Birding IS Fun

My monthly post is up over on BirdingIsFun.com today, I hope you will go on over and read about Red Knots – A species on the edge. I shared a post on Red Knots two days ago here on my own blog and I wanted to share the information with the great group of viewers on BirdingIsFun too.

In case you have never visited BiF I think you will enjoy the terrific authors there, the super information and images provided by the authors and how the BiF community welcomes all birders, people who want to learn more about bird and bird photographers. They welcomed me and I am just a lowly bird photographer!

Red Knot flock in flight

Red Knot flock in flight

There was another post yesterday on BiF that I’d like to bring to your attention about the American Kestrel Partnership, a project that is near and dear to my heart. My friend Matt Giovanni shares information about the American Kestrel Partnership, a project of the Peregrine Fund.  Matt is in North Dakota right now with a pickup bed full of wood destined to become kestrel boxes to be put up in partnership with USGS Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center and Dakota Audubon. I hope he stays warm in North Dakota! Here is the post on BiF.

Female American Kestrel

Female American Kestrel

Head on over to BirdingIsFun! We’ll be waiting.

Mia

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Black Skimmer flying on over…

Adult Black Skimmer in flight

Adult Black Skimmer in flight – Nikon D200, handheld, f5.6, 1/750, ISO 200, Nikkor 80-400mm VR at 240mm, natural light

To see my monthly post on odd behavior of a Black Skimmer on BirdingIsFun.com, fly on over and check it out!

Sorry for this being just a single image but I’m tired from writing a very long post I published yesterday on Image Thieves – Copyright Violations. I took this photo in Florida in 2008 as the adult Black Skimmer flew by whilst giving me “the eye”. Isn’t the color of the Gulf of Mexico behind the bird simply delicious?

Join the flock at BirdingIsFun.com and check out all the great posts and birding fun.

Mia

More Black Skimmer images

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My monthly post on BirdingIsFun

Juvenile Prairie Falcon on a Ruddy Duck
Juvenile Prairie Falcon on a Ruddy Duck ~ Davis County, Utah

I write a monthly post for BirdingIsFun.com on the 19th of the month, this month I’ve written about “Prairie Falcon Fun“.  I hope that you will go over there and read my post! BirdingIsFun is a great resource for birders and bird photographers.

Mia

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My Monthly Post at BirdingIsFun.com

Bald Eagle in low light
Hoar frost covered Bald Eagle in low light

My monthly post titled “So ya think ya want to be a Bird Photographer?” at BirdingIsFun.com has been published.

Be prepared to laugh.

Mia

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Mia McPherson

Snowy Plover in early morning light

Snowy Plover in early morning light

I am a nature lover, wildlife watcher and bird photographer. Birds fascinate, delight and intrigue me which is why I devote many hours learning about them, observing their behavior and photographing them. It makes perfect sense that the more I know about each species the better my chances are for creating wonderful images of the birds because I can anticipate what they might do next.

I enjoy sharing my photos, photographic skills and techniques with those individuals who are serious about their own avian photography.  I have a great amount of fun while photographing birds and yet I can still be serious about my efforts.

I am self taught and have never attended a photo workshop other than the ones I have given. I practiced a lot when first photographing birds because they are such a challenge but I enjoy the challenges. I also became efficient at self critique by removing myself emotionally from the images I create and evaluating why they work and why they don’t.  As much as I hate to cull the bad images by looking at them and asking myself “what could I have done to make this shot better?” I’m able to learn from my mistakes. I feel that is very important; even critical, for my growth as a photographer.

I prefer to leave my images as close as possible to what they looked like as created, using only minimal contrast, saturation or levels adjustments along with sharpening for web presentation. I have seen too many images where the saturation and contrast levels were terribly overdone and the birds end up looking like cartoon characters because the colors are unreal. You won’t find images like that here.

I don’t “clean” up the bills when they are salt encrusted or muddy, I don’t attempt to clean bubbles off the top of water and rearrange feathers to make my images look more aesthetically pleasing.  I take images in nature and nature isn’t perfect but I find it to be perfectly wonderful just the way it is.

I don’t bait birds, use set ups or call them in with sounds. I prefer to photograph birds doing what birds do and where they want to do it. I will at times take images of backyard birds near the feeders though, I’ll mention that when I post them.

On image critique forums I often see the phrase “you take what you get” , my philosophy though is “I get what I take“.  I do my best in the field to create the image I am striving for and if I don’t get that image I want, you won’t see it here or on a critique forum,  it will be in my delete bin.

I photograph in all kinds of light, the golden light of dawn, sunsets, low light, snowy and foggy images too. I like the challenges of those conditions and have learned to work with the light, not fight it.

I find that my photographic nature  journeys bring a sense of peace and balance to my busy life and I try to show that with my images. I hope you enjoy my photos.

Mia

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I’m also a monthly contributor to a great birding blog called BirdingIsFun.com.

Mia McPherson photographing shorebirds

Photographing shorebirds in Florida ©Adrian Burke

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