Editor’s Pick
OCTOBER 22, 2008 10:50AM

to all the birds I've loved...

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GrayHeadedKingfisher.jpg

Grey-headed Kingfisher Halcyon leucocephala

 

Caveat lector

This is a long post of mostly photographs with some notes and comments along the way. 

I'm not a terrific bird photographer, it wouldn't take you long to find others who are spectacular at this craft. I'm an ok bird photographer. But I love birds. 

 

It is, however, extraordinarily difficult to photograph birds, and I've given a couple of examples below. I think in part it's because they seem to move about in a different sense of time than we do. That is understandable somewhat when you consider how short their lives are compared to how we occupy our own time. 

 

There are many things, really, that don't match up with our sense of time. I remember being enthralled with images and presentations that skewed that sense for me. Movies like Koyaanisqatsi, or in some of Spielberg's large scale backdrops that show dark clouds moving rapidly in the background while normal time sequences go on in the foreground. And consider this: Most of us think of the glass in our windows, indeed it's true for any glass, as a solid. It's not. Glass is a liquid; it just operates in a different time scale than what we can perceive. That window pane will be slightly thicker at the bottom in a generation or two because even glass in it's own slow way is subject to the laws of gravity.

 

So birds move in a way that is on the other end of that spectrum from glass. Their movements are fast in a manner required to preserve their short lives for as long as possible. Which results, at least for me in my meager talents, in an exponentially greater number of shots that are filled with blurry lines than the ones that are merely decent.

 

The little gem at the top, the Gray-headed Kingfisher is one that demonstrates that spread of success (or failure). I have hundreds of him, and a half-dozen that I like. He's small, only about 6 inches from tip of bill to end of tail, but what a handsome fellow. He knows I'm there and there is bright intelligence in that eye as he assesses the threat.

 

Now for some more. I hope you enjoy the compendium. (It really does represent a fraction of total shots to get these—and there are a couple of repeats from previous posts of mine—the Rainbow Lorikeet and Flamingos have been part of some previous blogs.)

 

DoubleWattledCassowary.jpg

Double Wattled Cassowary Casuarius casuarius

 

Even with a fast lens—taken wide open at f/1.8—this guy was difficult to capture. It didn't help that he was in a cloistered area surrounded by tall bamboo and the light was not optimal. The shallow depth of field, necessitated by the light, means that only part of his beak and the "casque"—the keratin extension of his bill on top of his head—were in focus. You can see below, he proves my point about the difficulty of photographing birds.

 

DoubleWattledCassowary2.jpg

 

 

 

HarpyEagle2.jpg

 

HarpyEagle.jpg

Harpy Eagle Harpia harpyja 

 

This beauty is a very large bird. It's extraordinary that his habitat means that he has to maneuver between the trees in a rain forest as he seeks his usual tree-dwelling prey; monkeys, coatis and sloths. His wingspan is enormous, as you can see in in this not very good shot from this set of photos of mine which makes his agility all the more amazing. Note also, in one of the shots above how large his talons are. There is no measurement of scale in the shot, but trust me, those claws and talons are enormous. The talons are about 5 inches/13 cm long—longer even than a Grizzly Bear's.

 

 

 

KingVulture.jpg

King Vulture Sarcoramphus papa

 

This could be a good ad for Visine™—maybe not. This photo demonstrates a curious phenomena. All of these birds are in enclosed spaces, many behind some sort of screen or fence. If you use a shallow depth of field, and just focus on your subject you can minimize the fence or barrier and still come out with an ok shot. (And you have a good lens—this shot used the estimable Nikkor 70-200mm f/2.8 VR with a 1.7x teleconverter resulting in this being at 340mm, f/4.8, 1/60 second. I used a monopod too to stabilize the cam and lens.)

 

 

 

Cuckoo.jpg

Guira Cuckoo Guira guira

 

This cuckoo varietal is a favorite of our own dear tequilaanddonuts. I think she likes him because of his punk hair-do. The Guira is a non-parasitical cuckoo.

