6/29/2011: Obligatory Black-crowned Night-heron

For Wings on Wednesday.

We were all done at Talbert Marsh and the mouth of the Santa Ana river and trudging back to the car for the next part of the adventure (Bolsa Chica, see Point & Shoot 4 Wildlife takes a Tern at Bolsa Chica), scopes and cameras shouldered, when we came up on this Black-crowned Night-heron feeding at the near edge of the marsh. We were about to march right past…I mean, all of us have hundreds of shots of BCNH on our hard-drives, and the light was not great (misty and dull, Orange County June gloom), and then I thought, and then said, “We have to do this bird. My theory is: if you don’t do the easy birds when given the chance, then you won’t be given a chance at the good ones or the hard ones.” So we downed tripods and scopes, upped cameras, and shot the BCNH. It would have been the height of ingratitude to do otherwise.

Canon SD4000is behind the 20-75x Vario eyepiece on the ZEISS DiaScope 85FL for the equivalent field of view of a 1400mm lens on a full frame DSLR, 1/250th @ ISO 125, f3.5 effective.

Processed in Lightroom for Clarity and Sharpness.

And zoomed up a little to about 2500mm equivalent.

4 Comments

  1. Reply
    Steve Sosensky June 29, 2011

    And thanks to Stephen’s insistence, we were rewarded a week later with a Lesser Sand-Plover. Bird karma is sweet!!!

  2. Reply
    Bruce Aird June 29, 2011

    Stephen,

    Have you noticed that this bird always wore his hair parted to the left? That is, his lone filoplume always dangled down that side. Since all my shots had him facing right, none of them show the plume I know was there. You got it though!

    Bruce

  3. Reply
    admin June 30, 2011

    Yes Bruce, I did notice. I have a few shots facing each way. Kind of odd that, but then I have never had to manage a filoplume. Closest I ever came was a pony-tail in the 60s 🙂

  4. Reply
    Stacey Nagy July 2, 2011

    I love these captures, you always do such a wonderful job !

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