More non-bison. These two male moose dropped antlers recently. You can see the nub at base of skulls.
These were "The Most Difficult Shots", Yellowstone NP, Feb 2022 - Why is this shot difficult?
a) The exposure of dark subject in snow white conditions. To get this, one must over-expose often up to 3 stops.
Moose have little contrast detail around eyes or within the areas of fur
b) The falling snow often fools the autofocus of the camera. If the animal was not running, I would have switched to manual focus.
c) The moose is running
d) it is -30° F at the time of the shot.
e) I wanted to capture the animal slightly moving toward me (I check this by looking at the position at the base of the ear. The far ear needs to be closer to front of the animal.
f) I want the far front leg to be moving forward. By having the far leg forward this opens up the angle of the chest of the animal, presenting a more powerful overall impact.
g) I want to see all 4 legs - In some running positions, only 3 legs are visible.
H) I didn't want brush in the background directly behind the moose as this would hurt the contrast beteen the moose and the willows.
Shot with OM System's Olympus EM1X and M.Zuiko 150-400mm lens
1/800 • f/6.3 • ISO 400
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© buddy4344 [SHARE LINK] THIS IS A LOW QUALITY PREVIEW. Please log in to see the good quality stuff. 1/800 • f/6.3 • ISO 800
Image hosted by forum (
1147790)
© buddy4344 [SHARE LINK] THIS IS A LOW QUALITY PREVIEW. Please log in to see the good quality stuff.