Parent feeding its young on our garden fence this evening
I keep talking about my fledgling Red-bellied Woodpecker but I finally got off my duff this morning to photograph this sweet baby
The light was not great on these monkeys but... I have finally developed something to capture the mood of this family.
why did this background end up so f'n yellow? the bird and branch are true color (this is Gray-headed Tanager)
I am adding photos to my new Flickr album from my Wildlife Photography workshop in Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica
i'm still not happy with my tree photography but to prevent overwhelm i will continue to focus on birds &, i hope, macro subjects-- that's enough overwhelm for a beginner
For an animal that doesn't move much, sloths can be hard to photograph in a way that results in a photo worth looking at. However, on the last day of our workshop, we found this mother and baby, and
part of my macro workshop involved working w/ flash to overcome the extreme depth of field issues, i'm a bit meh on flash but me thinks this one's a keeper
This is another professionally "wrangled" amphibian from my macro day, all were released back into the wild by the property owner/wrangler after the class was over (a couple of hours) but it's still
A random focus stack i did yesterday, i've only done a few focus stacks (mostly astro focus stacks of Comet Atlas) so i need to practice to make sure i know all the steps before my next workshop...
If a photo takes a metric s***ton of processing, you probably won't be happy with the final result & so it is with this phone digiscope of Slender-billed Kite that I had to settle for because we were
"some people act like they never seen a woodpecker peck wood before..."-- vaguely huffy Cinnamon Woodpecker male
@JimsPhotos@ohai.social
Awwwwwww