Today we continue with the series on "The Pennsylvania Deer Wars",   but as I like to say, "with no fighting yet". That; however,  will soon   follow if we continue to explore this subject.  This takes up where the   post of  March 16, 2011 left off.
Until the spring of  1974  my primary interaction with whitetail deer was either hunting or   observing them, although I did have a strong desire to photograph  them.   Since I was operating on a shoe-string budget I got the Minolta  SRT  101, with 50mm F1.7 normal lens in early May of that year and  waited a  few weeks until I had more funds before I purchased the  Spiratone  400mm.  What a thrill it was to look through the view finder  at distant  subjects. Now birds and animals were no longer barely  visible spots in  the finder.  It is hard to describe the excitement I  felt at this  point--it was even difficult to sleep at night with  thoughts of  prospective encounters with wildlife running through my  mind.
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| Minolta SRT 101 and Spiratone 400mm F 6.3: Photo by W.Hill | 
 
On one fine spring morning I left our  family farm  and walked to a remote mountain farm where an old barn was  still  standing.  This was ideal whitetail habitat with excellent  prospects  for photo opportunities during the entire trip, but I saw no  deer until  I got to the barn.  When I came around one corner of the  barn, a young  whitetail doe ran out of the barnyard into the nearby  woods, then  turned and paused to look at me for a few seconds.  With  heart  pounding, I brought the camera to eye level and fired a few frames   before she bounded away.
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| Young Whitetail Doe-The First Close-up Photograph: Photo by W.Hill | 
 
I was using Ektachrome 100 slide  film and the 400mm  lens without a tripod, which required an exposure of 1/125 sec. at  f6.3, and it is difficult to hand-hold a 400mm steady enough to get   acceptably sharp photos at 1/125 sec., especially in the days before   image stabilization, Needless to say the photographs were not all that   great, but I was so thrilled to finally have a close-up photo of a deer   that I didn't even notice that they were not very sharp.  It would not  be  until the DSLR age that I would become obsessed with sharpness and  the  use of premium lenses and tripods.  
This  was the first of thousands of photos I would take  with SLR/DSLR  cameras and telephoto lenses.  The photo below shows a  mature doe and  was taken this past winter with a Canon 7D and 300mm F2.8  telephoto,  and what a world of difference there is. She was  photographed less than  75 yards from where I took the photo in 1974 and  there is a fair  probability that she is a descendant of the young doe  that I captured  on film that day.
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| Adult Doe Photographed In Same Area Almost 37 years Later: Canon 7D 300mm F2.8 | 
 
It would be interesting to mount the 400mm   Spiratone on the 7D and see how it performs with this camera while   mounted on a high end tripod.  This can be done quite cheaply as those   lenses utilized a screw on T mount that adapted it to any   interchangeably lens SLR and these adapters are still available.  I am   certain that the results would not begin to compare with modern   professional equipment, but one must consider the price of the lens and   high end lenses such as the Canon L series are forbiddingly expensive   and like the price of gasoline seem to become more so by the day.
So  at this point, any involvement in deer wars was simply  struggling to  learn how to hunt and photograph them, but these interests  would lead  my brother Coy and I to become involved in the fight to  protect the  whitetail deer and other wildlife.
Originally posted at
 Pennsylvania Wildlife Photographer by Willard Hill
3 comments:
The second photograph of the deer is lovely!
What a great post! I started going through my Flickr photostream and was going to delete some of the old images, because they aren't as much quality as my recent photos. But... I stopped myself, because it made me realize where I had come from, what I've learned, and that I did my best with what I had at the time.
This was a GREAT post Willard! The comparison shots, commentary package was perfect! I felt/feel that rush all the time!
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