For those who have been reading this blog for the past few months, you are sure to remember my insane plan to compete in a 1/2 ironman race this year.  I am happy to say that I have picked a race and I am on track in my training.  My day of reckoning is October 23, 2011 where I will complete the ironman 70.3 in Austin, Texas.  That means I will have 8.5 hours to swim 1.2 miles, bike 56 miles and run 13.1 miles.

My goals are actually pretty simple.  I want to finish and enjoy the experience (AKA be alive at the end), so I am taking steps to improve my chances of meeting these goals.

First off, I have gotten more organized in my training.  In May I started working with Jen Rulon, a triathlon coach at Tribalance.  Jen has been a great help in organizing my workouts and keeping me honest about the effort I am putting into training (it is harder to cheat when you have to account to someone at the end of the week).  Her first act as my coach was to dramatically increase the the number of weekly workouts I was doing (it went from 6 to 9 workouts every week).  I vaguely remember her mentioning something about recovery weeks, but I find that her “recovery weeks” are more than the heavy weeks I was doing before.  I am currently training around 8 hours a week.  Take my word for it, that is a lot.  In June, for example, my workouts included:

  • 182.6 miles of biking.
  • 47.5 miles of running.
  • 13.2 miles of swimming.

Second, I have tried to keep it fun.  The truth is that endurance training is long, tedious work.  If you don’t want to burn out, you have to find ways to mix things up on occasion.  Towards this end, I have tried a few different things.  When we travel, I have gotten in my workouts, even if things were a little different.  When we went to South Padre Island, Noemi and I did a long run along the beach.  At Lake Placid (the one in Texas), I did my 40 minute swim in a canal off the Guadalupe River.  Everyone seemed convinced that I was going to get eaten by snakes, but the reality is that open water swims can be a lot of fun.  My upcoming visit to Salt Lake City will probably find me on a mountain bike trail somewhere.

Noemi has also helped to keep me motivated by signing me up for local races.  Thinking that a 5k fun run might be a little too easy, she decided that we needed to run in the Chupacabra nighttime trail race.  There is nothing quite like running in the dark along a dirt trail trail with 1,200 strangers to give yourself a challenge.  Actually, the race was a lot of fun.  I finished in 1:06:42, beating Noemi by a good 6 minutes.  This is a good thing because in a normal road race, she leaves me in the dust.  I have to take my victories where I can find them.

What does all this have to do with photography?  On the surface, nothing.  Yet setting long goals is a necessary step in becoming a better photographer.  Personal fitness also directly impacts our ability to get out there and photograph.  The big kick in the butt that got me on the road to fitness was how difficult I found climbing the hillside stairs at Kigongoni lodge.  I admit those stairs are long and steep, but climbing them shouldn’t have required a 10 minute recovery.

We don’t get good at something overnight, at least not anything worth becoming good at.  Skills are developed through time and effort.  So, no matter what you chose to do, set your goals, work hard, and do everything you can to achieve your results.

Written on July 25th, 2011 , Personal

 

 

Great White Shark with open mouth as it swims by underwater.

What do you do when a 1,100 pound Great White Shark jumps into your boat?  That was the situation shark researchers found themselves in while working near Seal Island in South Africa.  It s a story of drama, heroics, and a very big fish.  For a full account, visit the Shark Chronicles blog.

 

Written on July 21st, 2011 , Africa, News and Notes

Canvas on Demand is offering a 20% discount for orders placed by Friday, July 22nd (midnight deadline).  If you haven’t seen their work, Canvas on Demand creates beautiful gallery wraps.  To get the discount, use promo code: FIRECRACKER at checkout.

Written on July 20th, 2011 , Announcements, News and Notes

 

Spotted hyaena smelling car bumper.

Sometimes they are as curious about us as we are about them.

This spotted hyaena was photographed smelling the bumper of our Landrover as it walked past.  The image was captured using a Canon 1D mark 2, 500mm IS lens with a 1.4 teleconverter, at 200 ISO.

 

Written on July 18th, 2011 , Africa, Image of the Day

 

Female lion walking between two vehicles with photographers watching.

This is the first summer in five years that I will not spend some of my time in Africa.  It is an amazing place and images like the one above remind me how much I miss it.

The image was captured using a Canon 1D mark 4, 120-300mm lens with a 1.4 teleconverter, at 400 ISO.

 

 

 

Written on July 11th, 2011 , Africa, Image of the Day

Here is a link list to all twelve steps in the 12 steps to better nature photography series.  If you are reading the series for the first time, or looking to refresh your memory about a certain step, I hope you find the information useful.

Step #1 – Know your equipment

Step #2 – It is about the light

Step #3 – Use a tripod

Step #4 – Lens do more then get you closer

Step #5 – Get closer

Step #6 – Composition is not a four letter word

Step #7 – Go where the wildlife is

Step #8 – Move beyond the pretty picture

Step #9 – Learn biology

Step #10 – Be ready for the action

Step #11 – Learn to use the digital darkroom

Step #12 – Edit, share, and compare

Know a tip that is missing from the list, share it with the community by posting a comment.

 

Welcome to the twelfth in a 12 part series about how to improve your nature photography.

Step #12 – Edit, Share, and Compare.

For most of us, photography is a social activity.  I might be alone when I take an animal’s picture, but I’m not taking that picture just for me.  I photograph wildlife because I want to share the beauty and wonder of the natural world.  There are few things more exciting than coming face to face with a wild animal and interacting with it on a personal level.  I take photographs because I want to share those experiences.  It doesn’t matter how good of a photographer I am or how many great images I have captured.  If my images never move beyond my computer it is as if they don’t exist.

