Over the years, I've tried to get a pic of what is arguably our most colourful bird, very mobile and shy. I succeeded today. Below is the European Bee-eater, Merops apiaster.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Colourful bird
Collapse
X
-
hm. just remembered - that bird should have been an bee eater too, I think. east african...
off-focus, I know.
mfg
wulfman"Perhaps they communicate by changing colour? Like those sea creatures .."
"Lobsters?"
"Really? I didn't know they did that."
"Oh yes, red means help!"
Comment
-
-
That's the White-fronted Bee-eater, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White-fronted_bee-eater, quite common in sub-saharan Africa. There are over 20 species of Merops. AFAIK, the only other one rarely visiting Europe is the Blue-cheeked Bee-eater. They are all very colourful birds.Brian (the devil incarnate)
Comment
-
Wulfman, regarding the last you posted. But it's probably not the lens (it was a zoom though, wasn't it?) but the fact that you could have opened the aperture a little more. Please don't take this the wrong way, I've never shot a picture as good as that one in my life
Comment
-
*g*
honestly? I think it is a flawed picture - the subject is out of focus. I had the camera focus in the center, and compared to the point of focus, the bird is sitting half a meter to the front. I think you are not really complaining about the bokeh - it is just that the grasses have been in focus. it could have been a very nice shot, though - but it just isn't. normally wouldn't have posted it, but it was the only one I had that showed the colours nicely.
the zoom was a nikon 70-300 4.5-5.6 (or something) ED, nothing expensive. and yes, I could have opened the aperture more... but given the brightness of the sun some 4° south of the equator early in the afternoon, I'm not even sure if my camera could have handled an exposure time short enough with a wide open lense w/o a filter.
teaser:
not so colourful, but still a beautiful bird.
mfg
wulfmanLast edited by Wulfman; 14 September 2008, 10:07."Perhaps they communicate by changing colour? Like those sea creatures .."
"Lobsters?"
"Really? I didn't know they did that."
"Oh yes, red means help!"
Comment
-
at that point, yes, d70. the focusing moter failed a year later, got myself a D80. nice toy.
we should seriously think about reviving the digital imaging forum...
mfg
wulfman"Perhaps they communicate by changing colour? Like those sea creatures .."
"Lobsters?"
"Really? I didn't know they did that."
"Oh yes, red means help!"
Comment
Comment