Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/11/30

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Subject: [Leica] Re: Bird Watching and Bird Pictures
From: Jim Brick <jimbrick@photoaccess.com>
Date: Mon, 30 Nov 1998 17:42:21 -0800

My oh my Marc... what fun.

See there Ted, I told you that Marc does things other than screw around
with screw mounts, Viso's, and the like!

Very nice story Marc. Please let us know how the Kodachrome comes out.

And Cyndi sounds very charming. Please keep us informed.

:-)

Jim


At 07:58 PM 11/30/98 -0500, you wrote:
>As Roy Zartarian, Epic Lugger, will tell you, birds are quite elusive and
>hard to locate.  When you find them, they seem to shy away from having
>Large Tubular Objects such as camera lenses -- and rifles! -- pointed at
>them.  This is what makes bird watching a real feast as well as a royal pain.
>
>I visited the tidal flatlands of Virginia over Thanksgiving.  The weather
>was supposed to be cloudy and dank, so I brought not my vaunted Leica
>APO-Televid, foolish me.  But I did have a couple of Zeiss binoculars and
>my trusted M6 set and, of course, the 2.8GX Rolleiflex.  
>
>On Thursday, I was driving along the Colonial Parkway towards Yorktown when
>I came upon a couple of Trumpeter Swans parked at one of the inlets -- the
>one just north of King's Creek, and I cannot recall the name.  It is a
>broad, barely briney estuary.  Two Swans, two Canadian Geese, one of the
>Geese perched on a log and the others swimming about.  The Goose in the
>water was defensive towards all comers -- and then my escort, the charming
>Cyndi, noted that the Goose on the log had an oil-soaked wing and the other
>was protecting it from both the Swans and Yrs. Trly.  
>
>The Swans were playful -- they are not uncommon in the York and James
>estuaries, but are normally quite skitterish about Outsiders, and only let
>Humans, and other such folks, approach to within a hundred yards (yeah,
>yeah, a hundred meters for the Imperially Challenged among our number, Ted)
>or so.  These two were of a different bent.  They splashed, and preened,
>and swam about, dove for food, and showed off some more.  They were
>strutting their stuff.  
>
>I had Kodachrome.  I had a Leica.  I had lenses, 1.4/35 to 4.8/280 (DAMN!
>Why didn't I bring that 5/400!).  I shot a roll.  The Swans liked the
>binoculars.  They loved the camera.  They showed off.  These guys were
>Hollywood Hams if ever such existed.  It was warm, and sunny, and clear,
>and they were in fine form.
>
>The film is in the shaky hands of Kodak, who have never failed to process
>Kodachrome for me promptly and well.  This shoot was a tough enough one, as
>it can be terribly deceiving to shoot over water -- water is much darker
>than it seems to the nekkid eye, and light meters do not always properly
>register the ambient light.  But, my errors and Kodak's being there, I am
>praying that THIS roll will come out.  
>
>I have never seen anything like this before, and I used to live in this
>neck of the woods, back in my poor student days.  The Charming Cyndi was
>quite upset about the Goose's wing until I assured her that either the wing
>would, eventually, dry itself -- the bird WAS dipping it occasionally -- or
>the Park Police would grab the bird and clean it off.  (Yes, they DO do
>this, one of those environmentally friendly services which even the worst
>gummits occasionally are caught commiting.)
>
>And then the Charming Cyndi and I took a ferry ride from Jamestown to
>Surrey to get some Peanut Soup at the Surrey House, a rare and delicate
>Virginia treat (Oh, you poor westerners!  You deprived Canadians!  Yes,
>Campbell's DOES make a "peanut" soup, but, trust me, the Gwaltney's make it
>a work of art.)  Cyndi happens to have a sea-captain's license (I DO date
>some fascinating women!), so her commentary, tart at times, over the
>boat-driving was a bit fascinating.  But the Gulls flocked all about, and I
>shot those with PPF (Kodak Pro 400), and those DID come out -- I even
>entrusted these to the tender mercies of my local pro lab, and they came
>out most wonderfully.  Gulls, and wake, and a golden sunset.
>
>It was a day from heaven, for me as a photographer and for me as an avian
>enquirer.  (No, no, guys!  Cyndi SAID she had a good time, but men never
>know:  after all, she IS a Contaflex photographer!)  And the day was topped
>with a wonderful dinner, sans photographs, at the Williamsburg Inn, replete
>with Beef Wellington and a rather interesting Chilean Merlot.
>
>I wish I had brought my Televid.  Hell -- I wish I'd had my Klepper Aerius
>along.  These birds were in the mood to play around a bit, and it would
>have been a blast to have been able to join in their antics.
>
>Marc
>
>
>
>
>
>msmall@roanoke.infi.net  FAX:  +540/343-7315
>Cha robh bas fir gun ghras fir!
>