Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART
January 3rd, 2016

Free Excerpt with Images. And more Canon 100-400 II Versatility...

What’s Up?

Well, I got the master CD and the cover art for the birds as art: The Avian Photography of Arthur Morris/The Top 100 exhibit-companion e-book project to UPS on Saturday morning. It is going Next Day Air for delivery to the manufacturing company in Richardson, TX on Monday morning. But it was not easy.

First, I had a ton of trouble burning the CD because the external CD reader for my Apple 15.4″ MacBook Pro Notebook Computer with Retina Display & Force Touch Trackpad (Mid 2015) kept crapping out. When I did burn the CD on one of our office computers, it came up as “Corrupt File.” So I tried Jim’s computer and the file burned correctly. But I still had to make sure that the master CD could be read by a Mac. Miraculously, the external CD reader came back to life just long enough for me to view the PDF on my laptop.

Next, I called the UPS dispatcher. She was very nice and was willing to send a driver to my home for the pickup, but when she confessed to being “geographically challenged” and told me that there were “only four substitute drivers working” I decided to drive the 25 miles into town to hand-deliver my package to the UPS station. Piece of cake, right? Not exactly. I tried in vain to find the address for more than 15 minutes and then called the dispatcher. I told her that I was in the Sunoco station on SR 27. I must have sounded desperate as she offered to drive to the gas station to get my my overnight parcel. And so she did.

Now I can only hope that everything goes smoothly with the manufacturing process so that I have CDs to sell at the exhibit opening. 🙂

As for the free excerpt below from the Southern Oceans Guide (in progress), all that I can say is that if Godthul is basically a backup landing site, imagine the images that you could make at one of the world class South Georgia wildlife landing locations. Scroll down to join me and the BAA group on next year’s Cheesemans’ South Georgia Expedition.

Thanks a Stack!

Thanks a stack to the many who helped proofread the Canon Panel either via comment or e-mail. The irrepressible BugBob Allen volunteered to help without being asked and came up with a few great catches that everyone else missed. I will send the final version to Alan Lillich today so that he can go over it with his fine-toothed comb.


gentoos-on-hillside

This image was created at Godthul on the Cheesemans’ 2015 South Georgia Expedition with the with the hand held Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM lens (at 176mm) and the amazing Canon EOS 7D Mark II. ISO 400. Evaluative metering -1/3 stop: 1/2500 sec. at f/5.6 in Av mode. AWB.

AI Servo Expand/Zone AF as framed was active at the moment of exposure (as is always best when hand holding). The system selected 4 AF points below and to the left of the center AF point, just where it should have. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to see a larger version.

Image #1: Gentoo Penguin colony on hillside with photographers (one kneeling, one seated)

Free Excerpt with Images

The text below was adapted from the Southern Oceans Site Guide that I have been working on in my free time. 🙂

Godthul

This is another spot that would not be on the top of anyone’s list of favorite landings. I have, however, made a few landings here and wound up making some good images. Godthul is in a very protected location; if you are blown out of a landing at St. Andrews Bay, for example, you might very well get to spend a few hours on Godthul. As above, there is a Gentoo colony up the hill. Before you make the hike be sure to check out the sun angle; if it looks as if you will not be able to point your shadow at the birds, it might be best to skip the hike.

100-400 II Versatility

Consider the variety of subject matter and the framing in today’s featured images and throw in the fact that I was able to make a pretty neat image of a single seal eyeball with the 1-4/1.4X TC combo and it gives you a pretty good idea of just how versatile this new lens is.


gentoo-penguin-in-stream-_36a4510-gothul-south-georgia

This image was also created at Godthul on the Cheesemans’ 2015 South Georgia Expedition with the with the hand held Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM lens with the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III (at 450mm)and the amazing Canon EOS 7D Mark II. ISO 400. Evaluative metering at about -2 stops was considerably underexposed at 1/800 sec. at f/9 in Manual mode. AWB.

Center AF point (by necessity)/AI Servo Expand/Rear Focus AF as framed was active at the moment of exposure (as is always best when hand holding). The active AF point fell on the penguin’s right eye. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to see a larger version.

