Last week, I posted a picture of 3 young Pileated Woodpeckers in a nest cavity. Last weekend, there was only one fledgling remaining in the nest when I returned...a male. (You can tell the male from the female by the red marking on the cheek.) He was extremely anxious, and there were a few moments I thought he may fledge in my presence. He and his family were calling back and forth frequently, and there were times he was literally hanging out of the nest craning his neck.
It was right in the middle of the day with high sun, and I figured just for the fun of it, I would try stacking my 1.4 and 2.0 teleconverters. I began to manual focus and to my surprise soon realized that I was actually acquiring AF. Not sure why, but surely not unhappy about it. This is a very high nest, and it's amazing how all that reach helped to cut off the angle. I know it's not a great processing job, but though it would be fun to post the results anyway.
Canon 1D3, Canon 500L with 1.4 & 2.0 stacked
F11, 1/160sec, ISO 1000, manual mode
Flash w/BB at probably between -1 and 0
Feisol tripod, Jobu head
Thanks for looking.
Marina Scarr
www.marinascarrphotography.com







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