tsk tsk we have a phantom squirrel at out backyard feeder,he shows up but leaves no tracks in the snow so we can't figure out how he gets there unless he jumps off the roof
Wow. I am in awe of the talent here. I am a total amateur....I have an Xsi which I adore, but I am in over my head. I will show one of my best efforts....
Hehe, a bit of a long story. I'll try to sum up. Essentially in college (My major was computer arts/3d animation) we had a semester long project that was about 1/2 way done, stored in a folder named "penguin" (this particular shared computer had a name of an animal for each letter of the alphabet). Well, someone needed more space to do their project and, with complete disregard to everyone else, started deleting projects. Mine was one of them. I lost almost two months of work and now, it's a reminder to back up early and often. I used it once or twice as a screen name, and it just stuck.
Now, every year, I get at least one penguin related gift for my birthday or Christmas. Quite the predicament I've got myself into.
Yep, that's from the Animal Kingdom near Expedition Everest. The things you can see when you take your time .
In light of a discussion on a different thread on shooting in cold weather, I wanted to post a couple from our local zoo taken last March (around -20 celsius that day)
cornfield in winter...ok i know my mind works in mysterious ways but i liked the way the rows of corn stalks run into nothing but the sky with the tiny little farm off to the side...to me that showed the insignificance of man's ideas vs uncontrollable nature...now that i explained it can you see it?
exif 100 iso, 28mm, f22, 1/60 sec, xt and 28-135 IS lens, from the car window IS on, car off, around 4 pm or so, i was wearing a red jacket at the time, what else do you want to know
Logan Martin Lake, Pell City, Alabama. Photo used as the cover photo for our January Lakeside magazine. Taken with a Canon 20D with a Canon 17-40L lens, 200th of a sec at f5.0, ISO 400.
Logan Martin Lake, Pell City, Alabama. Photo used as the cover photo for our January Lakeside magazine. Taken with a Canon 20D with a Canon 17-40L lens, 200th of a sec at f5.0, ISO 400.