haseeb badar
09-02-2019, 12:11 AM
Hello everyone, thank you for all your comments and suggestions to my previous post, as always much appreciated.
Here is an image of Swamp Deers taken at Dudhwa national Park, a very skittish specie normally photographed from a distance.
The Barasingha or Swamp Deer, is an endangered species of deer, and can be seen in protected sanctuaries in India. They derive their name from the large antlers of the adult male Barasingha, which may grow to have more than 12 points, hence the translation of its name in Hindi, 12- antlered Deer. Marshes or swampland is a Barasingha's preferred territory. The Barasingha is found in forested areas in the Gangetic and Brahmaputra basins in India. The Barasingha is a vulnerable species. The destruction of their habitat due to deforestation, the draining of swamps and marshes for farming, poaching for its horns and diseases transmitted by domestic cattle, have all led to the decline of the Barasingha in India.
DPP 4.8, PSCC 2019, WB, curves, vibrance, selective colour/colour balance, darkened the fg a bit, cropped from top as well as from rhs and lhs, sharpening.
Canon 1DX MK II, Canon 200-400 f4@ 560mm, Bean Bag lying on the ground.
1/3200, f/5.6, iso 1000.
Looking forward for all your comments and suggestions, be it of any nature.
Haseeb.
Here is an image of Swamp Deers taken at Dudhwa national Park, a very skittish specie normally photographed from a distance.
The Barasingha or Swamp Deer, is an endangered species of deer, and can be seen in protected sanctuaries in India. They derive their name from the large antlers of the adult male Barasingha, which may grow to have more than 12 points, hence the translation of its name in Hindi, 12- antlered Deer. Marshes or swampland is a Barasingha's preferred territory. The Barasingha is found in forested areas in the Gangetic and Brahmaputra basins in India. The Barasingha is a vulnerable species. The destruction of their habitat due to deforestation, the draining of swamps and marshes for farming, poaching for its horns and diseases transmitted by domestic cattle, have all led to the decline of the Barasingha in India.
DPP 4.8, PSCC 2019, WB, curves, vibrance, selective colour/colour balance, darkened the fg a bit, cropped from top as well as from rhs and lhs, sharpening.
Canon 1DX MK II, Canon 200-400 f4@ 560mm, Bean Bag lying on the ground.
1/3200, f/5.6, iso 1000.
Looking forward for all your comments and suggestions, be it of any nature.
Haseeb.