 

Cuckoo2.jpg

 

 

 

RacketTailedRoller2.jpg

Racket-tailed Roller (with molted, missing rackets) Coracias spatulatus

 

There's something about seeing light blue in a bird that is pleasing, and this little gem is a perfect example. His normal habitat is the southern half of Africa. The following shows him with his rackets intact. 

 

RacketTailedRoller.jpg

 

 

 

BaldEagle3.jpg

Bald Eagle Haliaeetus leucocephalus

 

Most eagles, as you can see here and above in the Harpy too, seem to me to have a look of being permanently pissed off. 

 

 

 

VictoriaCrownedPIgeon.jpg

Victoria Crowned Pigeon Goura victoria

 

This little lady is huge—one of the largest in the pigeon family and about as big as a healthy sized chicken--about 29 inches/74cm long and almost 6 lbs. I think she's perfectly named. It's extraordinarily difficult to get a shot of the Victoria without some of her headdress in blurry motion—she's a jerky bird. You can see the details in this larger version of a lucky shot.

 

 

 

BlackSwan.jpg

Black Swan Cygnus atratus

 

These are stately beauties, but watch your step. If you get too close you may be chased; they're very territorial.

 

 

 

SaddleBilledStork.jpg

Saddle-billed Stork Ephippiorhynchus senegalensis

 

Relative to another post of mine, the Saddle-billed Stork is represented in ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs.

 

 

 

ChestnutBreastedMalkoha.jpg

Chestnut-breasted Malkoha Phænicophæus curviostris Look at that! Two ligatures in the same word!

 

Remember back to the 50s and early 60s when it was all the rage to get an alarm clock or wrist watch with pale green radioactive luminescence? The Malkoha has the same kind of bill. The slightest bit of direct sunlight on its bill blows it out in digital photographs—it has that same pale luminescent quality as those watches. I'm not sure though if it glows in the night—probably not.

 

 

 

WhiteCrestedLaughingThrush.jpg

White-crested Laughing Thrush Garrulax leucolophus

 

I love the name of this beauty. I've seen him several times, but never heard a peep out of him.

 

 

 

MandarinDuck.jpg

Mandarin Duck Aix galericulata

 

He just knows he's special.

 

 

 

 

And now some shots reprised from previous postings:

 

RainbowLorikeet.jpg

 

RainbowLorikeet2.jpg

Rainbow Lorikeet Trichoglossus haematodus

 

Unbelievable colors!

 

 

 

 

And these from my post Of what do flamingos dream that was dedicated to our own dear ePriddy.

 

Flamingo3.jpg

 

Flamingo.jpg

 

Flamingo2.jpg

Caribbean Flamingo Phoenicopterus ruber

 

 

 

 

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Oh, now you've really got me, Barry. I'm a major bird nut (uh, for the feathered kind). These are gorgeous! I have to leave for a meeting but will be back later to read the text and luxuriate some more in these gorgeous shots. Great big thumbs up!
Wow, I love the texture of this series! Just for silly I have to share this quote:

Fall is my favorite season in Los Angeles, watching the birds change color and fall from the trees.
David Letterman
Your photographs are absolutely breathtaking! I love birds. What a stunning job you did!
The flamingos and the King Vulture are incredible. I especially love the way the dark background contrasts against the vivid color of the flamingo's feathers.

And the colorful Cassowary! Fabulous, funny perspective.
You're not a terrific bird photographer??? I'm sorry, did I misread something? Did I mislearn English? Am I in Seinfeld's Bizzaro World? Is it Opposite Day?
Forget Open Salon. You should do a book! Amazing images, and interesting commentary.
Just beautiful shots, Barry. I'm always impressed by your work (and am now a proud owner) but these are extra special. When we lived in San Diego and went to The Wild Animal Park, there was a cassowary that greeted us right at the entrance to the Rainforest Section and we just loved him, so much personality. People underestimate the intelligence of birds. I can see, especially with our chickens, that they are anything but dumb.