Image #2: Gentoo Penguin swimming in stream

Godthul Excerpt Continued

The beach at Godthul is small and narrow. If it is clear and the sun is on your right when you get out of the zodiac the best strategy is to cross the small stream about 75 yards to your right so that you can work properly on sun angle. On some visits when there are lots of penguins by the stream, the leaders may forbid you from approaching them and crossing the stream. When that happened on my last visit I asked if a zodiac could drop off a few folks on the other side of the stream. “No problem.”


gentoo-penguin-calling-_36a4442-gothul-south-georgia

This image was also created at Godthul on the Cheesemans’ 2015 South Georgia Expedition with the hand held Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM lens (at 400mm) and the amazing Canon EOS 7D Mark II. ISO 400. Evaluative metering -1 stop: 1/2000 sec. at f/8 in Manual mode. AWB.

Center AF point/AI Servo Expand/Rear Focus AF as framed was active at the moment of exposure (as is always best when hand holding). The active AF point was placed just forward of and below the eye, just touching the gape–right on the plane of the bird’s eye. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to see a larger version.

Image #3: Gentoo Penguin calling

Godthul Excerpt Continued

You will usually find some King and Gentoo Penguins on the beach along with some fur seals. And there will be lots of fur seals up in the tussock grass. The penguins often congregate near or bathe in the stream; this can—as above—provide lots of good opportunities. By moving slowly and getting low, it is easy to get close to the penguins.

Exposure Question

What two factors led to my applying negative exposure compensation for each of today’s featured images?

Your Favorite?

Artistically, for me, one of today’s three images stands head and shoulders above the other two. Please leave a comment and let us know which is your favorite and why you like it.


southgeorgiacardfor-2016

All images on the card were created on the 2015 Cheesemans’ South Georgia Expedition. From top left clockwise to center: King Penguin resting on Snow, Fortuna Bay; Macaroni Penguin in snow, Cooper Island; Grey-headed Albatross, Elsehul; King Penguin neck abstract, Godthul; Northern Giant Petrel, Undine Harbor; adult Wandering Albatross, Prion Island; Elephant Seal, Undine Harbor; South Georgia Pipit fledgling/thanks Joe Kaplan! Fortuna Bay; high key King Penguins in snow, Fortuna Bay.

Card design and all images copyright 2015: Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART

The Cheesemans’ 2016 OCT/NOV South Georgia/Falklands Expedition

If reading the blog post here put a thought in your mind about joining the BIRDS AS ART group on the Cheesemans’ 2016 OCT/NOV South Georgia/Falklands Expedition, please shoot me an e-mail with the words “Cheesemans’ Last Southern Ocean Expedition” cut and pasted into the Subject Line with any questions or if you wish to receive additional inspiration. This will surely be my last ship-based trip to the Southern Ocean as well.


steeplenewsealioncard

All of the images on this card were created in the Falklands on the 2014 Cheesemans’ Southern Oceans Expedition. From top left clockwise to center: Black-browed Albatross tending chick, Steeple Jason Island; Black-browed Albatross courting pair, New Island; the Black-browed Albatross colony at Steeple Jason Island; Black-browed Albatross landing, New Island; King Cormorant head portrait, New Island; hull detail/derelict minesweeper, New Island; Rockhopper Penguin head portrait in bright sun, New Island; Striated Caracara, Steeple Jason Island; Magellanic Snipe chick, Sea Lion Island.

An Expedition Overview

Experience the vibrant spring of South Georgia, a true Antarctic wildlife paradise. Observe and photograph wildlife behaviors seldom seen beneath the towering, snow-blanketed mountains that dominate the island’s landscape. Southern Elephant Seal bulls fight for breeding rights while females nurse young, overlook vast colonies of loafing King Penguins, watch Macaroni Penguins cavort in the snow, photograph handsome Gray-headed Albatrosses in flight or attending to their cliffside nests and awkward Wandering Albatrosses attempting first flight. The itinerary includes six landing days on South Georgia and three landing days in the Falklands to observe too cute Rockhopper Penguins, Magellanic Penguins standing watch at their nesting burrows, and more Black-browed Albatrosses than you could ever imagine. To commemorate Shackleton’s famous self-rescue crossing South Georgia, CES also offers an optional trek retracing his steps. With Cheesemans’ twenty years of experience in the Antarctic region, they commit to an in-depth exploration of one of the densest wildlife spectacles found anywhere in the world, and with only 100 passengers, they routinely give you the opportunity to completely immerse yourself on each landing.

Two of the scheduled Falklands’ landings, New Island and especially Steeple Jason Island, rival the best locations on South Georgia. Those will likely include Salisbury Plain, St. Andrews Bay, Elsehul, Fortuna Bay, and either Cooper Island or Hercules Bay (for Macaroni Penguins).

