Picture of the Day!

Topic: A Malachite Kingfisher in the reeds on a waterhole bank

Technical data: Canon R6 MII with RF lens f11/800mm | ISO 500 | 1/500sec | ev-0.5 | WB 6500K | AV Mode

#amazingwildlife #africansafari #safarigetaway #christiansperkaphotography #big5 #gamereserve #wildlifephotography #learnphotography

Picture of the day!

Topic: Pied Kingfisher hovering

Technical data: Canon R6II with RF lens f11/800mm | ISO 2500 | 1/500sec | ev-2 | WB 6500K | AV Mode

#amazingwildlife #africansafari #safarigetaway #christiansperkaphotography #big5 #gamereserve #wildlifephotography #learnphotography 

Extra blog images:

There and back again!

Photographing birds in flight is quite challenging, but Kingfishers and Bee-eaters make it somewhat easier due to their hunting and bathing behaviors.

Both Kingfishers (with 10 different species in Southern Africa) and Bee-eaters (also with 10 different species) enjoy perching on trees to hunt or bathe. Additionally, they frequently return to the same branch after flying off to catch an insect or dip into the water.

Here is a brief guide on capturing in-flight birds before landing:

1. Place the camera on a beanbag or a tripod.

2. Set your shutter speed to 1/2000 second or faster.

3. Switch the camera to manual focus and ensure you do not touch the focus ring.

4. Set the camera to ‘continuous shooting mode’ with the highest frame rate available.

5. Frame and focus on the perched bird, leaving enough room for aerial landing images.

6. Wait for the bird to depart for its hunt or bath without looking through the viewfinder but watch the bird instead.

7. Begin shooting as the bird returns towards the perch, continuing until it is stationary again. Be sure to press the shutter button gently to avoid moving the camera from its target area.

8. Review your images (I typically shooting 20-40 frames for one landing) and select the best ones.

This process requires patience. For the Brown-hooded Kingfisher landing in the picture, I captured seven approaches with a total of 197 images taken, resulting in a satisfying outcome (and as you can see from the droplets in the air he returned from a bath).

Technical data: Canon R6 with RF lens f11/800mm | ISO 10000 | 1/3000sec | ev+0 | WB 6500K | AV Mode | Cropped to 10% of the original image.

For more stories and pictures, visit my blog at https://sperka.info/blog/.

#amazingwildlife #africansafari #safarigetaway #christiansperkaphotography #thandasafari #big5 #gamereserve #wildlifephotography #learnphotography

Technical data: Canon R6 with RF lens f11/800mm | ISO 1600 | 1/500sec | ev+0 | WB 6500K | AV Mode | Crop to 10% of original image
Technical data: Canon R6 with RF lens f11/800mm | ISO 1000 | 1/500sec | ev-0.5 | WB 6500K | AV Mode | Crop to 10% of original image

Not only fish!

There are ten species of Kingfishers to be found in Southern Africa. Five of them are aquatic species and therefore hunting mostly fish. The other five are forest species catching predominantly insects and small vertebrates.

This is one of my favorite pictures of a Brown-hooded Kingfisher, the most common forest species on Thanda Safari (the other four are Striped-, Woodland-, Pygmy-, and Grey-hooded). The five aquatic species are Malachite-, Mangrove-, Half-collared-, Giant-, and Pied-).

Technical data: Canon R6 with EF lens f4.0/500mm | ISO 100 | 1/750sec | f4 | ev+/-0 | 500mm | WB 6500K | AV Mode | Crop to 30% of original image

#amazingwildlife #africansafari #safarigetaway #christiansperkaphotography #thandasafari #big5 #gamereserve #wildlifephotography #learnphotography

TAKE-OFF

I love Kingfishers and I recently took these pictures of a Woodland Kingfisher at Thanda Safari.

FYI: We have an exciting Birding Weekend coming up in April. If you are interested to come and do some birding and bird photography at Thanda then please contact reservations@thanda.co.za.

I will be there all weekend to answer wildlife and bird photography related questions and to give photography lessons.

#Thandasafari @thandasafari #christiansperkaphotography @christiansperkaphotography