rated and mucho appreciated
Barry called me a whore!
Gorgeous! Just breathtaking. I have to say the mandarin duck has my heart - I've always loved their markings, they're almost unreal-looking. The harpy eagle is amazing, and the color and sinuous lines of the flamingo make me want to do an abstract watercolor painting. Thanks for the eye candy, this is a very nice exhibit.
UK, it's interesting you should say that. In fact, our wonderful OS artist ePriddy did just that...you can see her watercolors here. And (bonus!) she sent me copies of her work, and one of the original Chinese brush paintings.
Fabulous photos, Barry. And thanks for identifying the birds, too.
I would love to know where you took these shots. The variety of birds is impressive. As usual, your photos are incredible. Thank you for this tweet...errr...treat.
Thanks Lisa, I look forward to your thoughts.

Susan, ha! Having lived in SoCal for a long time, that's funny and true.

Scruffus, I thought you might enjoy the beaks and wings. Thanks for the kind words.

Cherie, thanks so much. The flamingos were also taken with that 70-200mm 2.8 pro lens.

Lainey...it's true though, after seeing tons of really good bird photographers, I'm pretty much middle of the road. But I like your thinking, thanks.

Thanks Mishima...the book is coming, but now delayed to next year.

Lauren, I'm happy you have one of my images, and yes...when you consider the provenance of our feathered friends, they outsmarted time, history and catastrophe if you consider that they are the descendants of dinosaurs.

Lonnie...I think my words were..."I'm not calling Lonnie a whore..."
The colors and the point of view are remarkable. I am jarred into silence and contemplation. You make beautiful things, Barry.
Julie...here's the scoop:

Gray-headed Kingfisher
Harpy Eagle
King Vulture
Guira Cuckoo
Racket-tailed Roller
Bald Eagle
Chestnut-breasted Malkoha
Victoria Crowned Pigeon
White-crested Laughing Thrush; all from the Dallas Zoo

Double-wattled Cassowary
Saddle-billed Stork; were both at Nashville Zoo

The first Rainbow Lorikeet also at Nashville Zoo

Second Lorikeet at Oregon Zoo

Flamingos at Fort Worth Zoo

Mandarin Duck at National Zoo in Washington DC

Black Swan at The Broadmoor Hotel in Colorado Springs
Liz, that's a beautiful thing to say, and a lovely compliment that this led you to contemplation. Thank you for that.
Barry, that's a stunning collection of birds. I can't believe how brilliant and sharp they appear on my monitor, especially the Victoria Crowned Pigeon/Goura victoria.
My wife and I just oohed and aahed our way through these. Lovely!
Your photographs are absolutely beautiful. You are a splendid bird photographer!
Barry, you know I am one of your biggest fans. These combine two of my favorite elements--vibrant colors and feathered dinosaurs. As someone who has spent a lot of time attempting to photograph birds, including our own parrots, you have my sympathy. Your patience rewards all of us, though. Many thanks.
Susan, I was waiting for you to show up. I know you love birds, and not just your own. But you've hit on a key element, and that is patience. You really can't be in a hurry, or have anything better to do, than to sit and wait and hope that you are ready for when the moment comes--actually for when the second, or nanosecond comes. One has to be patient, slow and deliberate. And enjoy it.
Really wonderful! I love these shots. Love them!

And I love birds, too.
Barry, your photos are stunning and bold. Crisp and clear. Jaw dropping. Make me even happier to be alive. Your "notes" are not mere notes...your writing is superb. Your analogy between glass and birds was striking and moving. Thank you!
Wow. Birds are about the toughest thing there is to photograph. I'd like to hear some specs on lenses and camera settings for some of these shots. Thanks!
Barry, Stunning in every way,......I will look at these great creatures differently, and meditate on the drama and beauty.
thanks Barry, for another wonderful post.
Scruffus turned me on to this post--and I'm so grateful for that!
I once turned around and picked up a bird that was dead on the side of the road and drove out of my way to the state park to get the ranger to identify it. It turned out to be a purple gallinule that shouldn't have been so far north. He was turquoise and purple and royal blue--amazing. I posed him on the porch and took pictures and cried over him before I took a few feathers and buried him. What a story he might have told. (And what rolled eyes my family gave me for photographing roadkill.)
barry - stunningly beautiful bird pics. what a wonderful visual to wake up to. your colors are so liquid - amazing.
I've heard writers call the wastebasket an essential part of their work. The good ones know what's a keeper. Your description of the volume of uninteresting or failed shots required to find a few really good ones has a familiar ring. But your images speak louder than any description possible. Thanks for posting these.
Thanks Stacey. I'm very grateful that I'm dealing in magnetic 1s and 0s instead of the exponentially more costly film, even though digital still cannot match the detail and nuances of silver on plastic.