Why Sign Up Through BIRDS AS ART?

If you have been thinking and dreaming of finally visiting South Georgia, this is the trip for you. There will likely never be another trip like this as the best outfit in the Southern Oceans business will not be returning after 2016…. Quit dreaming and act now. Though I will not be an expedition staff member on this trip, those who have traveled with me know that I cannot help but teach. And I will be doing a introductory photography program for the entire ship on our crossing to South Georgia. All who sign up via BAA will receive a free copy the new Southern Ocean Photography Guide (a $100 value) that I am currently working on. It will include pre-trip gear and clothing recommendations and a ton of info that you will find to be invaluable.

I will hold informal pre-landing briefings aboard ship so that when you land you know exactly what to expect and where to go. I will be available on the ship to review your images, answer your questions, and conduct informal over-the shoulder Photoshop sessions. And best of all, everyone who signs up under the auspices of BAA are invited to tag along with me on the landings where I will be glad to offer invaluable in-the-field advice. And the same goes for the shipboard birds in flight and marine mammal photographic sessions.

Again, if you would like to join me on what will truly be a once in a lifetime opportunity to a wondrous place, please shoot me an e-mail with the words “Cheesemans’ Last Southern Ocean Expedition” cut and pasted into the Subject Line.

You can learn more about the trip here. If you sign up on your own be sure to mention that you would like to be part of the BAA Group. I’d be glad to answer any and all question via e-mail or by phone at 863-692-0906.

Important Notes

#1: If you fail to e-mail me as noted directly above, and register directly with CES you MUST let them know that you would like to be part of the BIRDS AS ART group.

#2: Joining the BIRDS AS ART group as above will not cost you one penny.

For additional details on the trip and the ship, see the blog post here.



Please Remember to use our Affiliate Links 🙂

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 for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod heads, Gitzo tripods, Wimberley heads and plates, LensCoats and accessories, and the like. 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 we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail. I just learned that my account was suspended during my absence; it should be up and running by Monday at the latest.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above 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 visiting the BAA Online store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

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 🙂

January 2nd, 2016

Stuff...

What’s Up?

I finished the birds as art: The Avian Photography of Arthur Morris/The Top 100 exhibit-companion e-book last night at about 9pm. I will be burning the master CD early this morning and getting it off to the manufacturing company in Richardson, TX today for overnight UPS delivery on Monday. Whew!


canonpanelc

I created the Canon panel for the upcoming San Diego Natural History Museum exhibit in InDesign yesterday. Please scroll down to see my request for proofreading help with the text. Note: I posted the corrected version above at 9am on Saturday morning.

Insanity

I had the idea for the birds as art: The Avian Photography of Arthur Morris/The Top 100 exhibit-companion e-book in my mind for about a year but never did anything about it. I always say, “Great ideas are a dime a dozen; implementing a single good idea is priceless.” As recently as two weeks ago, faced with a ton of work to be done for the exhibit and two additional writing projects, I knew that I was not going to have time to do the e-book. About a week ago, however, I thought that I just might–with the help of friends–be able to pull it off. The result? A miracle.

My first and only-ever photography instructor, Milton Heiberg, helped me put together the InDesign file for the e-book when I visited his home last Monday and Tuesday. Several folks volunteered to help me with the first edit. Then Robert “BugBob” Allen, a longtime friend from southern California sent me an e-mail after reading the December 29th Hare-Brained Scheme… blog post here. He offered to help both with both InDesign and with the final edits. Many multiple IPT veteran and good friend Alan Lillich also offered to help with the final edits. Neither knew what they were getting into. The three of us spent virtually all of our waking hours for the past three days (or at least it seemed like that…) on the next “final edit.” Think that I am exaggerating? From December 27th through yesterday the three of us exchanged well more than 100 e-mails.


boba

BugBob Allen with his wildflower book. Scroll down for info on Bob’s book.

