zackiedawg
WEDway Peoplemover Rider
- Joined
- Aug 5, 2008
- Messages
- 3,888
I FINALLY got back out this weekend for the first time in over a month for some shooting. It was miserably hot, but at least the weather was mostly clear. I was out birding primarily, but I thought I'd share something else from that trip which was amazing to watch.
I witnessed an alligator lash out at a turtle for his dinner! I missed the initial strike, but as soon as it happened, I spun my A300 with my Tamron 200-500 around at 500mm and started shooting. I was probably 100 yards away, so I had to do some heavy cropping even at 500mm, and he was in some mixed light and shadow which meant it was hard to get a fast enough shutter speed...but it was one of those wow moments to witness, and I was glad to have enough lens to get the action.
Here's the moment just after the initial strike, when the gator stood upright out of the water to reposition his bite on the turtle:
After that, the gator actually sat for a few minutes just holding onto the turtle (as reptiles tend to do...lots of pauses in their actions before resuming). That gave me a chance to reposition slightly down the trail for a somewhat side view.
Here's the remainder of the sequence I took from the side...I was in burst mode, but deleted alot of the excess frames. Basically, he's tenderizing, biting, lifting to swallow, and then gnawing off a chunk of the turtle during this sequence:
The birding wasn't too bad that day either...here's a few of the highlights:
Red-winged blackbird:
Green heron:
Anhinga:
Sandhill crane:
Water-ballet ducks:
Comments, questions, critique welcome.
I witnessed an alligator lash out at a turtle for his dinner! I missed the initial strike, but as soon as it happened, I spun my A300 with my Tamron 200-500 around at 500mm and started shooting. I was probably 100 yards away, so I had to do some heavy cropping even at 500mm, and he was in some mixed light and shadow which meant it was hard to get a fast enough shutter speed...but it was one of those wow moments to witness, and I was glad to have enough lens to get the action.
Here's the moment just after the initial strike, when the gator stood upright out of the water to reposition his bite on the turtle:

After that, the gator actually sat for a few minutes just holding onto the turtle (as reptiles tend to do...lots of pauses in their actions before resuming). That gave me a chance to reposition slightly down the trail for a somewhat side view.
Here's the remainder of the sequence I took from the side...I was in burst mode, but deleted alot of the excess frames. Basically, he's tenderizing, biting, lifting to swallow, and then gnawing off a chunk of the turtle during this sequence:





The birding wasn't too bad that day either...here's a few of the highlights:
Red-winged blackbird:

Green heron:

Anhinga:

Sandhill crane:

Water-ballet ducks:

Comments, questions, critique welcome.