This is a UK site, Wendy, but there is a lot of information about bees in general there.
http://www.bwars.com/index.htm
This is a UK site, Wendy, but there is a lot of information about bees in general there.
http://www.bwars.com/index.htm
Frankie,
It's a Brown Spotted Yellow Wing.I've not seen these here,but I am sure they're around.The pond I frequent has mostly Widow Skimmers and Red Skimmers.
Made my first serious attempt at shooting insects yesterday. I got a couple I thought worth sharing. C&C welcome.
Honeybee at the water fountain:
Dragonfly, unknown species. The depth of field isn't quite large enough here, but I like the shot, anyway.
Another shot of the dragonfly. DOF is better here, but still not quite sharp on the wingtips. I like the angle of the above shot better.
Last edited by Snarkbyte; 25th July 2011 at 01:36 PM.
Here's a shot of the mantis I played peek-a-boo with that shows off a bit more of his arsenal....
- Bill
Peter,
This particular one was still a juvenile and only about 3.5-4 inches long. Adults can be about 6-8" long.
They are impressive hunters. They are aware of everything around them, can move at undetectable slow speeds or lighting fast speeds, and those jaws slice right through the exoskeleton of other insects like a hot knife through butter.
I once had a hanful of babies that a customer gave to me when I owned my pet store. They tore through crickets like crazy and some days I swear you could watch them grow! Unfortunately, at the time I didn't own a flash, so wasn't able to get any good shots of the babies.
- Bill
Peter, what I do in cases like your bee photo is to run a Blur Tool lightly around the noisy background. This will make the bee appear a lot sharper. And possibly a little more selective sharpening applied to just the bee.
But photographing bees is extremely difficult. Even when they are on the ground they usually move faster than I can focus.