the locally breeding shorebirds, we will likely get to see some southbound migrant arctic-and sub-arctic breeding shorebird species such as Sanderling, Semipalmated Plover, Semipalmated Sandpiper, and maybe even Red Knot. And we might encounter large, swirling flocks of Sanderling in flight over the ocean.

Join me this August to photograph at the East Pond at JBWR in the mornings (conditions permitting) and at Nickerson Beach in the afternoons.

Clockwise starting from the upper left back to center: Marbled Godwit (likely in juvenal plumage); Wilson’s Phalarope in first winter plumage; Black Skimmer adult in flight over the Atlantic; juvenile American Oystercatcher foraging surf; adult Lesser Black-backed Gull; Black Skimmer attacking tiny chick; Killdeer in fresh juvenal plumage; Least Sandpiper in fresh juvenal plumage ruffling; and juvenile Lesser Yellowlegs and mixed shorebird flock.

Morning sessions at the East Pond will run from just before dawn till about 9:00 or 9:30am. If the afternoon weather forecast is looking ominous, we may decide to photograph until after 11:00am and cancel the afternoon session. Afternoon sessions at Nick will run from 5:30 till sunset (assuming that entry policies are as they were in 2023).

Many folks head home feeling that while our time in the field was fabulous and productive, that the working brunch sessions were even more valuable. During image review you will learn to select the best images from several thousand made with your 20- and 30 fps (or 120 fps!) camera bodies. In addition, we will process some participant images and distribute the screen-capture videos for you to learn from after the trip. All IPTs offer follow-up image critiques.

Change your life: sign up for this IPT today. Please shoot me an e-mail if you would like to explore the possibility of renting some Sony gear (including an a1) from me.

Clockwise from upper left around and back to center: Adult American Oystercatcher foraging at sunrise; Adult American Oystercatcher posing on clean sand; predawn skimmer flock blur; Black Skimmer large chick; Black Skimmer landing at nest on cloudy day; Black Skimmer large chick; Black Skimmer sunrise group blur; Black Skimmer adult with Atlantic Silversides; juvenile Semipalmated Plover, and photographer with oystercatcher family.

Some of What You Will Learn on the COMBO IPT

  • 1- The basics and fine points of digital exposure; how to get the right exposure every time after making a single test exposure (or before you make even a single image if you are using SONY gear).
  • 2-How to get low and super low
  • 3- How and why to work in Manual mode (even if you’re scared of it).
  • 4- How to approach free and wild birds without disturbing them.
  • 5- Lots about bird behavior and how to use that knowledge to help you create better images.
  • 6- To spot the good and great situations and to choose the best perspective.
  • 7- To see, evaluate, and understand the light.
  • 8- To design pleasing images by mastering your camera’s AF system.
  • 9- And perhaps most importantly, to evaluate wind and sky conditions and understand how they affect bird photography. You will learn where and when to be (and why).
  • 10- To identify and age a variety of shorebird, tern, and gull species.
  • 11- More than you could ever imagine.

The Details

There will be a Photoshop/Image Review session during and after brunch (included) each full day. That will be followed by Instructor Nap Time. This IPT will run with only a single registrant as I do not like disappointing anyone. The best airports are JFK or Islip (if you have lots of Southwest points). Once you register, you will receive an e-mail with lodging information. Do know that it is always best if IPT folks stay in the same general area (rather than at home or at a friend’s place a good distance away).

Folks attending this IPT will be out in the field ridiculously early and stay out late to take advantage of sunrise and sunset colors; this is pretty much a staple on almost all BIRDS AS ART Instructional Photo-Tours. Doing so will often present unique photographic opportunities, opportunities that will be missed by those who need their beauty rest and those who need to get home for a proper dinner. I really love it when I am leaving the beach at 9:00am on a sunny morning after a great session just as a carful or two of well-rested photographers are arriving … We may be getting our feet wet on occasion, especially in the mornings, but those who wish to keep their feet 100% dry can do so.

Your $699 deposit is due now. Credit cards are OK for that. You can register by calling Jim or Jennifer during weekday business hours at 863-692-0906 with a credit card in hand. Once you leave a deposit, you will receive an e-mail with your balance statement and instructions for sending your balance check. Those who wish to pay for the trip in one fell swoop via check may do so by making the check out to BIRDS AS ART and then mailing it to BIRDS AS ART, PO BOX 7245, Indian Lake Estates, FL 33855. You will receive a confirmation e-mail with detailed instructions, and clothing and gear advice right after you register. Please shoot me an e-mail if you plan to register or if you have any questions.

IPT veterans and couples or friends signing up together may e-mail for discount information.

Typos

With all blog posts, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors.

5 comments to A Great Ending to the JAX IPT. And the a1/a9 iii Dilemma …

  • Bryce Yamashita

    Pleasant surprise to see you on the beach at Jacksonville.

    Glad you’re doing well.

    Bryce

  • Anthony Ardito

    Sorry about Rudy. Just a dumb move on Canon’s part.

  • Anthony Ardito

    a1/a9III dilemma? I considered the a9III, but I had the original a9 with 24mp, and wouldn’t want to go back to 24mp again. 50mp with 30fps is the sweet spot for me. Way fast enough and nice big images. Unless I get real lucky, there is always some sort of cropping going on.

    Canon’s new flagship R1 is a joke with 24mp and 40fps.

  • David Policansky

    Hi, Artie. Rudy even responded to my questions. It’s really stupid to have let him go, unless he wanted to go. I love your tern photos and the interesting fish they carry. The one in image 2 is a ribbon fish, also called scabbard fish. I can’t tell what the fish is in image 1 but I much prefer it. I love the pose, composition, color, and everything.

    • Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART

      He was (and is) a very good man.

      I thought that you had previously called that one a Cutlassfish. But heck, a cutlass does go into a scabbard, no?

      with love, artie

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