On January 1, BugBob sent this hopefully not prophetic but likely realistic e-mail:

I learned with my second book (Wildflowers, see the image in my signature block) that no matter how hard you edit, something will slip through the cracks. I had a co-author, the publisher’s editor, and 12 botanists edit my book. When I received the first bound copy, I randomly opened it up to a page and immediately found a typo in the middle of the first paragraph I read! Bob

Right after I got Bob’s e-mail I got this from Alan:

It looks great to me. The newly aligned layout is very nice. An amazingly professional book in how few days? Help aside, the selection of the photos and drafting of the text is quite an accomplishment. Not to mention the little part about creating the photos in the first place … Alan

Both Bob and Alan are incredibly eagle-eyed; they have consistently found errors that I would not have found if I live to be a hundred. So just when we were all feeling pretty good about the final “final version,” I got this e-mail from good friend Patrick Sparkman:

Thanks for sending me the final version of your new e-book. It is fantastic and I am sure it will be well received. I did not read the whole thing carefully, and it is probably too late, but I did find one mistake. In the caption that goes with the Wood Duck head portrait, you wrote “nets in tree cavities.” It should of course be “nests.” Patrick

You gotta love it.

Both Bob and Alan have my profound thanks for the incredible amount of work that they put into this project.

Wildflowers of Orange County and the Santa Ana Mountains

Wildflowers of Orange County and the Santa Ana Mountains. Allen, R.L. & F.M. Roberts, Jr. 2013. Laguna Wilderness Press, Laguna Beach, CA. 500 pages, more than 2300 photos and 360 illustrations of wildflowers, plant communities, and associated wildlife– primarily insects and birds.

It is available here from the Orange County chapter of the California Native Plant Society and at Barnes & Noble. The BioQuip website has sample pages here.

Many years ago, Bob learned macro photography from George Lepp and John Shaw. Then bird photography from yours truly. He teaches general nature photography and macro photography workshops in southern California. Learn more here.

Canon Panel Help Needed

If you have a good eye for proofreading and spot any errors in the Canon Panel that opened this blog post, please leave a comment. Suggestions for improvement are also welcome.



Please Remember to use our Affiliate Links 🙂

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 for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod heads, Gitzo tripods, Wimberley heads and plates, LensCoats and accessories, and the like. 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 we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail. I just learned that my account was suspended during my absence; it should be up and running by Monday at the latest.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above 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 visiting the BAA Online store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

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 🙂

January 1st, 2016

Have a Great 2016!

What’s Up?

I spent virtually all of my waking hours yesterday working with Alan Lillich and BugBob Allen on the final edits of the birds as art: The Avian Photography of Arthur Morris/The Top 100 exhibit-companion e-book. This morning I need to incorporate the changes suggested by folks who called and ordered an advance review copy yesterday and fine-tune the document cover art and cover text. I hope to be burning the master CD today right after lunch. Luckily, I was able to arrange for a UPS pickup at my home-office for Saturday morning.

There is not a whole lot of room left on the OCT/NOV 2016 Cheesemans’ South Georgia Expedition, their last ever. If you would like to make your 2016 special by joining the BIRDS AS ART group for this trip, please scroll down for complete information.


predawn-clouds

This image was created from the ship at about 3:45am as it was anchored off the spectacular King Penguin colony at Salisbury Plain, South Georgia on the 2015 Cheesemans’ Expedition. What can I say? I like getting up early. I used the hand held Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM lens and the rugged Canon EOS-1D X. ISO 400. Evaluative meterting +1/3 stop: 1/320 sec. at f/8 in Manual mode. AWB.

Center AF point/AI Servo Expand/Rear Focus AF on the top of the large mountain on the left and re-compose. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to see a larger version.

Pre-dawn lenticular clouds

Have a Great 2016!

Older daughter Jennifer, right-hand man Jim Litzenberg, and I hope that all of you have a great 2016 filled with wonder (as above), good health, happiness, prosperity, success, and lots of great new images. Whether you will be traveling to many of the world’s top photo destinations or will be making images in your own backyard, remember that the big secret to becoming a better nature photographer is to pay attention to small details.

Important Note

Please understand that if you are up in the air about selling any old gear that the price of your item is dropping every day….

Selling Your Used Gear Through BIRDS AS ART

Selling your used (or like-new) photo gear through the BAA Blog or via a BAA Online Bulletin is a great idea. We charge only a 5% commission. One of the more popular used gear for sale sites charges a minimum of 20%. Plus assorted fees! Yikes. The minimum item price here is $500 (or less for a $25 fee). If you are interested please e-mail with the words Items for Sale Info Request cut and pasted into the Subject line :). Stuff that is priced fairly–I offer free pricing advice, usually sells in no time flat. In the past few months, we have sold just about everything in sight. Do know that prices on some items like the EOS-1D Mark IV, the old Canon 500mm, the EOS-7D, and the original 400mm IS DO lens have been dropping steadily. You can see all current listings by clicking here or by clicking on the Used Photo Gear tab on the yellow-orange tab on the right side of the menu bar above.

