Friday, 21 November 2014

Wideangle Fungi

After a very poor start to this year's fungi season due to the dry weather, things did pick up a little in late October and early November. I therefore had a few photographic sessions in some local woodland taking a mix of wideangle and more traditional macro style images.

Most images will feature in future blog posts but here's one image that I've already processed. It was taken with my Tokina 35mm macro lens (one of my favourite lenses) early on a misty morning earlier this month. If I'm honest, it's an image that I'm really quite pleased with. I tend to be my own harshest critic at times but there's something about this image that I do like. I don't necessarily expect the fact that I like it to mean that others will too - I often find that my photographic tastes don't coincide with the tastes of others! - but the fact that I like it is enough for me. It's a slippery slope taking photos with other people's preferences in mind.


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Monday, 10 November 2014

Dragonflies in Flight

A trip to a local nature reserve in September gave me an opportunity to do something that I hadn't tried for several years; to photograph dragonflies in flight. It was a still, sunny morning with a hint of Autumn in the air and I noticed several Migrant Hawkers patrolling the reed beds at the margins of a small lake. Every now and then they would hover for a few seconds as they surveyed their habitat. It's this characteristic of Migrant Hawkers that generally makes them the easiest dragonfly to photograph in flight.

My weapon of choice was to be my 400mm lens with a couple of extension tubes fitted to allow closer focus. Dragonflies in flight are not an easy subject to photograph. They move quickly and often only hover for a second or two. So often I found I was just getting the point of focus on the dragonfly and about to squeeze the shutter when they disappeared from my viewfinder. Nevertheless, over the space of approximately an hour I managed quite a few shots where the subject was in focus and sufficiently large in the frame.


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It's worth noting that I returned to the site a few days later with a view to having another go photographing the dragonflies. However, on this occasion they didn't co-operate at all. There only seemed to be 1 or 2 individuals around, they seemed to be patrolling a much larger area (regularly disappearing from view for minutes at a time) and they weren't hovering at all. The conditions were broadly similar to those on the first occasion so it's not clear why the dragonflies were behaving so differently. As is so often the case with wildlife photography you do need a bit of luck for all of the elements to come together.