Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART
January 10th, 2020

An Amazing Day: I Never Woke Up on Thursday January 9, 2020. For real ...

This image was made with the Canon 70-200mm f/2.8L IS lens, the 1.4X II TC, and the EOS-1D Mark IV. Not bad for Canon 🙂

If you missed the Homer IPTs announcement (there are two separate trips), or if you are thinking of attending, be sure to see yesterday’s post here.

Image #25: Bald Eagle top shot silhouette

More On Homer

For the first trip only, I am offering a $500/person discount for those who sign up with a friend or spouse.

IPT #1: FEB 25 through the full day on MAR 1, 2020. Six full days: $4799.00. Limit 5 photographers/Openings: 4.

Via e-mail from Multiple IPT veteran Greg Ferguson:

I attended this IPT in 2011 and can only say it was the most intensive bird photography I have ever experienced. My arms were tired and sore from shooting so many action photos. It is highly recommended! I called Jim today and signed up for a reprise. Greg

An Amazing Day

Yuppers, I never woke up on Thursday, January 9, 2020. Not once. I hit the sack at 7:30pm on Wednesday. I woke at 11:45pm still on Wednesday. Somewhat jet-lagged, I was never — though I tried mightily — able to get back to sleep. While Wednesday morning at the cliffs had been stellar, Thursday morning was just OK. … We had a great brunch at Vahik Cafe, met Dr. Cliff Oliver and Annie, schmoozed for a bit, ate, and reviewed some images. The forecast was for rain in the late afternoon so I was stalling for clouds. The clouds came and wanting to give everyone their money’s worth, we headed back to the cliffs. I knew just the place to be in the afternoon with a stiff wind from the west.

My plan was to nap in the car after we got a parking spot. But when I got out to scout and saw that things were pretty good, I got out the SONY 600 GM and the a9 II. The 1.4X TC was in my pocket. BTW, the FlexShooter Pro is ideal both on the cliffs and the sloping sidewalks. Put the tripod down with the legs spread, center the floating bubble in the scribed bubble, and you are good to go for flight photography on the level no matter where you point your long lens. Though the sun came out for about an hour I kept photographing the flying pelicans and never got a nap.

Light clouds rolled in by about 2pm and for three hours we enjoyed a rare flying circus with the wind behind us and the sky filled with banking and flying and descending pelicans. It rained hard for about five minutes at about 3:45pm. Terry and Stacy called it quits while Monte and I stayed on and enjoyed another hour of truly spectacular flight photography. To celebrate I picked up a small ribeye at Vons in La Jolla.

After dinner, having been up for 18 hours (with no nap!), I decided to do some editing. I was 2 1/2 days behind, about 5,000 images. Picking my keepers in Capture One the Thursday folder of 1832 images took me about an hour. But, tired, I screwed up and wound up deleting all the images from the hard drive. But I still had the two cards so I re-downloaded them and got to bed at 7:30pm on Thursday. My first pit stop was at 12:45pm on Friday so as things turned out, I never woke up on Thursday. But what a great day it ended up being.

I woke at 3:15am, re-edited the 1832 images. After the first edit, I wound up with 175 keepers from Thursday alone. Re-editing a folder from scratch after you have already done it once takes a lot less time as you know what is coming. Buoyed by my success, I worked on three other folders and am proud to say that I am all caught up!

I continue to be astounded by the AF tracking accuracy and high-ISO performance of the SONY a9 II. It has quickly become my all time favorite-ever camera body …

We head out in 23 minutes. Have a great day. With love, artie

January 9th, 2020

The Top 24 List: Two Dozen Reasons to Join Me on One or Both of the Greatest-ever Bald Eagle Experience IPTs ...

What’s Up?

I have committed to doing both the 6-day and the 5-day trips. I have my flights and my hotel room. Now, all that I need is you. There has been considerable interest so far and it looks as if both trips will fill quickly.

The Greatest-ever Bald Eagle Experience IPTs

IPT #1: FEB 25 through the full day on MAR 1, 2020. Six full days: $4799.00. Limit 5 photographers/Openings: 2.

IPT #2: MAR 3 through the full day on MAR 7, 2020. Five full days: $3999.00. Limit 5 photographers/Openings: 2.