Things have been heating up on the Used Gear page lately.

  • Alice Garland sold her Canon 500mm f/4L IS Lens for $3999 in late December 2015.
  • Doug Rogers sold his Canon 100–400mm L IS zoom lens (the old 1-4) for $649 in late December 2015.
  • Troy Duong sold his Canon 500mm f/4L IS II lens for $7500.00 in late December 2015.
  • Walt Anderson sold his used Canon 1D X for $3000 in late December to a BAA friend before it was even listed!
  • Larry Master sold his Canon EOS-1D Mark IV in excellent condition for $1399 in mid-December 2015.
  • Melissa Hahn sold her Canon 400mm f/2.8L IS II lens in mint condition now for $8299 in early December, 2015.
  • Monte Brown sold his 300mm f/2.8L II lens in near-mint condition for $4499 two days after it was listed in mid-December, 2015.
  • Stephen Zarate sold his used Canon 100-400mm L IS zoom lens very quickly in early December for $650, the original asking price.
  • Kenton Rowe sold his Canon 200-400mm f/4L IS lens with Internal 1.4X Extender in early December for $9799.
  • Brent Bridges sold his Canon 600 II for the full asking price, $9799,in early December 2015.

New Listings

Canon 100–400mm f/4.5–5.6L IS Zoom Lens

Doug Bolt is offering a used Canon 100–400mm f/4.5–5.6L IS zoom lens (the old 1-4) in excellent condition for the record-low BAA price of $629. The sale includes front and rear lens caps, the ET-83C hood, the tripod ring, the tough fabric LZ1324 lens carrying case, and insured ground shipping via major courier. Your item will not ship until your check clears unless other arrangements are made.

Please contact Doug via e-mail or by phone at 301-937-3112 (Eastern time).

The old 100-400 was and is superb. I made hundreds of sale-able images with mine including the one used on the front cover of Scott Weidensaul’s “Return to Wild America”. Contrary to reports by the internet idiots the lens is–in competent hands–sharp at all focal lengths. It is extremely versatile and would make a great starter lens for those interested in bird, wildlife, and general nature photography. artie

Canon 400mm f/5.6L Lens

Douglas Bolt is also offering a used Canon 400mm f/5.6L lens in excellent condition for $699. The sale includes all the original stuff, a LensCoat, and insured ground shipping via major courier. Your item will not ship until your check clears unless other arrangements are made.

Please contact Doug via e-mail or by phone at 301-937-3112 (Eastern time).

I put my beloved Toy Lens” on the map before the turn of the millennium when I began using it with film and the Canon A2 camera body to photograph birds in flight. Today it remains a great flight lens and in addition, makes a great bird photography starter lens. I couples quite well with the 7D Mark II and will autofocus with a 1.4X TC with that camera and most of the newer Canon bodies as well. artie

Tamron SP 150-600mm f/5-6.3 Di VC USD Zoom Lens for Canon

Douglas Bolt is also offering a used Tamron SP 150-600mm f/5-6.3 Di VC USD Zoom lens for Canon in like-new condition for $699. The lens sells new at B&H for $1069. The sale includes all the original stuff and insured ground shipping via major courier. Your item will not ship until your check clears unless other arrangements are made.

Please contact Doug via e-mail or by phone at 301-937-3112 (Eastern time).


southgeorgiacardfor-2016

All images on the card were created on the 2015 Cheesemans’ South Georgia Expedition. From top left clockwise to center: King Penguin resting on Snow, Fortuna Bay; Macaroni Penguin in snow, Cooper Island; Grey-headed Albatross, Elsehul; King Penguin neck abstract, Godthul; Northern Giant Petrel, Undine Harbor; adult Wandering Albatross, Prion Island; Elephant Seal, Undine Harbor; South Georgia Pipit fledgling/thanks Joe Kaplan! Fortuna Bay; high key King Penguins in snow, Fortuna Bay.

