Thanks Chris,
Initially the 2nd was my favourite but that one has grown on me.
I think you are getting the exposures about right here for capturing the birds in flight against the sky. A little bit of wingtip blur adds movement without losing the main details. The shadows might be opened up a little but you wouldn't want to open them completely. They add depth and reality.
I agree with Chris re liking the third shot, it is a bit more unusual in the moment you have caught it although in this case I'd have cropped in a little closer.
Thanks Mike,
Exposures can be hard to nail as I might be capturing something else and then see a bird coming along the lake with very little time to change anything other than get focus on a similarly distanced object. Still learning pp...
I purposefully cropped them all the same size and ordered them to give the sense of climbing. Not the first series I have shown where they were actually taken in reverse order!
Nice set of this beautiful bird in flight from a three quarters angle that shows all his lovely features, and his flight movements. Well caught, for sharpness and detail. I'm still intrigued with these white faces on a heron that otherwise looks much like a paler version of our great blues. Well done.
Thanks minniev,
They are more graceful than many of the other birds that seem to be on a mission to escape the human predator.photographer... I looked up the great blue. Quite some differences and I've seen a few photos of other species with a lot of variation too. These ones are on my bucketlist to fill the frame a bit more and hopefully try for some finer detail.