I took about 5 or 6 shots, trying to get more heads in there - still need to look close at them and see what is really best. some of the foliage, I wasn't really wanting to stick my hand right in the faces of the snakes...
Thanks for the ideas and tips. -- Best regards, Bruce Friday, March 25, 2005, 7:56:48 PM, you wrote: KW> I would have thought at that f stop, both snake heads would have been in focus. KW> FWIW I'd crop out the lower foreground green splash. KW> Kenneth Waller KW> -----Original Message----- KW> From: Bruce Dayton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> KW> Sent: Mar 25, 2005 8:24 PM KW> To: [email protected] KW> Subject: PESO - Wriggly KW> I took the family up into the mountains today. We took the cameras KW> and went for a hike. We were looking for a specific geocache (for KW> those GPS'ers) in an area with lots of gold mining tailings. So lots KW> of broken up rock was all around. My wife called me to come over near KW> her. She had discovered several snakes all intertwined (I believe KW> they hibernate that way) wiggling around. It turned out to be one KW> large snake (mother?) and 4 small snakes (offspring?). KW> I got the camera and took several shots. Not sure which one I like KW> best, but here is one of them: KW> http://www.daytonphoto.com/PAW/bkd_1530a.htm KW> Pentax *istD, A 70-210/4, handheld KW> ISO 800, 1/750 @f/11.0 KW> Converted from Raw to 16 bit Tiff in C1. Cropped from horizontal to KW> vertical and sized/sharpened for web using PictureWindow Pro. KW> Comments welcome. KW> Bruce KW> ________________________________________ KW> PeoplePC Online KW> A better way to Internet KW> http://www.peoplepc.com