Thanks Lisa, I like that description of liquid colors.

Lydieth...I'd love to see some images of your gallinule, what a find.

Thanks Gary, I think it does us all good to contemplate beauty and our relation to it.

Rich, I'll work on doing a list of exif data for you and post it here.

Mary, thank you (again and again) for your lovely comments.

Odette, nice that we have similar loves...thanks.
Scrumptious, Barry. I second Mary's comment: seeing the profusion of form and color through bird, fish and flora makes me happy to be alive. And I second designanator: I can't believe how good your images make my old monitor look! My personal favorite is the racket-tailed roller. It has a delicate zen outlook which says it's unaware or unconcerned with how beautiful it is. Kind of like our cat Amelia Mouse.
You just made my morning. Beautiful!
So beautiful, both the birds and your photos. In Ranthambore National Park in India, we saw a Kingfisher in the wild. So small and yet even from a distance, the brilliant blue was amazing. But I'm REALLY not a photographer, and the picture isn't great. The memory, though, is. Thanks for bringing it back.
Incredible! One of my all-time favorite posts to which I will return again and again to soak in the beauty.

I love birds. My Buddhist cousin promises me that I will be an "uncaged wild bird" in my next life. I'm holding her to it.

I salute you with the whispery sound of feathers in flight...
Stunning.

I spent an hour recently trying to get some good pictures of (wild) pelicans, with minimal success. So I have a tiny bit of understanding of how long it takes to get a decent shot, much less ones as lovely as this.

You’re going to make me want to buy a better camera!
I sympathize Denise, pelicans are terrific subjects, but not easy at all. One of the hardest things is to get a decent background with them. I have just two that I like a little...

Pair of whites here

Brown here
Great pictures, as always, Barry. Thank you for sharing them. My only complaint is that now I can't get that stupid Willie Nelson/Julio Iglesias song out of my head.
I'm a total fan of photographing birds at zoos and going to zoos. Was thinking just the other day about the difficulty of photographing birds with a digital camera because they are so slow. That gap of time between pushing the button and the click is forever when you're trying to capture birds. Forgive the technical talk, please; I'm so well-versed in terminology. Is there such a thing as a moderately-priced digital that works like a 35 mm? Speak as to a two-year-old, please.
As you well know, I love to photograph birds as well. The collection you have here is awesome, bro. Awesome. I love the Harpie eagle, but truthfully I'd have a hard time picking a favorite out of these - they are all exquisite.
Thanks for the colorful post of feathered friends. :-D

Rated/appreciated/still trying to get my jaw off the floor.
Wow! great photos! thanks for sharing them!
I love these photos, especially the blurry Double Wattled Cassowary Casuarius casuarius - it perfectly captures the nature of the bird. The last flamingo is poetry. I have a weird attraction to birds: I find them fascinating, but I'm a little afraid of the really smart ones. (Praying mantis's also freak me out because they look back at you!)

btw : "Chestnut-breasted Malkoha Phænicophæus curviostris Look at that! Two ligatures in the same word!" The æsc (æ) is not a true typographical ligature but an actual letter/vowel of its own.
Very nice. We only have brown pelicans in my area. (at least in the wild)

I find them awkward and beautiful at the same time.
Barry, these are freaking amazing. It helps that I too love birds--bird watching in my back yard is one of my favorite pastimes--but really, the detail and color and depth in these pictures is breathtaking.
Marcelleqb said: "btw : "Chestnut-breasted Malkoha Phænicophæus curviostris Look at that! Two ligatures in the same word!" The æsc (æ) is not a true typographical ligature but an actual letter/vowel of its own."