From Homer, Alaska:

We will do two two-hour or one four hour boat trip to Katchemak Bay each day. Our schedule will be flexible and weather dependent. We will have numerous and varied mind-boggling opportunities to photograph this hugely popular species. We will be feeding the eagles to attract them into photographic range. The trip is costly because chartering the boat is expensive, the fish are very expensive at $1.25/pound (all on me), the costs of in-room breakfasts and one sit-down meal/day are included, hotel to dock transfers are included, as is lodging (double or triple-occupancy). Single supplements may be available. Please inquire.

We will do most of our flight from the boat until you can no longer lift your lens. We will get off the boat on various islands to photograph the birds both perched and in flight. We will hope for snow.

It is best to register right now so that you can secure your flights and I can arrange the lodging. Register for both trips and apply a $500 discount.

A $2000 credit card deposit is required to hold your spot. Call Jim today, Thursday 9 JAN or tomorrow, Friday 10 JAN to leave your deosit. He will be back in the office on Monday 13 JAN. Your balance will be payable immediately thereafter by check or by credit card plus 4%. Please e-mail me immediately or try me on my cell at 863-221-2372 with any questions or to let me know of your plans. First come, first served.

Not included: your round-trip airfare from home to Homer, AK through Anchorage and back. Your second sit-down meal each day. One hotel night if you are doing both trips back-to-back. Alcoholic beverages at our sit down meal.

There is lots more info on the trip in the captions below each image — all were made in Homer, or in Kachemak Bay, AK.

Image #1: Bald Eagle calling

Proximity

We will get close to gorgeous adult eagles; this one was made at only 500mm.

Image #2: Bald Eagle in flat flight looking down

Long Lens Flight Photgraphy

We will get to do tons of flight photography both with hand held short and intermediate telephoto lenses and with long super-telephoto lenses — hand held if you wish, but tripod-mounted for most of us.

Image #3: Immature Bald Eagle: close-up of talons

Learning Point-Blank Techniques That Apply to All Types o Nature Photography

You will learn a ton about bird photography including why and when to use small apertures: f/16 for this image. And exactly where to focus when creating super-tight close-ups.

Image #4: Bald Eagle adult banking vertically

Getting the Right Exposure in Sunny Conditions

You will learn to get the right exposure when working in bright sun. Even when working with starkly black and white subjects. With all three major systems: Canon, Nikon, and SONY. Note: all of the images in this blog post were created with Canon gear.

Image #5: Bald Eagle adult/upside down start of dive

70-200mm Lens are Deadly in Homer

As we are photographing from a boat and baiting the eagles with frozen herring, short and intermediate zoom lens can be just what the doctor ordered. The lighter the lens the better. So while the light gathering ability of the 70-200mm f/2.8 lenses is a plus, the lighter weight of the 70-200mm f/4 lenses have a lot going for them … Image #5 was made with the Canon 70-200mm f/2.8L IS lens at 125mm.

Image #6: Bald Eagle adult/tight flight

The 300mm f/2.8 Lenses in Homer

These lenses combine a fine and usable fixed focal length with superb light gathering ability. Their weight might be problematic for some … The additional lesson here is to keep firing when the bird gets close. It is not always necessary to include the whole bird in the frame when doing flight photography. As long as you can keep the bird pretty much centered in the frame and in focus you have a good chance of coming up with something powerful.

Image #7: Bald Eagle sunset flight silhouette

Flexible Scheduling

The weather in Homer is extremely variable. We do either two 2-hour boat trips or one 4-hour boat trip each day. We plan our sailing times by looking out the window! We often stay out a lot longer than planned. And we often stay out for sunset.

Image #8: Bald Eagle striking fish

Variety

We can choose our backgrounds simply by deciding where to position the boat before we begin feeding.

Image #9: Bald Eagle in falling snow

The Trip Timing

By going earlier than most Homer trips we have an increased chance of getting some snow. If we do have some falling snow, you will learn how to determine the best shutter speed to get the effect that you want.

Image #10: Bald Eagle in falling snow

We Will Walk With the Eagles!

Depending on the wind and the weather, we will — on occasion — get off the boat with our big lenses on a tripod to photograph perched eagles.

