Translate

Thursday, January 11, 2018

Looking For Eagles: Still Learning


Dale Matson

Click On Photos To Enlarge



This year seems to be the year of the juvenile Bald Eagles. This is my second year that I have sought to photograph them in earnest and tried to be methodical about it. I think much of my methods are based on my experience that wildlife in general and eagles in particular are creatures of habit.
I became intentional about seeking out wildlife a few years ago trying to photograph the elusive and endangered Sierra Nevada Bighorn Sheep. What a challenge compared to landscape photography. In fact, it is almost different in kind as a type of photography. It is certainly more challenging. I actually began with a point and shoot zoom lens camera. My first lesson was, “Go big or go home”. The lenses for wildlife are usually much larger (400mm-800mm) than landscape and not easy to carry into the mountains. When backpacking, the lens usually weighs more than my tent and sleeping bag combined. The camera settings are also more sophisticated. Adequate light is more critical. Mountains are in a specific location and wildlife at best is in a general area. And that is when you know about the ‘general area’. Navigating the terrain can be difficult also. Wildlife rarely pose either and are constantly on the move trying to put trees and shrubbery between themselves and you. It is frustrating for me when the closer I get the more things seem to get in the way. Eagles and sheep standing on large boulders really helps me to get the full animal in the viewfinder.
For bighorn sheep, binoculars and a spotting scope are useful. The distance usually also requires a tripod for sharp photos assuming the air is clear enough. Flat light and an overcast sky makes the photo difficult and generally inferior. The closer you can get, the better the photo, period.
Knowing the area is very important and time of day is important. What does an area normally look like? Is there a new trail, a new ‘bump’ on the landscape? Is there a different color? Fresh tracks? Adult Bald Eagles have a white head that shows up rather well. Immature eagles will land further down in a tree than adults. I don’t know if this is a hierarchy thing or to blend in with the branches. Mornings seem to be the time the raptors are most active.
Photography is more than walking down a trail. In fact, with sheep, this is a rather futile and arduous effort. It is better to find a good vantage point and scan with binoculars. The CDFW has an advantage and head start over civilians with animals. Select herd members are fitted with GPS and radios collars.
Yesterday I drove out to a seasonal peninsula of Millerton Lake and parked. I scanned using my 10X50 binoculars along the road that leads to the Blue Oak Trail. I also was able to see several spots along the trail. I did spot a large bird along the road and made a mental note of the location. I was ready to photograph as I approached the area and got some nice close shots from my truck. I sometimes use the camera lens itself but this uses battery life. I was also able to establish where the birds were not. This saved traveling to the location. Photographing an animal/bird can also lead to discovering additional animals that you didn’t see when taking the photograph. Yesterday, I spotted and photographed a distant eagle in the top of an Oak tree. Much to my surprise, there were two additional eagles in the tree below that eagle when I enlarged the image in my viewfinder.
There is a spot on the Madera side of the lake where I have seen an eagle more than once. The closer I got, the more obscured the bird became with branches. Yesterday the bird was not there and I investigated a couple of alternate routes to the tree that would keep me concealed as I approached a keep me high enough to get a clear photo at a good distance. Every time is a learning experience.  


 3 Eagles

 Two Distant Adult Bald Eagles










No comments:

Post a Comment