Sitting at my desk at home, I see a flock of birds land high in a tree about 1/2 kilometer away. Lots of birds. Can't photograph them through the window screen. Run downstairs to see them from a front window. Pull up the blinds. A clear view. Lots of birds, still there. Think to myself: go for it. Run upstairs. Get out my 120-400 mm lens. Attach it to my camera. It's a heavy bugger. Run downstairs. Take off the lens cap and the lens hood. Turn camera on. Check the camera settings. Shoot. Birds are mostly staying put, but some are coming and going from above and below. Keep shooting. Realize that I'm probably not getting very clear shots. Need the tripod. Run upstairs. Grab the tripod. Set it up. Put the camera on it. Compose and keep shooting. Birds still coming and going. At one point they all fly away at once, and a few seconds later, they all return at once. Still shooting, about 75 shots. I'm missing my remote to get even more stable shots. Run upstairs. Grab the wireless remote. Run downstairs. Attach remote to camera. Turn it on. Ready to shoot. Dang. The birds have all flown away.
Even in the 400 mm. shots I can barely identify the birds. There is a tiny bit of color in the tails and heads, which I heightened. I think the camera exposed more for the sky than the birds, so should have used spot or center weighted exposure. The more distant shots are black and white conversions. Main conclusion: I "need" a longer lens.
1. 400 mm
2. 171 mm
3. 140 mm
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