Swainson’s Hawks Of Montana’s Centennial Valley

On my trip to Montana’s Centennial Valley last month Swainson’s Hawks were very abundant.  I found two families of them that would reliably hunt close to a road and since they had become habituated to the traffic they were easier for me to approach as long as I stayed in my pickup truck.    1/1000, f/7.1, ISO 500, 500 f/4, 1.4 tc This was one of two juveniles along the river at the west end of the valley.  Both birds, along with their parents, would repeatedly perch on posts and poles close to my pickup.  But it was very difficult to get an acceptable light angle at this location in the morning so I include only this one shot of those birds.       1/2000, f/6.3, ISO 500, 500 f/4, 1.4 tc I had more luck with another family (two juvies and one parent) at the east end of the valley.  The light angle was better and I also preferred the fence posts in this area – they were older and had more character.       1/500, f/11, ISO 500, 100-400 @ 400mm Occasionally I was able to get both juveniles in the same shot but of course that situation often brings with it a depth of field problem so I switched to the 100-400 zoom and set my aperture at f/11 and focused on the post between the two birds.  It seemed to work pretty well.       1/2000, f/6.3, ISO 500, 500 f/4, 1.4 tc  I loved the “butterscotch” colors on these two juveniles – particularly this one.       1/2000,…

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How I Photograph Birds

     Tripod shooting at the Great Salt Lake wetlands  Tripod shooting is certainly not my typical method of photographing birds.  My best estimate is that less than 10% of my bird photography is from a tripod.  When circumstances demand it however there’s simply no substitute for a sturdy but relatively lightweight tripod and a gimbal style head, especially for shooting birds in flight with my large, heavy lens.  Some folks are able to hand hold this lens for hours on end and get spectacular results.  I can’t, partly due to back problems.   Lens Cart   Because of back problems I can’t carry my heavy lens, camera body, tripod and associated gear further than about a mile.   To help solve that problem I came up with this lens cart.  It’s a  pull-type golf cart that I modified to be able to carry my heavy 500mm lens with attached body in the pack and my tripod with Wimberly head attaches under the “tongue” of the cart.   There’s room in the pack for other assorted gear and I often hang a water bottle and extra body with my 100-400mm zoom to the pack.  It’s very light and pulls effortlessly.  The wheels are large enough to handle fairly rough terrain.   The main limitation of this outfit is that it can’t negotiate tall vegetation or narrow paths between trees.  Without this cart some of my favorite birding spots would be unavailable to me.   My typical method of photographing birds  This is how I do most of my shooting – from…

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