On Sunday this past weekend I had the chance for a February practice session, photographing birds-in-flight at a local frozen-over harbour. Most of the birds were ducks and geese, along with a few gulls.
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Finding birds in a sufficient number to do a practice session has been a challenge due to the cold weather. And, making the time to go out in the field and get some practice has also been difficult.

I haven’t been out very much the past few months as I dedicated most of my available time to finishing my eBook Handheld Bird Photography and getting it published on this website.

Immediately after getting that done, I focused my efforts on my upcoming handheld macro/close-up photography eBook.

The initial image selection has now been completed for that new eBook, and written content has been progressing reasonably well.

It is premature to anticipate an exact completion date for my handheld macro/close-up photography eBook, but it should be fairly early in the spring.

My apologies to regular readers for not publishing a lot of newly captured images for the past little while.

It felt great to be out with my camera again, and getting back into the swing of things with this February practice session.

For the local harbour to freeze over it needs to be cold for an extended period of time. For the past 16 days our daytime highs have rarely gotten above -5 Celsius, with the highs on some days being in minus double digits.

Night time low temperatures have been well into negative double digits with some getting in the -20 Celsius range. This is not ‘brutally cold’ when compared to other parts of Canada… but it is unusual for the Niagara Peninsula.

The good thing that comes out of a stretch of cold weather like this is that our local harbour freezes over. This brings a concentration of ducks and geese into a small area.

On Sunday I estimated that there were about 700-800 birds on the ice, all packed into a reasonably small area. This meant that there were a good number of birds taking flight, or coming in to land, on a regular basis.

A few area residents periodically arrived and fed the birds. As expected this resulted in absolute bedlam as dozens of birds where in flight simultaneously flying towards the food source.

I had to change my shooting position frequently to put myself in the right spots to get decent angles on the incoming birds, as the feeding locations varied along the shoreline.

It was pretty cold during my February practice session with the temperature at -8 Celsius and a modest breeze blowing. I doubled up with the gloves on my left hand in an attempt to stay warm enough to keep shooting. In order to maintain proper control of my shutter release I had a single glove on my right hand.

Doubling up with gloves on my left hand made it very clumsy trying to change my focus limiter switch. I ended up anticipating how close the birds would be, and did my best. Then paused to change the focus limiter as needed. I wasn’t as spontaneous as I prefer to be.

My February practice session was fairly brief and lasted about an hour and twenty minutes. This included a couple of brief trips back to my car to warm up.

I captured as many images as I could… and pushed myself to shoot at any bird that was in-flight… even if the chances of success were low. This resulted in me capturing several thousand images during this time-condensed practice session.

As is my standard practice, I kept shooting until I had drained both batteries in my E-M1X. The cold weather impacted battery life.

To me, a practice session is very different than going out with my camera and specifically attempting to capture good, usable images. A practice session is all about building and reinforcing eye/hand coordination… as well as improving my speed of capture.

It really doesn’t matter to me in the slightest if I get any ‘keeper’ images during a practice session. As it turned out I processed about 60 images from my February practice session.

I could have spent the time to do a lot more… but I didn’t need any more images for this article so I just deleted everything else that I had captured.

Did I miss very many captures? Yup. I’m pleased to report that I missed a pretty sizeable number of attempted captures. I always view this as an indication of a very productive practice session.

If I haven’t missed a lot of attempted image captures, then I know that I haven’t pushed myself and my camera gear hard enough during a practice session.

Hopefully as my handheld macro/close-up photography continues to progress, I’ll be able to make more time to get into the field to get my skills up to snuff in preparation for the spring birding season.

This February practice session reinforced the importance of getting out in the field, even when it can be pretty cold outside. Capturing the beauty of birds-in-flight warms one’s heart.
Technical Note
Photographs were captured handheld using camera gear as noted in the EXIF data. All images were created from RAW files using my standard process in post. Pro Capture L at 18 frames-per-second was used for all of the images in this article. Pre-Shutter frames were set to 15. Frame Limiter was turned off. This is the 1,507 article published on this website since its original inception in 2015.

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