A few images taken around Grantchester Meadows with the infrared camera
Friday, July 22, 2011
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Story of a Fox
I have been starting to sort through my Swiss holiday images and thought I would record the tale of the Fox as a lesson on keeping your longest lens on the camera when walking. I had been photographing flowers and was in a bit of a hurry to get the train back to Wengen so did not change to longer lens. Round the corner comes this bold fox carrying a discarded sandwich so the first shot was with the 50mm (fortunately not the 24mm). He came pretty close so a reasonable shot was had before he headed off into the rocks on the left. As I had a hard-boiled egg left over from lunch (dyed an orange colour!), I threw this for him as delaying tactics while I changed lenses. It worked and with my 70-200 mm I was able to get closer photos as he buried the egg and then went back to retrieve more discarded lunch.
Friday, July 15, 2011
On the Tour
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Flower Portraits 4
Final day in the Bernese Oberland and a very hot humid one. We walked up from Kleine Scheidegg to Eigergletsch photographing new or attractive flowers. The red campion comes under the latter and is there in its masses. I liked this single spike. Interesting comparison - lefthand with G12, righthand with 5D and 24mm lens. Round-headed Rampions for Tricia.
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Moonrise Swiss Style
Specially for Tricia - a truly amazing spectacle last night as the moon rose behind the Silberhorn while the mountains were bathed in alpenglow. I know that people are going to say the moon was added! I continued to take photos after the glow had faded. Later, when the moon was higher in the sky, the mountain range lit by moonlight.
Monday, July 11, 2011
Mixed Day for Photography
Today was dry and sunny after a misty start, so we did the Mannlichen walk.
The 24mm lens is my favourite for alpine flower photography but I also tried it with an extension ring. With the 25mm ring the focus is very close and the depth of focus very narrow as seen with the Sainfoin flower. Using a 12mm ring proved very useful for photographing small flowers such as this White orchid.
As well as many new species of flowers, I also had the privilege of photographing a dragonfly that had just emerged, an incredible cloud formation against the north wall of the Eiger and a very tame Fox.
The 24mm lens is my favourite for alpine flower photography but I also tried it with an extension ring. With the 25mm ring the focus is very close and the depth of focus very narrow as seen with the Sainfoin flower. Using a 12mm ring proved very useful for photographing small flowers such as this White orchid.
As well as many new species of flowers, I also had the privilege of photographing a dragonfly that had just emerged, an incredible cloud formation against the north wall of the Eiger and a very tame Fox.
Sunday, July 10, 2011
Flower Portraits 3
Saturday, July 9, 2011
Flower Portraits 2
Flower Portraits 1
Friday, July 8, 2011
jungfraujoch
As the weather looked fine for the morning, we decided to take our one trip through the Eiger up to the Jungfraujoch. The station where the train arrives is just off to the left on the first image and the Observation building can be seen in the second image. The choughs were amazingly tame - great fun with their yellow beaks and red legs.
Lenses for Flower Photography
I have brought a variety of lenses to use for flower photography and gave most of them an outing yesterday. The pansies are taken with a 70-200mm lens with an 25mm extension ring, the Butterfly orchid with the 24mm tilt and shift, the Dark Vanilla orchid with a 50 mm macro and the Rampion with the G12 macro mode. The light was very harsh for the pansies and getting a bit low for the two orchids.
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