Helpful Posts:
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3rd December 2013, 01:01 AM
#1
Cooper's hawk eating lunch
I'm not a bird photographer, but twice recently, I have been walking on a nearby trail when a hawk swooped down to capture prey and couldn't resist. This time it was a Cooper's hawk (or maybe a sharp-shinned hawk) that swooped down to capture a bird and then sat in a (fortunately) low branch, first picking off the feathers and then eating lunch. I had only a 24-105mm (on a FF camera, no less), so I had to do some severe cropping to get these. C&C welcome, as always.
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3rd December 2013, 02:23 AM
#2
Re: Cooper's hawk eating lunch
I really like this series, Dan. Lots of detail and clarity.
Pretty darn good for only the second time around.
Sergio
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3rd December 2013, 03:16 AM
#3
Re: Cooper's hawk eating lunch
Nice captures.
I'm curious, what shutter speed did you use? The reason I ask is that most parts of the pictures are nice and sharp which I guess means 1/100 sec. or faster. But in the third image, the foot has some motion blur. So how fast does a hawk move its feet when eating and how fast of a shutter speed do you need to freeze it?
Anyway, if I was going to make any suggestions I'd try cropping the 1st and 3rd pictures a little less. I'd just stick with the rule of thirds on them. I'd place the branch running across the picture at about 1/3 of the way up and I'd leave more room in front of the bird. I'm not sure if I'd place the hawk or the vertical branch at the 1/3rd mark.
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3rd December 2013, 11:33 AM
#4
Re: Cooper's hawk eating lunch
Thanks. All three were f/10, 1/200.
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3rd December 2013, 11:48 AM
#5
Re: Cooper's hawk eating lunch
Nice set. The quality doesn't seem to have suffered from the cropping.
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3rd December 2013, 06:36 PM
#6
Re: Cooper's hawk eating lunch
I think I would crop #1 a fraction tighter at the bottom. And lose the same from the sides, or a different size ratio. Either way, remove that little bit of a twig which is sticking up from the bottom. Clone out if not cropped.
And #3 could probably also take a fractionally tighter crop at the bottom.
The first two have suffered a bit from the distant, out of focus, twigs taking on a bluish cast. But probably nothing can be done with these. Just the angle of light when shooting.
However, the main subject is excellent.
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3rd December 2013, 11:23 PM
#7
Re: Cooper's hawk eating lunch
These are great, and the first is my favorite - However severe that crop was, the optics did well enough to give you a lovely, sharp image.
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4th December 2013, 03:56 AM
#8
Re: Cooper's hawk eating lunch
A couple of very nice shots.
Which means? You will be joining the bird gang soon.
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4th December 2013, 12:13 PM
#9
Re: Cooper's hawk eating lunch
Thanks, all. Bobo--those big, expensive lenses for birding are a deterrent, I have to say. Geoff--I think the blue cast of the twigs is simply because they are outside of the range of DOF. That blurs the blue sky with the brown twigs.
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