Young masai giraffe walking behind its mother.

Editing:

Before you show a single image to anyone, edit your work.  After two weeks of photographing in Africa, I usually come home with between 5,000 and 10,000 images.  From these I narrow the number down to the best 100 images.  Sounds hard, but it isn’t.  The key is to accept that everyone takes bad pictures.  The difference between bad and good photographers is the ability to let go of the bad images and only show the good ones.  There is a running joke that the difference between a professional and amateur photographer is the size of their trash can.  The professional’s trash can is bigger and it gets used a lot.

When I edit my work, I do a first run through and throw away any images that don’t make a basic quality cut.  Anything that is out of focus, poorly exposed, or shows bad composition gets tossed.  After 19 years I still get shots of tail feathers as the bird flies out of the frame.  It doesn’t matter how good you are.  If you never take a bad picture, you’re not pushing yourself and you will never get better.

Once the obviously bad images are removed, I start the second round edit.  This is where I separate the wheat from the chaff.  Factors like composition, critical focus, and light all come into play in deciding which images stand out.  I also look at each image at 100% magnification to assess critical focus.  If the eyes aren’t sharp – delete.  It is painful, but I only want the best images in my files.

In the end, I end up with two different groups of “keeper” files.  The first is my top image category.  These are my babies.  These are my go to images when someone wants to see what I can do.  From a big trip, I might have 80 – 100 images in this category, but they are my best.  The second group is my good but not awesome category.  These are still high quality images (mediocre and bad images got thrown out during editing), but they are a notch below the top shots.  They also might number between 2,000 and 3,000.  Why do I keep these?  As a stock and editorial photographer, I often have a need for images that help to tell or complete a story.  These images help to fill out the story.  They might not be show stoppers, but they are solid images that show subjects that are often in demand.

Cheetah lying in grass yawning.

Sharing:

Before you start sharing, you need to determin which images are worth sharing.  Not just which images, but how many.  We all dread the words, “Want to see a slideshow of my vacation?”  What usually follows is hundreds of boring images that make you want to move to a distant land where they have never heard of slideshows.  Don’t be that person.  If you give a slideshow, blow the audience away.  Make them beg for more.  Remember, 20 pictures of you sitting on a beach might bring back great memories, but they will end your future chances of a social life.  Do your audience a favor, keep it short.  If you can’t say it with 30 to 40 images, you need to refine your message.

It goes back to editing.  Not only do you need to select quality images, but the image you pick need to be assembled so they tell a story.  Not just any story.  It needs to be a story that your audience actually wants to hear.

In today’s digital world, image sharing has come a long way from the slideshow.  Online photographic sites like NatureScapesBirdPhotographers.net, and Flickr offer opportunities to post images for review and critique.  Short of a photographic workshop, online communities are probably the fastest way to become a better photographer.  Pick your specialty, find a group, sign up, start posting, and listen to what people have to say.  For those looking for a more personal touch, there are many local area camera clubs that run monthly competitions and workshops.  These can also be outstanding venues for photographers looking to share their work and improve on what they are doing.

Beyond showing off, sharing my photography gets me excited about what I do.  As a wildlife photographer it is easy to be isolated.  Sharing my work gets what I am doing out in front of others and reaffirms the value of what I am doing.  In the case of my students, it has the added benefit of getting them excited about something I am passionate about.

Herd of hippopotamus resting in the water.

Compare:

One of the best ways to develop as a photographer is to expose yourself to the work of other photographers.  Check out what others are doing and compare it to your own work.  How do your images measure up?  Are your images better?  If so, fantastic.  Now go out and find a photographer who is better then you.  Trust me, they are out there.  If not, don’t get depressed.  Every industry has its stars and there is nothing wrong with looking at their work with envy.  The problem comes when that is all you do.

When you find a photographer whose work you truly admire, ask yourself what it is about the work that draws you.  Is it their use of light?  Their unique camera angles?  Their post processing technique?  Once you identify the key factor (or factors), ask yourself what it will take for you to start producing images of that quality.  Then get to work.

Too often photographers obtain a basic level of competence in their craft and then stop developing.  Comparing your work to that of other photographers and pushing yourself outside of your comfort zone will assist you in evolving yours photography.

Olive baboon troop in a tree.

Closeup of an adult male olive baboon's face.

I always have fun photographing baboons.  Their faces are expressive and their interactions remind me of a big family get together.  Best of all, they travel in large troops, so if you miss a shot, you have several hundred more chances.  Photographically, the problem is that it is easy to photograph baboons, it is hard to photograph a baboon.  Removing all of the distractions and focus in on a single behavior or interaction is a serious technical challenge.  The solution is a long lens and a lot of patience.

The large male baboon shown above is a good example.  Using a long lens (300mm lens with a 1.4 teleconverter) I was able to narrow the angle of view, thereby removing the visual distractions.  Next I focused on the face, which presented an additional issue, limited depth of field.  Long lenses have reduced depth of field and it is essential to control which part of the scene will be in focus.  Each twist of the head shifted the point of focus and changed the image.  With wildlife, the key is to get the eyes sharp.  From that point on, it became a waiting game for when all the elements come together: the head turned in the right direction, the expression interesting, and the eyes in focus.

The image was captured using a Canon 1Ds mark 3, 120-300mm Sigma lens with a 1.4 teleconverter, at 800 ISO.

Written on July 4th, 2011 , Africa, Image of the Day

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Through the lens with Chris Gamel

Musings of a photographic educator.