Image #11: Bald Eagle and snow-covered mountains

You Will Learn to Create Bird-scapes

I called the group together and suggested that using a 70-200 zoomed out that they might be able to create a powerful bird-scape with a small-in-the-frame eagle in the upper right corner and the snow-covered mountains filling the bottom of the frame. Making one with the perfect wing position was extremely satisfying.

Image #11: Bald Eagle and snow-covered mountains

You Will Learn the Basic Compositional Skills

Among those is placing the bird well back in a horizontal frame with 3-5 times as much room from the tip of the bill to the frame-edge as from the tip of the tail to the frame-edge.

Image #13: Bald Eagle on hillside in snowstorm

You Will Learn to Think and See Creatively

To me, this is a Monet. Can you find the eagle? On all IPTs I share my thoughts with everyone within earshot. And with some who are not!

Image #14: Immature Bald Eagle pan blur

You Will Learn the Secrets of Creating Contest-Winning Pleasing Blurs

In extreme low light conditions creating pleasing blurs is often the best way to go, especially if you do. not like working at ISO 25,800 … On the eagle boat, you will learn exactly how to succeed in creating prize-winning sharply focused blurs that put smiles on folk’s faces. You will learn also that creating a killer-good blur is similar to winning the lottery.

Image #15: Bald Eagle flying in falling snow

You Will Have Your Eyes Opened With Regards to Shutter Speeds for Flight Photography …

This image was created at 1/800 sec (at f/2.8). Click on the image to enjoy a larger inexplicably sharper version.

Image #16: Immature Bald Eagle braking to land

You Will Learn a Huge Ton About Wind Direction and Wing Positions and What They Have to Do With Flight Photography

The braking to land wing position is a very dynamic one. In order to succeed with these, you need the wind from somewhere behind you.

Image #17: Bald Eagle calling

Learning About Bird Behavior

Bird behavior is often repeated. The first time that this bird called, I missed the shot. But I stayed with it and made some great images.

Image #18: Immature Bald perched

You Will Learn to Use Your AF System to Come Up With Pleasing Image Designs

Whether you are using Canon, Nikon, or SONY I can teach you to master your AF system for static subjects and for birds in flight and in action.

Image #19: Sea Otter

It Ain’t Just Eagles!

We may encounter a variety of natural history subjects and will be quick to take advantage of such opportunities.

Image #20: Glaucous-winged Gull in flight

White Sky/White Subject Exposures

You will learn to make perfect exposures in soft light/white sky situations with both light (as here) and dark subjects.

Image #21: Stand of trees dead from salt water intrusion from the big earthquake

Learn to see and think creatively

I will lead by example and teach you how too see and think like a pro.

Image #22: Bald Eagle head portrait silhouette

We Will Be Doing Lots of Small-Group Photoshop Lessons

I am conversant in doing RAW conversions in ACR (Photoshop and Lightroom), in Canon Digital Photo Professional 4 (DPP 4), and in Capture One (my favorite). I am fairly skilled in Photoshop especially with regards to image clean-up. This striking silhouette was created from an image that was exposed for detail on the young eagle’s face.

Image #23: Bald Eagle two-headed blur

You Will Learn to Push the Limits and to Take Risks

I went way out of the box for this one by working at 1/8 second. This image made the final round of judging in several major international contests. We will talk at length about flight photography shooting strategies and techniques …

Image #24: Bald Eagle top shot

We Will Have Lots of Top Shot Opportunities

Images that depict a bird’s dorsal wing surfaces can be quite dramatic. We will have lots of chances to create top shots of both adult and immature Bald Eagles.

January 8th, 2020

Keep or Delete: How Far to the Right is Too Far to the Right?

Homer Bald Eagles …

I am returning to Homer for the Greatest-ever Bald Eagle Experience IPT at the end of February through the beginning of March 2020. My plan is to do a six-day (FEB 25 —26— 27 — 28 — 29 — MAR 1) trip followed by a day off and a five-day trip (MAR 3 — 4 — 5 -6-7). As in the past, folks may wish to do both trips back-to-back. I do expect both trips to fill very quickly. If you are seriously interested, please contact me via e-mail. Complete details very soon. Flight photography until your arms drop, most with a 70-200mm lens. We photograph from a chartered boat and make some landings as well.

See the Bald Eagle gallery here; most of the images are from Homer.

What’s Up?

