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The River |
Temperatures were hot and humid when I arrived in
Benezette in mid-afternoon on Monday July 17th for several days of elk
filming and photography. Reports indicated that few elk were being seen
in town or on Winslow Hill, but in spite of this I felt optimistic of
success.
Even though it was stifling hot, there was
little haze in the air with only a slight threat of a thunderstorm and
it was a good evening to take a walk with the cameras if you didn't mind
being soaked with sweat. Since I usually concentrate on taking video, I
carried a Panasonic FZ2500 fitted with a 5" Small HD monitor on the
tripod for that purpose and a Canon 1DKMKII with the Canon 100mm-400mm
IS II lens in my camera bag for still photography. I saw several small
bulls that evening and one was close enough for good still photos.
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Alert 5x5 |
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5x5 Looks At Distant Bulls |
The best bull of the evening was a decent 6x6, but
unfortunately he was in short grass, which provided a less than deal
setting and he was always looking directly at me when I was taking
stills.
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6x6 Pauses From Grazing |
Three of the most important parts of elk photography
in the summer is being out early in the morning and staying late in the
evening. When I walked I never got back to the vehicle until after
dark. The down side to this of course is that lighting conditions are
often less than ideal when you encounter the elk. I
prefer the mornings if it is not too foggy, but that is a big problem in
elk country as it seems most mornings are foggy--some of them so bad
that photography is almost impossible. Fortunately the morning I
encountered a fine 6x7 with a bachelor group of smaller bulls, the fog
was spotty and there were relatively clear periods at times.
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6x7 On A Foggy Morning |
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4K Video Frame Grab of Bachelor Group |
On Wednesday morning another fine 6x7 was grazing in a
meadow of tall grasses and I photographed him with the 1DXMKII and
500mm F 4 lens.
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6x7 Looks To Distant Hill Side |
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Another View |
Eventually he returned to feeding and worked past my
position and I used the 5DMKIII with the Canon 100-400mm IS II to
photograph him with a bit more of the surroundings included in the
photo.
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6x7: Taken with 5DMKIII and 100-400mm IS II at 371 mm |
I spent very little time driving around Winslow Hill. I did check for the bulls that I saw last month along the road at
the upper end of the hill, but I only saw a small one and didn't film
him. Late on Tuesday morning I played tourist and photographed a herd of
elk in a camp lawn with the Panasonic FZ1000, which I usually use for
close-up video filming when I am not able to set the tripod up. I also
used it to take the river photo at the beginning of the post and it does
a creditable job with stills as long as one keeps at the lower ISO
settings.
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A Typical Sighting On Winslow Hill |
All in all I have had better July trips to elk
country, but this one still gave a lot of photo and video
opportunities. The summer has moved so quickly and it seems impossible
to think that very shortly most of the bulls will shed the velvet and
soon another rut will begin.
Originally published at
Pennsylvania Wildlife Photographer by Willard Hill.
3 comments:
Very nice captures Willard, what a great animal.
Beautiful captures of these beautiful animals.
Nice photos -- you had better opportunities than I did ten days ago.
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