Card design and all images copyright 2015: Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART

The Cheesemans’ 2016 OCT/NOV South Georgia/Falklands Expedition

If reading last Saturday’s blog post here put a thought in your mind about joining the BIRDS AS ART group on the Cheesemans’ 2016 OCT/NOV South Georgia/Falklands Expedition, please shoot me an e-mail with the words “Cheesemans’ Last Southern Ocean Expedition” cut and pasted into the Subject Line with any questions or if you wish to receive additional inspiration. This will surely be my last ship-based trip to the Southern Ocean as well.


steeplenewsealioncard

All of the images on this card were created in the Falklands on the 2014 Cheesemans’ Southern Oceans Expedition. From top left clockwise to center: Black-browed Albatross tending chick, Steeple Jason Island; Black-browed Albatross courting pair, New Island; the Black-browed Albatross colony at Steeple Jason Island; Black-browed Albatross landing, New Island; King Cormorant head portrait, New Island; hull detail/derelict minesweeper, New Island; Rockhopper Penguin head portrait in bright sun, New Island; Striated Caracara, Steeple Jason Island; Magellanic Snipe chick, Sea Lion Island.

An Expedition Overview

Experience the vibrant spring of South Georgia, a true Antarctic wildlife paradise. Observe and photograph wildlife behaviors seldom seen beneath the towering, snow-blanketed mountains that dominate the island’s landscape. Southern Elephant Seal bulls fight for breeding rights while females nurse young, overlook vast colonies of loafing King Penguins, watch Macaroni Penguins cavort in the snow, photograph handsome Gray-headed Albatrosses in flight or attending to their cliffside nests and awkward Wandering Albatrosses attempting first flight. The itinerary includes six landing days on South Georgia and three landing days in the Falklands to observe too cute Rockhopper Penguins, Magellanic Penguins standing watch at their nesting burrows, and more Black-browed Albatrosses than you could ever imagine. To commemorate Shackleton’s famous self-rescue crossing South Georgia, CES also offers an optional trek retracing his steps. With Cheesemans’ twenty years of experience in the Antarctic region, they commit to an in-depth exploration of one of the densest wildlife spectacles found anywhere in the world, and with only 100 passengers, they routinely give you the opportunity to completely immerse yourself on each landing.

Two of the scheduled Falklands’ landings, New Island and especially Steeple Jason Island, rival the best locations on South Georgia. Those will likely include Salisbury Plain, St. Andrews Bay, Elsehul, Fortuna Bay, and either Cooper Island or Hercules Bay (for Macaroni Penguins).

Why Sign Up Through BIRDS AS ART?

If you have been thinking and dreaming of finally visiting South Georgia, this is the trip for you. There will likely never be another trip like this as the best outfit in the Southern Oceans business will not be returning after 2016…. Quit dreaming and act now. Though I will not be an expedition staff member on this trip, those who have traveled with me know that I cannot help but teach. And I will be doing a introductory photography program for the entire ship on our crossing to South Georgia. All who sign up via BAA will receive a free copy the new Southern Ocean Photography Guide (a $100 value) that I am currently working on. It will include pre-trip gear and clothing recommendations and a ton of info that you will find to be invaluable.

I will hold informal pre-landing briefings aboard ship so that when you land you know exactly what to expect and where to go. I will be available on the ship to review your images, answer your questions, and conduct informal over-the shoulder Photoshop sessions. And best of all, everyone who signs up under the auspices of BAA are invited to tag along with me on the landings where I will be glad to offer invaluable in-the-field advice. And the same goes for the shipboard birds in flight and marine mammal photographic sessions.

Again, if you would like to join me on what will truly be a once in a lifetime opportunity to a wondrous place, please shoot me an e-mail with the words “Cheesemans’ Last Southern Ocean Expedition” cut and pasted into the Subject Line.

You can learn more about the trip here. If you sign up on your own be sure to mention that you would like to be part of the BAA Group. I’d be glad to answer any and all question via e-mail or by phone at 863-692-0906.

Important Notes

#1: If you fail to e-mail me as noted directly above, and register directly with CES you MUST let them know that you would like to be part of the BIRDS AS ART group.

#2: Joining the BIRDS AS ART group as above will not cost you one penny.

For additional details on the trip and the ship, see Saturday’s blog post here.



Please Remember to use our Affiliate Links 🙂

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 for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod heads, Gitzo tripods, Wimberley heads and plates, LensCoats and accessories, and the like. 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 we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail. I just learned that my account was suspended during my absence; it should be up and running by Monday at the latest.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above 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 visiting the BAA Online store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

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 🙂