House Sparrow
House Finch
Chipper
A Chipping Sparrow on our Pedestal Feeder
Rose-Breasted Grosbeak
Flowering Quince
Hatti Dinda
House Sparrow
Lilacs
Feeder with House Finch
Grackle in the Maple
Grackle in the Maple
There's a Tiger on the Loose
Chipping Sparrow in Tree
Spirea
Tulips
Mr. Grackle Sits for a Formal Portrait
Goldfinch
Mourning Dove in the Crabapple, with House Sparrow
The Nuthatch
Goldfinch, leaving
Apple Blossoms
How About Another Tulip?
Tulips, Anyone?
Brandon Loy
Theo Piccirilli
Starling leaving
The Sultans of Springfield
White-Crowned Sparrow on the Platform
Bat, Ball, and Tree, with cars
Plum
I Really Like Our House Finches
White Crowns!
Sidearms it to First
Rose-Breasted Grosbeak, with Sparrows
Male and Female
Anemonies
MSU's Ryan Hudspeth
Two House Sparrows
Oreo
The May Rig
Canada Geese
I Was Skeptical About the Trellis at First
Location
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Goldfinch


I think he's spotted me....
==========
Facebook dialog about the photo I posted a year ago today (copied below):
Dave Evans: How long did you have to wait for this shot?
Me: Aha! An interesting question.
Technically less than 1 minute, but I was shooting continuous mode so "wait" is the wrong word. Overall I shot 44 pictures over the course of about 5 minutes from three locations; this was the 19th in the set. Didn't know I'd caught it until I reviewed the images later.
==========
For that matter, I didn't know the bird had dropped the seed until I reviewed the images...
Photographing birds has some resemblance to baseball photography. If you look at this pic's EXIF data you'll note that I'd not changed the settings since the previous day's ballgame. They're a good starting point.
Also like sports work, bird photography requires anticipation and involves some portion of luck. The sort of just-shoot-lots-of-pix mentality described above (and here) is probably a necessity.
On the other hand, I'm no more a bird photographer than I am a serious birder. So take these comments with a grain of salt, and study the wildlife photographers I mentioned a few days back.
==========
This photograph is an outtake from my 2012 photo-a-day project, 366 Snaps.
Number of project photos taken: 44
Title of "roll:" Goldfinches & Grackles
Other photos taken on 5/9/2012: 21 rather dull pix, with the Nikon 1--"Flowers, a Cat, Birds"
==========
Facebook dialog about the photo I posted a year ago today (copied below):
Dave Evans: How long did you have to wait for this shot?
Me: Aha! An interesting question.
Technically less than 1 minute, but I was shooting continuous mode so "wait" is the wrong word. Overall I shot 44 pictures over the course of about 5 minutes from three locations; this was the 19th in the set. Didn't know I'd caught it until I reviewed the images later.
==========
For that matter, I didn't know the bird had dropped the seed until I reviewed the images...
Photographing birds has some resemblance to baseball photography. If you look at this pic's EXIF data you'll note that I'd not changed the settings since the previous day's ballgame. They're a good starting point.
Also like sports work, bird photography requires anticipation and involves some portion of luck. The sort of just-shoot-lots-of-pix mentality described above (and here) is probably a necessity.
On the other hand, I'm no more a bird photographer than I am a serious birder. So take these comments with a grain of salt, and study the wildlife photographers I mentioned a few days back.
==========
This photograph is an outtake from my 2012 photo-a-day project, 366 Snaps.
Number of project photos taken: 44
Title of "roll:" Goldfinches & Grackles
Other photos taken on 5/9/2012: 21 rather dull pix, with the Nikon 1--"Flowers, a Cat, Birds"
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