James Newman
Member
I shot this little beauty at Brazos Bend and was pretty pleased. Not only pleased with the images, but just pleased to have gotten close enough to get them. These birds are usually pretty jittery and hard to sneak up on. I only have 300mm to work with so I have to do a lot of stalking to get any good shots. I think this one was so busy looking for his dinner that he didn't even pay me any mind.
I think the first shot is interesting and I like the fact that the tree is in the foreground. I used that tree as a shield while trying to get closer to the bird. It sort of captures that feeling, at least to me. I have had people say they wish the tree was not there and that it is distracting to them. That's ok. I'm not going to crop it out and I am happy with it. The second image I just like because I was able to get a pretty sharp focus on him and on his catch. The entire sequence of events was great viewing. I have images from the time he first started stalking the crawfish (I'm from Texas so you can read this as crayfish if you want) to the time he caught it, prepared it, and ate it. It was very interesting to watch. He held the crawdaddy in his mouth and twisted his head very fast in circular type motions, until each of the pinchers shook completely off. Once he got the pinchers off, down it went. I had never seen that before.
I think the first shot is interesting and I like the fact that the tree is in the foreground. I used that tree as a shield while trying to get closer to the bird. It sort of captures that feeling, at least to me. I have had people say they wish the tree was not there and that it is distracting to them. That's ok. I'm not going to crop it out and I am happy with it. The second image I just like because I was able to get a pretty sharp focus on him and on his catch. The entire sequence of events was great viewing. I have images from the time he first started stalking the crawfish (I'm from Texas so you can read this as crayfish if you want) to the time he caught it, prepared it, and ate it. It was very interesting to watch. He held the crawdaddy in his mouth and twisted his head very fast in circular type motions, until each of the pinchers shook completely off. Once he got the pinchers off, down it went. I had never seen that before.

