Mr. Sharp - pls pls pls can you take me with you! I want to see a saw-whet (and I know you've had luck with that given the Flickr photos!)... and I'd love to get this close to some big birds of prey!! Will you consider having a walk about sometime soon for newbies such as myself!?
buy me lunch and don't murder me or be overly crazy and you have a deal!
i bird on Tues, Fri, Sat and Sunday (not all of those days...i go once a week now). so DM me when you can go and we'll see if it works.
i use a 400 mm lens, so i'm not close. but the beauty of Toronto is bird habituation. it isn't like in, for example, keswick, where you make eye contact with a RTH that's 200 feet away and it flies. I've watched a RTH take apart a vole from 20 feet away. now, that is rare, but this RTH in this photo was across 4 lanes of traffic. so...60 feet away?
the other secret, as I told someone else on here, is to avoid eye contact. at least, that's what i do. prey doesn't like to feel threatened or become hunted. you stare at it or make prolonged eye contact, it is out of there. and a zoom lens looks like a giant eye, so don't expect to point your lens at a bird and have it smile and pose. take a few quick snaps and lower your lens.
Thanks for the tip mr.sharp, I do have to invest more time studying exactly how the angles of the sun affects your shots. I started photography last Fall and have just been "winging it".
i've been taking bird photos for around 5 years. you learn as you go. for example, i saw that this hawk was landing on light posts, looking for food, and then flying to the next light post. it was noon and the sun was bright. so i knew that i was going to have issues with shadows and potential back lighting. so i moved further down the path to get a good angle. i waited until the hawk turned so i could get some catch light and less shadow and i shot. i posted 2 of the 30 pictures i took. out of the 30, i'd suggest that 7 were very good but unexciting. the rest were deleted.
i also knew to change my settings. the hawk looked ready to fly. so my ISO went to 1000 and the shutter speed up to 1/2000. hence the sharpness.