Nothing but feathers,at six frames per second.
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- Spike
- Posts: 61
- Joined: Sun Aug 09, 2009 5:50 pm
Nothing but feathers,at six frames per second.
Wish I had the skill and equipment to catch these type of action shots with better quality.
This was way after sunset with 1200 ISO and the shutter speed cranked way up.
This was way after sunset with 1200 ISO and the shutter speed cranked way up.
Last edited by castnshoot on Sun Oct 13, 2013 5:09 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Nothing but feathers,at six frames per second.
Very cool.
Uva uvam vivendo varia fit - Augustus McCrae
- MuleyMadness
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Re: Nothing but feathers,at six frames per second.
What's the secret to getting something like this? You have a lot of Owls in your area?
- sneekeepete
- Monster
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Re: Nothing but feathers,at six frames per second.
That is really awesome! Thanks for sharing!
SNEEKEEPETE
OIF Vet.
Sgt Petersen USMC
Colossians 1:27,28
OIF Vet.
Sgt Petersen USMC
Colossians 1:27,28
Re: Nothing but feathers,at six frames per second.
that was way cool!
Re: Nothing but feathers,at six frames per second.
That was awsome! How did you manage to get set up to capture those images?
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- Spike
- Posts: 61
- Joined: Sun Aug 09, 2009 5:50 pm
Re: Nothing but feathers,at six frames per second.
There is a pair of owls that have lived in some trees at my house for years. I have a squirrel problem at my house and have feed them squirrels that I have live trapped. So they have become my friends over time.
I found this dove with a broken wing so I thought I would give him to the owls.
Even if you know what is going to happen it is very hard to actually catch on the camera.
I read an article about National Geographic photos and they claimed that most of the predatory shots you see are manipulated like this either by bait or herding the pry.
With these new DLSR cameras we have now days an average joe can do things that a real pro would have had a hard time doing 20 years ago.
I found this dove with a broken wing so I thought I would give him to the owls.
Even if you know what is going to happen it is very hard to actually catch on the camera.
I read an article about National Geographic photos and they claimed that most of the predatory shots you see are manipulated like this either by bait or herding the pry.
With these new DLSR cameras we have now days an average joe can do things that a real pro would have had a hard time doing 20 years ago.