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Thread: Black-throated Green Warbler feeding baby

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    Default Black-throated Green Warbler feeding baby


    Hancock County, Maine | July | Canon 50D | Canon 600mm f4 IS | ISO 200 1/500 f5.6

    I posted another from this series a little while ago but I can't resist posting another. Whitnessing the feeding was certainly one of the highlights of my spring shooting season. I could have used a touch more DOF here. I did try a new sharpening thechnique and will be curious to hear what you guys think.
    Last edited by Matthew Studebaker; 09-13-2009 at 05:36 PM.

  2. #2
    Axel Hildebrandt
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    Matthew, there is only a 'no hotlinks' button instead of an image. You can host the image on the BPN server by going to 'edit', 'go advanced' scroll down and click on 'manage attachments' where you can upload.

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    There we go. fixed it. Thanks Axel.

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    Wonderful interaction captured in this image. I like the mother's angle. Do you have more with the mother actually feeding the baby? Nice image.

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    Publisher Arthur Morris's Avatar
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    Timing, SH, the bug, the EXP, and the adult are all perfect. I wish only that the head of the baby were turned a bit more towards us.
    BIRDS AS ART Blog: great info and lessons, lots of images with our legendary BAA educational Captions; we will not sell you junk. 30+ years of long lens experience/e-mail with gear questions.

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    Publisher Arthur Morris's Avatar
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    ps: Thanks for your membership support. It is greatly appreciated.
    BIRDS AS ART Blog: great info and lessons, lots of images with our legendary BAA educational Captions; we will not sell you junk. 30+ years of long lens experience/e-mail with gear questions.

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    Great moment captured. Love the perch and the worm. Great looking species.

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    Nice shot Matthew! Could this chick be a cowbird? It seems a bit big.

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    Lifetime Member Stu Bowie's Avatar
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    Super interaction, and I like the anticipation of the chick with the open beak. Well captured.

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    Forum Participant Melvin Grey's Avatar
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    Very nicely captured behavioural image, well composed against a nice un-obtrusive BG. The young bird looks incapable of sustained flight so why was it out of the nest? If as Dan suggested it might be a parasitic species like our European Cuckoo, these often leave the host nest before being able to fly, generally because they have outgrown it!
    Would others please mind commenting on this.

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    Good question Melvin. He could actually do very very short flights but he was out of the nest because HE has parasites. There were worms crawling out of both this young Black-throated Green Warbler chick and its four siblings.

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    I remember the first image in this series, awesome!
    Did you sharpen in LAB mode?

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    Hi Mike - instead of running a sharpen filter on this shot, when I resized the image in photoshop I simply chose the "nearest neighbor" for hard edges algorythm in photoshop instead of the default "bicubic" mode. Just something I'm playing around with. The advatage is that there is no halo created when using this method, and it preserves fine detail well, but it does increase the noise in the background.

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