I would disagree a bit, it depends on how you look at the etymology. It was originally a Latin diphthong that became a ligature, and while it is a "character" in English typography, it is a separate letter in many languages, but not usually represented as a separate letter in American English. However, if you look at it's Anglo Saxon roots, then the transliteration from the ancient equivalent æsc "ash tree" roots, then indeed it is considered a letter. A minor point to all but lexicographers and philologists.
Lemur, not sure what your budget is, but I would begin by looking on Amazon and start with the Canon Powershot A series and look at the reviews. This is a point and shoot series that will range from $125 or so up to $450 or so for the A650IS, which is a fine camera. The middle of that range would be the A630 which is highly regarded. If you're looking for a DSLR, a digital SLR, search for Nikon DSLR or Canon DSLR on Amazon and go by your budget considerations and what you see in the reviews. Look for reviews that are heavily weighted in scores of 4 or 5--there will always be negative reviews. Also look at a few of the negative reviews to see if they are of the generic variety, as in complaining about slow service etc and not about the camera.

Good luck!
Wow! Your photos are superb. Let's get those lorikeets at the 2 separate zoos together so they can make beautiful babies!

Thanks for the "coffee table" post.
wow. birds are not normally my thing, but some of those were just too breathtaking to move past.

the one on the OS home page really grabbed me. i would normally never come to a post like this, but it kept tugging at me.

i had no idea what i would find here. i had no idea they would captivate me this way. they have.

nice work.
Magnificent! The clarity you achieve and the colour contrast your subjects have provided, and those close-ups, and that last one with all of those swirls! I might print this off, cut out the pictures, frame them and exhibit them gallery style along the hallway. (you wouldn't mind, would you?)
Amazing. Spectacular. Each bird and each shot is beautiful in its own right.

I can't wait to finish typing this so I can click on "Of What Do Flamingos Dream."

Thank you for sharing this.
m. a.h, thanks so much for your kind words. I hope you enjoy the other flamingo shots.

Karin, you are welcome to print these off, but it won't do the images justice. The images are re-rendered by the OS servers downward to the 120kb range...probably at 72dpi or so as well, so they really don't print well, and are best viewed on a computer display. I do sell my work, but I've never asked for or offered that for the OS audience. If you have a particular image here that you like, I'd be happy to print out a complimentary copy for you on nice paper with good inks and send it along...just let me know. (viral marketing)

Dave, I'm so glad you stopped by. And for your honesty to say it's not normally your thing, and yet you still enjoyed it means a lot to me. Thanks so much.

Pat! ha! Those lorikeets have all the loving they can handle at their respective boudoirs I imagine.

Merwoman, thank you very much for your lovely compliments. I know you have a passion for animals, so to please you means a lot.

Steve, yeah, that tune kind of stuck in my brain too. Sorry.
Oh, dear, is my Latin showing?
Sheesh, I keep forgetting a comment I wanted to make. You mentioned your poor eyesight means you don't know if you got a good shot until you see it on a bigger screen. I was amazed to hear that. I have that exact problem and it can be incredibly frustrating. But if you can get such crisp and beautiful photos even with vision issues, then I'll be damned I'm not going to let it get to me!
Beautiful, beautiful colors. Nature is such a beautiful place to look for color palettes. I actually really liked that blurry picture of the cassowary, a beautiful swirl of movement and colors.

I've been considering a peacock tattoo, but I may have to revise after seeing that rainbow lorikeet. Thanks for the inspiration and high quality photos!
Susan, in addition to the general degradation of presbyopia, I've been about 20/220 in my right eye since about 1970 when an infection left extensive keratitis on the eye...the aftereffects of which lead to bouts of severe iritis every couple of years or so. I have a couple sets of reading glasses I use--never could get used to bifocals, one for about 12" away, and one pair for 12" to 20" away, but even with those, the 3" screen can't give me good enough detail on the shot. So it's a delight to come back to my office and see something that's worked out, based on the settings and guesses I've made.

