Re: One man's two owls - EOS 1D mk II first results
- From: Roy Zartarian <rzartarian@xxxxxxxx>
- To: leica@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2004 23:11:58 -0400
Mark
You've got two once-in-a-lifetime behavioral shots of the owls. Since
owls tend to be solitary except during nesting season, I'm guessing
that these are first year birds still in a family unit.
If I were one to quibble, I'd suggest that a bit of fill flash would
bring out more detail in backs of the Acorn Woodpeckers. Nonetheless if
it were mine, I wouldn't discard the picture.
Roy
On Aug 23, 2004, at 1:02 PM, Mark Bohrer wrote:
Bernd Heinrich's "One Man's Owl" tells the story of his rescuing Bubo,
a great horned owl, and how Bubo learned to hunt red squirrels, resist
mobbing crows and find shelter in Maine's northern forests. I've been
watching a great horned owl in Sycamore Grove, a rural park in nearby
Livermore, California.
[snip]
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- Re: One man's two owls - EOS 1D mk II first results
- From: Mark Bohrer
- One man's two owls - EOS 1D mk II first results
- From: Mark Bohrer