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The
White Storks of Racconigi (November 21, 2006)
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| Canon
EOS 20D, Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6 L IS USM, 1/6400
f/5.6, iso 800, handheld. Racconigi, Italy. |
I discovered the Racconigi Park (www.cicogneracconigi.it)
a while ago, when my longest lens was the Sigma 180mm Macro. Since
then, it has become one of my favourite places for bird photography.
The park was created in 1985 by the
ornithologist Bruno Vaschetti and the LIPU (Italian association for
protection of birds) to reintroduce the White Stork in Italy. Now,
there are tens of White Storks that nests here, and the parks hosts
many other species of birds (in particular ducks and geese); some of
them live in captivity in the smaller ponds, while a large pond
hosts many wild species that regularly visits the park (mallards,
herons, stilts and many other species). Every photographer, both
skilled professionals and beginness, have many opportunities: the
professional with super-tele lenses can photograph the wildlife from
a large, well built hide, while the beginners with short lenses or
even digicams can easily take photos of the many tame ducks in the
small ponds.
The many beautiful birds are not the
only positive aspect of the Racconigi Park. The park is always open:
you can visit it even in winter, to photograph the birds between ice
and snow; you can visit with sun, rain or snow to photograph the
birds in every season and every weather condition. Even more
important, the owners of the park (Bruno and his family) are always
very kind!
I've taken this photo during one of my
(many) workshops at Racconigi. I loaned the 600 f/4 one of my
"students" so I was photographing with my other tele lens
- the small, light and versatile Canon 100-400 L IS. Being used to
the 600, I find this lens extremely easy to handhold, and its fast
AF, combined to IS and push-pull desing, makes it the ideal choice
for flight shots. When I bought it, I din't like the push-pull - if
you are used to the traditional ring-zoom design, you need some time
to get used, initially it feels quite awkward. It has it pros and
cons - the most negative aspects are that you have to lock the lens
when you carry it around, otherwise it extends, and it makes a bit
difficult to compose precisely the photo. On the other hand, it is
extremely fast to frame the bird at 100 and then to zoom at 400mm to
take the shot: this is a great help for flight shots. I've tried
other tele zooms with ring desing and, even though they are great
for static subject, they does not allow fast zooming for action as
the 100-400.
Here, I used ISO 800 because I was
photographing some ducks in shade and, when I saw the stork in
flight, I didn't have time to change any setting. Anyway, it is not
a problem with a Canon camera ;-), and the super fast shutter speeds
helped to froze the motion (by the way, if I had had time to change
the settings here I'd have use ISO 400, and I'd have selected AFPS,
even though MFPS worked well). I have taken a burst of three shots
and they are all in sharp focus, thanks to the fast AF of the
100-400, but this image is the only one with the other two storks
and the nest into background. The nest is nearly 4-5 meters from the
stork in flight, so of course it is out of focus at f/5.6, but I
like it as is - it gives more depth to the image, and it adds some
environment.
Do you have
comments or questions?
If you have comments or questions about this
article, feel free to ask in the Juza
Nature Photography Discussion Forum!
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