Why So Many Bird Photos?

Why So Many Bird Photos?

lappet baby smallZambia defies my kind of photography, the scenery being so vast and flat. On the blog I try to square up the photos for consistency and big view shots don’t square up very well. Besides, I love shooting birds. It is wildly frustrating and difficult and I’m sure I drive Jim crazy doing it but once in a while there is a satisfying shot and I am energized.

While waiting for birds or looking for them, or holding still hoping they won’t see me, many other creatures appear. Standing on the deck overlooking the Zambezi, waiting for the green pigeon pidgeon smallto appear, a snake dropped out of the tree next to me. Not a big snake but hey. It’s a snake in Africa. It came out of a tree and is inches from me. Before I can gather my wits and leap off the deck into the croc infested river, an army of Chinese tourists jump up with their huge glass and the snake panics and disappears. I miss the photo of the tourists.

barbet smallThe Trumpeter Hornbill is a good spot, a first for me. The Collared Barbet is a first as well. A favorite is the Robin Chat; they are as common as needy children and their song is indescribably sweet. Children sing too, they run down the road after us calling “Sweet! Sweet!” and it sounds just like a bird, tweet tweet. The kids want candy. The birds don’t care.

Birdbrained

Birds are a passion for us. They are everywhere all the time and searching for them hones spotting skills. Photographing them – a hobby for otherwise un-frustrated – is a digital photographers dream. You’re only limited by how much time you want to spend deleting.

Practice + Patience + Proximity = luck and maybe one or two decent photos.dsc07843

That birds are well-adapted, well-evolved dinosaurs is fascinating. We live among dinosaurs – we even feed them. New fossil finds and research is indicating that birds were “bird dinosaurs” not dinosaurs who “turned into birds” after the meteor hit, and evidence of feathers goes way back in the fossil records. This article in Scientific American has terrific current findings and the Cornell University site is full of information.

Which birding books to take? All of them. Bird drawing books, personal sketch books and bird coloring books round out the library.