Thanks again Susan.
Oh, and I forgot: Many extra points for mentioning Koyaanisqatsi. Timing is interesting, too--the DH and I were just talking about it last night. It's what finally convinced the DH that we needed to get the hell out of Houston and move somewhere quieter and slower.
Love these photos -- you could work for a nature magazine. I keep thinking that bird watching needs to be one of my hobbies. Great post!
bbd, I do especially love the the Flamingo trio. Thank you for offering a complimentary print, but I just couldn't accept that. You're too talented. Without know what the cost of your prints are, I'd love to buy all three. I'll message you via OS and we can talk dollars, ok? Also, do you have an online business? If so, can you post the URL, please? Thank you so much, once again, for your kindness.
Amazing, beautiful, wonderful - the superlatives lack oomph! My mom's a big Birdie - I'll have to forward her these.

Now that I'm out in NorCal, I've fallen in love with the brown peli. There's packs of them that hang - quite literally - on the sea side of the GG Bridge; they do they same thing to a lesser degree off the boardwalk of Santa Cruz. They sit in the air, a hundred, 150 feet above the earth's curve, facing the wind, and are immobile. I look at them and wish to be immobile too. I hold my breath and face the wind and try not to blink and clear my mind. They're like my meditation gurus. Thanks for the close-up.
A lovely way to finish a day, too.

Plumed, of course.
Here I am, late as usual. Barry, I hate to contradict, but I think that you're a fine bird photographer. I am quite a fan of using a restricted depth of field to focus in on a defining feature of a subject and let the rest remain a bit out of focus. Somehow, it's like you've caught the essence of the cassowary.

I remember taking of from the airport at Buenos Aires returning home to Boston after my brothers wedding in northern Argentina. As I looked out the window of the aircraft just after rotation, there was a huge flock of parrots taking of. I assume the aircraft had disturbed them. It was just an explosion of reds, blues, and greens that I had only seen in photos until then. It was definitely a double-take moment.

I always feel like playing Peggy Lee's version of "Is That All There Is?" when I come to the end of what you describe as a "long" post.
You have such a gift.

My parents live in Illinois, and I love how, at Christmastime, the cardinals flock in the snowy trees at the back of their yard, sometimes congregating in groups of 20 or more. What you could do with that scene, and a camera!
Absolutely love the blurry Cassowary shot!
Although it's already been said, I will join the chorus and say these are amazing! I am really impressed by how much personality you are able to convey and the richness of the colour. Thank you for this.
I have tried to post some exif data at the request of Rich Banks above, and spent some time formatting the text offline, but the paste and post won't stick, so I'll have to try something else.
Maybe it's too long of a paste, though I've not seen that before in comments...will post it in two sections:

All aperture priority, center weighted metering and white balance on auto unless noted otherwise. For focal lengths above 200mm it means that the 1.7x teleconverter was used on the Nikkor 70-200mm f/2.8 VR lens. Image links of lens on first mention of that lens.

GH Kingfisher: Nikkor 70-200 f/2.8, 1/30sec, f/4.8, ISO125, 340mm

DW Cassowary: Nikkor 50mm f/1.8, 1/30sec, f/1.8, ISO160, 50mm, matrix metering

DW Cassowary: (the blurry one) Nikkor 18-200 f/3.5, 1/30sec, f/5.6, ISO 640, matrix metering

Harpy 1: Nikkor 70-200 f/2.8, 1/60sec, f/2.8, ISO100, 200mm

Harpy 2: Nikkor 105mm f/2.8 macro, 1/60sec, f/2.8, ISO100, 105mm

King Vulture: Nikkor 70-200mm f/2.8, 1/60sec, f/4.8, ISO100, 340mm

Cuckoo 1: Nikkor 18-200mm f/3.5, 1/125sec, f/5.6, ISO100, 170mm

Cuckoo 2: Nikkor 18-200mm f/3.5, 1/160sec, f/5.6, ISO100, 200mm

Racket-tailed Roller 1: Nikkor 70-200 f/2.8, 1/640sec, f/2.8, ISO100, 200mm

Racket-tailed Roller 2: Nikkor 105mm f/2.8 macro, 1/125sec, f/5.3, ISO100, 105mm

Bald Eagle: Nikkor 70-200mm f/2.8, 1/100sec, f/2.8, ISO100, 200mm, flash fired

Victoria Crowned Pigeon: Nikkor 105mm f/2.8 macro, 1/40sec, f/3, ISO100, 105mm
Black Swan: Nikkor 18-200mm f/3.5, 1/60sec, f/5.6, ISO100, 200mm, spot metering, WB set on flash though flash not used