Tuesday morning was a strange one at La Jolla. There were lots of pelicans before the sun came up over the hill. Just as the sun crested the ridge, every pelican took flight and flew west as if they all had heard a clearly rung dinner bell. Multiple IPT participant and good friend Monte Brown and I hung out for 30 minutes to no avail; not a single pelican returned … We did the nesting Brandt’s Cormorants for a while and had some point-blank chances with a gorgeous bird with long, white breeding plumes about its head. Next, we did some California Sea Lions and then did a bit of exploring and gull photography along the low cliffs and then a great brunch as usual at Cafe Vahik. Monte did a lot better with the sea lions than I did …

We meet the rest of the IPT group tonight at 7:00pm for an introductory Meet and Greet.

Nikon D850 Users e-Guide & Video<

Purchase here.

Nikon D850 Users e-Guide & Video

$50 via download

This great new guide includes 15 pages of text, a 46-image gallery, and a comprehensive camera handling video.

The text covers all of the menu item settings that I used on my two D850 bodies and each gallery image has a legendary BIRDS AS ART educational caption. The emphasis is two-fold:

1- getting your camera set-up so that it is optimized for bird photography.

2- sharing everything that I know about the Nikon AF system so that you can create consistently sharp images of static subjects, and most especially, of birds in flight and in action.

Though this guide is designed for the D850 nearly all of it applies to the D5 and to the D500 as well.

You can purchase your copy in the BAA On-line Store here. Both files are large so you will need a good internet connection to download them.

IPT Updates

Coming soon: one or two Spoonbill Boat IPTs, a spring Fort DeSoto Sandbar Secrets IPT, and a Nickerson Beach IPT this summer.

Do check out the Galapgos Gallery here.

  • The GALAPAGOS Photo Cruise of a Lifetime IPT/The Complete Galapagos Archipelago Photographic Experience. August 17-31, 2021 on the boat. 13 FULL and two half-days of photography: $14,999.00.
  • You can see complete IPT info and details here.

BIRDS AS ART

BIRDS AS ART is registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

Money Saving Reminder

If you need a hot photo item that is out of stock at B&H, would enjoy free overnight shipping, and would like a $50 discount on your first purchase over $1000.00, click here to order and enter the coupon code BIRDSASART at checkout. If you are looking to strike a deal on Canon or Nikon gear (including the big telephotos) or on a multiple item order, contact Steve Elkins via e-mail or on his cell at (479) 381-2592 (Eastern time) and be sure to mention your BIRDSASART coupon code and use it for your online order. Steve has been great at getting folks the hot items that are out of stock at B&H. Those include the SONY a7r IV, the SONY 200-600, the SONY 600mm f/4 GM, and the Nikon 500mm PF. Steve is eager to please.



Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending BAA IPTs and dozens of photographers whom I see in the field and on BPN, are–out of ignorance–using the wrong gear especially when it comes to tripods and more especially, tripod heads… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail. Those questions might deal with systems, camera bodies, accessories, and/or lens choices and decisions.

This image was created on January 4, 2020 at La Jolla, CA. I used the hand held Sony FE 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G OSS lens (at 218mm) with the blazingly fast AF King, the Sony Alpha a9 II Mirrorless Digital camera body. ISO 2,500: 1/2000 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode was oover-exposed by a mile. AWB at 8:53am on a sunny morning.

Center Zone C (tracking) AF worked perfectly by getting sharp focus on the bird’s eye.

This is a Capture One Screen ACapture

Keep or Delete: How Far to the Right is Too Far to the Right?

I am not sure how I screwed this one up so badly. I only know that I followed my own advice: “When unexpected action happens, acquire focus and push the shutter button. If you try to change the exposure or the AF point or mode, you will wind up with nothing.”

All the RED in the Capture One screen capture above is the over-exposure warning. My Highlight exposure warning value is 251.

You are editing your day folder and come across this image, a mile over-exposed with too, too many extraneous pelicans in the frame. Do you keep it or delete it? Be sure to let us know your reasons.

If In Doubt …

If you are in doubt about using the BAA B&H affiliate link correctly, you can always start your search by clicking here. Please note that the tracking is invisible. Web orders only. Please, however, remember to shoot me your receipt via e-mail.



Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog or Bedfords, for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And please remember that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would, of course, appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links or Bedfords for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

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Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right :).