As for quality of the pictures, I was actually a little reluctant to post these, as I felt many of them were rather poor. I'm sure that there more serious photographers among us (Lunar Mist, E_dawg, Buck, and etc.) (if I can call good people "etceteras") would agree.
This was a trip with a purpose and a hectic schedule. We were surveying ecological vegetation classes in the district (doing formal vegetation assessments: species lists in particular locations, that sort of thing) and my role (as a rank beginner at this botany game) was to document the habitats - i.e., to take record shots of as many plant species and habitat types as possible. Clarity and typicality were the goals, not artistry, and time was very short. Mostly I just didn't have the time to try for really good shots. Good photography takes an incredibly long time to get right. Just ask Buck how long it takes him to get one of his flower shots just so. Also, this was my first time with a brand-new camera, and I'm only just getting an idea of how to use it. Also, there was only one clear day: all the others were grey and flat.
Let's look the pictures one by one:
I like this one. It would never make a great shot, but it's well-framed and the light is nice (early morning can't be beat). It needs a better foreground, but there wasn't one to hand. Walk forward or zoom and then there isn't any foreground and the composition is unbalanced. A
real photographer would have walked and driven around for a few hours to find a better spot, then waited till 7AM the next day to get the shot. Cropping a small slice off the bottom would improve it. Canon 20D.
Nailed this one. Not entirely convinced that the framing is ideal, but I class it as a very good shot.
Isopogon is wonderful stuff, one of my favourite plants. Coolpix 4500.
Nice Sacred Kingfisher. This was my second-best shot of this bird,which for some reason I decided to post instead of the best one. Reasonably good, but I can do beter. Swarovski scope and Canon A95.
The background needs to be further out of focus - i.e., a faster lens is required. Close, but no cigar. (I'll buy a proper macro lens for the 20D as soon as Tannin's credit card recovers a bit. Probably a TS-E 90mm, but I haven't decided for sure yet. ) Nikon CP4500, f/5.6.
Wonderful old River Red Gum log on the edge of a dry swamp, I'm probably a bit too close to it though. I still like this shot, but it's not as good as I thought it was on first sight. Canon 20D.
Same beautiful log. I like this one. Shame about the weather. 20D.
Nailed it. One of the best shots of the wek. Nikon 4500.
Not great, but a shot I'm happy with. Bit hard to go wrong with that beautiful old Yellow Gum. 20D.
A little too far away from the birds for good results. Nice pose, nice sidelight, but I had to get closer. Scope & A95.
Stunning flower, and a rare species (a
Swainsonia sp) but the shot is very ho-hum. Wind was a problem (as it often is with flowers and similar) but I should have composed this better and done more with the background. Again, a proper macro lens will help. CP 4500.
Nothing special. It's a river. It looks like a river. Fantastic camp site! (I slept between the river and the car - beautiful place to wake up. This is where I saw the Sacred Kingfisher, by the way.) 20D.
The 5 times a second shutter repeat of the 20D makes this sort of thing ridiculously easy. Not bad, but I can do better. Will do better next time.
Not bad. It's a lake bed. Loks like a lake bed. Needs post processing to remove fly and straighten horizon. (Note to the Canon design engineers: forget telling me my exposure in the viewfinder, give me a spirit level so I can get things bloody straight some of the time!) 20D.
Really, really rushed for this one, as I had to stop, snap, and then drive like hell to catch the car in front before we got to the next corner and I woudn't know which way to go. I didn't think I'd framed it right at the time, and I was right. In fact, that first crop I did to show the "birds" is
much better. Let's look at the crop again:
Yup. Heaps better. 20D.
Habitat shots are quite difficult. In general, if it shows a representative sample of the habitat and the plants in it, aesthetically it's a complete mish-mash. This one is rather good. 20D.
A small crop along the bottom would help. 20D.
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Very nice. Not quite as sharp as it should be because the lens doesn't focus quite as close as I was standing, I think. (OK, kneeling - it is about 18 ibches off the ground under a shrub.) But I like this one. 20D.