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Wildlife Photography, Value of Patience

Wildlife Photography, Value of Patience

Rudy Turnstone.  Photographed on Assateague Island stretching its wings.

Rudy Turnstone.

Value of Patience when photographing wildlife.

The key to good wildlife photography is patience.  During my photo workshop on Assateague Island, I observed two ruddy turnstones at Ferry Landing.  Class participants took several fine photos capturing interaction between the two.  Since I don’t typically photogrpah with the class, I could not resist returning to the same area on the following day in hopes of having similar success.  That morning I spent several hours photographing ruddy turnstones, willets, and least sandpipers until canoers arrived interested in launching their boats from the shore.  My patience resulted in several great shots including one showing the turnstone flipping shells in search of food, another feeding on eggs, one bathing, another stretching its wings, etc. If you want to capture action, you must watch and wait.  If lucky, you will be able to capture behavior that you can not see with your eye. Of course you need fast shutter speeds for this.  That is where fast lenses and cameras that perform well at high ISOs give you an advantage,  With careful observation, you may be able to predict what is coming next which makes your images more unique. This sense of satisfaction is part of the reward for pursuing wildlife photography.
When photographing wildlife, you can capture unique behavior.

RuddyTurnstone

This shorebird has dug up eggs from horseshoe crabs. Wildlife photography reveals details of behavior missed by the eye

Ruddy Turnstone

Wldlife photography captures action we cannot see.

Ruddy Turnstone bathing.

The camera captured the bird in mid air.

ruddy turnstone

Photo Workshops – Chincoteague & Norfolk Botanical Gardens

The last Chincoteague photo workshop I conducted was fun as usual. Great people and myfavorite location to offer programs.  Saturday mornings dawn photography on the beach was very productive with wind swept waves backlit by the sun and feeding sanderlings racing along the shore to beat advancing waves. Attracted by an abundant supply of horseshoe crab eggs, other migrating shorebirds were prsent in large numbers on the mud flats at low tide and along the shore of Toms Cove –dowitchers, godwits, dunlin, ruddy turnstones, willets, plovers and more. Great photo opportunities were presented by terns and egrets catching fish in the borrow ditch just a few feet away, sometimes catching two at a time and fighting over prime fishing territory. A pair of oystercatchers nesting near the ocean parking lot calmly posed for photographs those who remained in the car. Black skimmers engaged in courtship antics nearby.  This program was sponsored by Norfolk Botanical Gardens. 

Coming up are two nature photography workshops, “Wildlife Photography” at Norfolk Botanical Gardens, 24 – 26 Aug.  Plus a basic editing class at the gardens the same week. Just added to my schedule is a new Chincoteague weekend scheduled for 10 – 12 Aug and sponsored by the Ward Museum of Waterfowl Art,  Salisbury University.