Saddle-billed Stork: Nikkor 70-200mm f/2.8, 1/90sec, f/5.3, ISO100, 120mm, matrix metering

Chestnut-breasted Malkoha: Nikkor 105mm f/2.8, 1/30sec, f/4.5, ISO320, 105mm

White-crested laughing Thrush: Nikkor 70-200mm f/2.8, 1/350sec, ISO100, 155mm, WB set on flash though flash not used

Mandarin Duck: Nikkor 70-200mm f/2.8, 1/30sec, f/5.6, ISO125, 200mm, matrix metering

Rainbow Lorikeet 1: Nikkor 85mm f/1.4, 1/500sec, f/1.4, ISO200, 85mm, matrix metering
Rainbow Lorikeet 2: Nikkor 18-200mm f/3.5, 1/60sec, f/5.6, ISO100, 200mm, matrix metering

Flamingo 1: Nikkor 70-200mm f/2.8, 1/500sec, f/2.8, ISO100, 200mm

Flamingo 2: Nikkor 70-200mm f/2.8, 1/90sec, f/4.5, ISO100, 200mm, spot metering

Flamingo 3: Nikkor 70-200mm f/2.8, 1/400sec, f/2.8, ISO100, 200mm, spot metering
Hey, Barry.

Thanks for the info. You must write things down. I need to do that.

I'll spend some time thinking on what you got with these lenses and settings. Birds are pretty impossible to photograph, so I want to rave once more on what you have here. We saw that Victoria Crowned Pigeon in the Singapore bird park. If you haven't been there, I know you would enjoy it. Birds, birds, birds, tropical birds.
Read, loved, rated, saved for reading again.
Mr. Doyle - I adore your photography! I'm something of a photography nut (particularly fond of Ansel Adams) and your work is wonderful. Madame Beloved directed me to this post and it amazed me. Also, thank you so much for the charming comment on my avatar photo! Susan (Madame B) took it for me, and she was also quite pleased by your accolades. Happy early Christmas!
thank you so much CK...and I adore Susan.
An astonishing collection of utterly exquisite images!
Good Lord, Barry. Wow. I have recently gotten into birds because I now live in a place full of fancies.....But these take the cake! That crowned/frilled pigeon! Wow! I am gonna have to rethink the pigeon thing now.

Absolutely stunning.
These are absolutely incredible. Came over here on O'Steph's recommendation and I am speechless (although you wouldn't know that since no one actually speaks on here...). These are stunning, unbelievable, mind-altering, beautiful photographs. Have you sent them to Nat'l Geographic? Are you entering them in competitions??? I am certain you must have won many awards. I was going to pick a favorite, but I cannot. Oh, maybe between the Cassowary, the Harpy Eagle, the King Vulture and the cuckoo. I'll just stop there.
What amazing pictures. Some of these birds look like flowers.
wow, dcv, thank you so much for your lovely comments.

This post was back in October, I'm glad it still has some visitors. Open Salon is such an instant/now place, there's not much digging back into the archives of past postings, so I'm happy you came by.

Can I ask how O'Steph mentioned it? was it in the comment thread of another post?

And thanks Suzn and other relatively recent visitors for your lovely comments as well
I can't believe I missed this the first time through. Stunning.
Rated! This was wonderful, thank you. That cassowary photo is a heartstopper!
Are you crazy? These are the most gorgeous bird photos that I have ever seen. I mean really!
Thank you, Barry....absolutely stunning. Viewing your pictures makes me want to start taking pictures...right now....but I can't. I've got to get my work done first. :(