I had watched this little newborn piping plover as it hatched it's way out of the egg at around 5:30 Sunday morning.
By 10:00, all 4 had hatched and by noon, there were foraging in the fore dunes.
I had to leave around 4:00pm and this little one and one of it's siblings (just out of frame), climbed on top of this little sand knoll and conked out.
The direction of the lighting wasn't perfect, but I certainly wasn't going to crawl through tern nests for a better angle. Sometimes you've got to take what mother nature offers up to you :)
Nikon D300, 500AFS~VR with a TC17EII, ISO640, F9, UniWB preset, center weighted metering with +.7 EV compensation.
Last edited by Jim Fenton; 06-03-2008 at 10:10 AM.
Jim, Such a nice image, and memories that will last you a lifetime. I agree with Robert's suggestion for trimming the bottom as it doesn't add anything. When working with babies as new as this, sometimes I try to highlight their smallness by including a fair amount of negative space. I feel like the baby might be a bit big in this frame, but it's certainly a personal interpretation.
Beautiful image with good exposure and excllent detail. Love those images that share the first few moments of life. I agree with Roberts suggestions. Thanks for sharing this wonderful capture Jim
Good move not crawling through the nest site. Sweet image. You made the most of what you were given. I might crop off the bottom somewhat as too much OFF foreground becomes distracting.
Sweet image Jim !!! Agree on not moving around the area. Love the feel and mood. Would agree to taking some of the bottom and evicting the plant !!! I like this image a lot, watching those little guys must have been fun !!!
I had left it intentionally as the little tyke was actually elevated on a tiny sand hill and this made it appear as it did to my eyes at the time of capture.
However, I will play with the crop tonight, forget what I actually saw and see if it presents better the cropped way.