Showing posts with label bison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bison. Show all posts

Sunday, March 19, 2023

Columbus January 23

I was struck by the shape of the tree on the far side of the lake.

There's food in the fake stump, and the mallards waited for the trumpeter swan to spill some. Because of the snow, I had to overexpose the swan so the ducks would not be underexposed.

Mexican wolf yoga

There is sad news about Hermie (Twitter).

Guillotine the wolverine gnaws an antler.

The trumpeter swan pond, complete with the mallards

A markhor eats snow.

Queen of the rocks!


Friday, December 25, 2020

2020 part 2

More from 2020.

male mallard (Whetstone Park, June 1). For some reason, there was a large gap between zoo visits, so I filled-in with a park visit.

brown bear (Minnesota Zoo, August 14)

black-tailed prairie dog (Minnesota Zoo, August 14). Like this prairie dog, my backyard chipmunks and ground hogs often have flying bugs on them. Is it because living underground leaves something interesting on their fur?

puma (Columbus Zoo, August 24)

Clover, as seen under Hermie (Columbus Zoo, August 24)

(Akron Zoo, September 11)

Pesquet's parrot (Toledo Zoo, September 26)

Bourke's parakeet (Toledo Zoo, Septermber 26). This is the species that was interested in my shoe.


Sunday, November 15, 2020

Recent photos

These pictures are from three zoo trips in October.

A mostly-white and a pink Caribbean flamingo
Caribbean flamingos (Columbus Zoo)


The Bali myna is white with blue skin around its eye.
Bali myna (Columbus Zoo)

The toco toucan is mostly black with a large orange, yellow, and black bill.
toco toucan (Columbus Zoo)

Mexican wolf (Columbus Zoo)

Kulu (Columbus Zoo)

emerald starling (Toledo Zoo)


Roary (Columbus Zoo)

Hermie and pronghorn (Columbus Zoo). They're not as close to one another as they appear.

Mandarin duck (Toledo Zoo)

A koala sits on a branch and turns to look.
koala (Columbus Zoo)


hippopotamus (Toledo Zoo)

 

Wednesday, January 16, 2019

In the snow

Columbus had a little snow recently, so I went to the zoo Monday to check out the animals I thought would be out. None of these photos would win a prize, but I enjoyed the trip.
An adult pronghorn walks through the snow.
pronghorn

Lee, a male polar bear, is splayed-out in the snow.
Lee, a polar bear. He's brown because of fun in a mulch pile.

A wolverine walks on a snowy pile of logs.
wolverine was quite active when I was there.

A bald eagle perches near a snowy branch.
A bald eagle, with another in the background

Hermie the bison lounges in the snow.
Hermie, a bison

Hermie the bison, with the zoo's water tower in the background
Hermie and the zoo's water tower

An Amur (Siberian) tiger is stretched-out in the snow.
Amur (Siberian) tiger

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Shooting through mesh

There are usually barriers between animals and a zoo visitor, and I'm learning to handle them. Photographic success depends partly on the distance between the camera and the fence or mesh and the distance between the fence and the animal.

I've read that it helps if the camera is close to the fence. Then the camera can more easily focus beyond the fence and on the animal. It's often not possible to get close to the fence, but sometimes the photo works out anyway.

Here, the fence is 3-4 feet away from the path I was standing on, and a strand of fence wire is visible as a light horizontal blur against the bison's dark nose and hair. The bison was 20 feet or more behind the fence.

A bison lounges 20 feet behind a wire fence (Columbus Zoo)
Here, I was the same distance from the fence, but the bison was close to it. With little distance between the fence and bison, the camera could not make the fence disappear. 
Bison close to a wire fence (Columbus Zoo)
With a fence like this one, it's possible to shoot between the wires and leave them out of the shot altogether. I almost did that with this shot.
Bison with a fence wire in the foreground (Columbus Zoo)

Sunlight was shining brightly on a snow leopard's mesh, so I played artiste and tried to use it as a picture frame.

This one would be better with more of Shishir's head, and possibly his ear, in the diamond. It still wouldn't be a great picture because his head is turned slightly away.


Snow leopard through shiny mesh (Toledo Zoo)

This one is better because the cat's mouth is open, but his eye is obscured. Not a particularly good shot.


Shishir, a male snow leopard (Toledo Zoo)

Here's an example of disappearing mesh. I posted a full Bornean crested fireback a while ago; here's a close-up.


Bornean crested fireback (Toledo Zoo)
This Meyer's parrot, about six inches long, is in the same enclosure as the fireback, and it's on the mesh at the front. (The bird's body looks out-of-focus to me, and manual focus might have been a better choice. It's hard to say with the mesh in the way.)



The mesh was a couple feet away from me, and the fireback was a good six feet beyond it. The mesh must have had some effect on the fireback photo, but I don't see it.