Gyrfalcon22
Legend
Challenging to shoot owl photos when it is dark out. There was a moon but this was looking east and was not even sure where the owls were until I took a test shot. My camera has a neat feature that has live exposure mode where you hit the button once and the finder shows you how the exposure develops in realtime as it goes longer. You hit the shutter button again when you see the lightness you liked via finder. One of these is well over 20 secs long so the star trails started to develop. When the owls hoot they blur things up as well.
These new cameras are crazy in their endless abilities.


Last one below is what happens if an owl leaves during the exposure. With his weight off the branch, it burned a different angle to the image. His mate stayed still enough to get more beamed in (well...sort of a Star Trek transporter sequence I suppose).

grabbed this off the net-same concept

These new cameras are crazy in their endless abilities.


Last one below is what happens if an owl leaves during the exposure. With his weight off the branch, it burned a different angle to the image. His mate stayed still enough to get more beamed in (well...sort of a Star Trek transporter sequence I suppose).

grabbed this off the net-same concept

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