Thanks for sharing your zoo pictures! We are visiting San Diego this summer and I am looking for tips on zoo photography. Any you would like to share? Thanks
Thanks for sharing your zoo pictures! We are visiting San Diego this summer and I am looking for tips on zoo photography. Any you would like to share? Thanks
Tripod and patience Animals are like kids, they won't hold the pose long enough to compose the shot so you have to be ready and they certainly don't listen to you! Also watch out for obstacles like branches, weeds etc. that might get in front of your subject. Depending on where that obstacle is, it can either enhance or ruin the shot.
Thanks for sharing your zoo pictures! We are visiting San Diego this summer and I am looking for tips on zoo photography. Any you would like to share? Thanks
one thing i noticed is some zoo's newer exhibits are behind glass...nice to view, not as easy to photograph..this trip i'm taking my circular polarizer to see if that helps but imo glass makes it much more difficult since at least at our zoos the glass is scratched and dirty. at least with fences, bars you could get close and hope they disappear. with the glass you can get close but that doesn't help with dirt and giant scratches. last trip i couldn't get some snow leopards at all due to the sun glare on the glass( and hadn't gotten a cp for my 70-200 lens yet.) i'll see how it goes this time with cp although this zoo (cleveland vs akron) doesn't have as many only glass enclosures. don't know about san diego's set up but you might want a cp before you go.
also i'd take a lens with as large an aperture as you can so you can get a fast shutter speed to freeze the action on some of the less lazy animals...ie a swinging monkey doesn't wait for anyone to take his photo
ie this hyper "some kind of primate who needed a facial hair trim" who literally paused for about a second at the akron zoo
and if you can use a continuous/burst mode it helps since they don't always cooperate and look at the camera. that way you can take a number of rapid shots and maybe get one where they are at least partially facing you
I don't have a cp for my 50mm, I think I have one for the 75-300mm, but I didn't shoot through glass with that, just the 50.
I was at the SD Zoo last year, and I don't recall much glass at all. The Polar Bears have glass, but there is also a building/cover of some sort that was helpful. I believe the bulk of the animals are open. I would recommend a lens hood, something I thought I had, my wife ordered the wrong one
Woody, they look great! I love all the colourful flowers, and the fireworks, and the California Screamin' roller coaster! Good work, and thanks for sharing.
Thanks everybody. The nightime DCA pic is one of my favorites and it is a neat effect with the ferris wheel turning during the exposure. I thought it would ruin the shot but made it look better IMO.
Las Vegas was officially opening the day after we were there and they were working very hard finishing everything up
Thanks for looking and next up will be San Diego including whale watching and the Zoo. I am also looking for any pointers as some these pics have been cropped but none of them have any other adjustments.
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