Thank you Kenneth. 
Yes it is cropped, but only a bit to adjust the composition. 
They are looking for food, but to me, it looked like the buggers main
purpose in life is to walk out of frame ;-)


Tim
Mostly harmless (just plain Norwegian)
 
Never underestimate the power of stupidity in large crowds 
(Very freely after Arthur C. Clarke, or some other clever guy)

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Kenneth Waller [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: 20. april 2006 16:04
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: Northern Lapwing
> 
> A wild looking bird nicely captured in decent light.
> Is this full frame?
> Well done.
> Looks like your patience is paying off.
> 
> Kenneth Waller
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Tim Øsleby" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> 
> Subject: PESO: Northern Lapwing
> 
> 
> > This is not a fantastic shot, but I am making improvement ;-)
> >
> > Two days ago I went into the hide at another time than I've done before.
> > The
> > sea had just passed the highest point. So there where no birds there at
> > that
> > point. Spent a couple of ours with nothing going on, but then it started
> > to
> > happen. The birds came pretty close 10-15 meters. I had a wonderful time
> > ;-)
> >
> > They are moving fast, because they are searching for food. This makes
> > focusing pretty hard with the slow lens. I ruined many shots because of
> > this. But I feel my old skills are slowly coming back.
> >
> > I came back with a bit more than 4gb of images. By accident I deleted
> one
> > card. I dumped them into a image tank, and did a mistake doing that. And
> > now
> > it feels that the best shots where at that card :-(
> > It's like fishing, the largest fishes are the one you loose.
> >
> > http://foto.no/cgi-bin/bildegalleri/vis_bilde.cgi?id=231709
> > *istDS at 800 ISO raw and spot metering, Tokina AT-X 150-500/5,6 at
> 500mm,
> > f:11, 1/250s.
> >
> > Norwegian name of the bird is Vipe, according to wikipedia, it is
> Northern
> > Lapwing in English.
> >
> >
> > Tim
> > Mostly harmless (just plain Norwegian)
> >
> > Never underestimate the power of stupidity in large crowds
> > (Very freely after Arthur C. Clarke, or some other clever guy)
> >
> >



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