Having ‘one of those days’…? Don’t give up!
January 12, 2009
I mean really, other than me, who forgets to take their tripod when they are going out to shoot with a 600mm lens. Spare battery, sure. Memory cards, maybe…but the TRIPOD?!
Yep, we all have them. One of those days where everything is going wrong and it seems we are just destined to not take any photo’s. I had weather, subject and memory (see above!) issues recently. However, I hung in there and was glad I did…
I had been unable to get out during the week due to work and other commitments, so decided I’d head out on this particularly cold Janurary morning for some sunrise shots of the frost before starting a shift at work later that morning. It would be the first chance I’d had to use the 600mm in almost 2 months and I was itching to play with it again. I had also arranged to meet a friend there as she is just starting to get in to photography and wanted some tips and practice. I woke up at 7am and looked out the window. It looked very frosty but also very misty…however the weather had predicted a sunny start to the day so I figured the mist would burn off as the sun came up. So I headed out and arrived around 15 minutes before sunrise and that’s where the problems began…!
First up, I opened the boot and realised in my sleepy state I had forgotten to pack the tripod! Not the smartest of moves when you have come out shooting with a 600mm! It usually lives in the boot but I had forgotten I had taken it out a few weeks back. Secondly, the ’sunny start’ to the day turned out to be a full blown dull, grey, flat foggy one at the park. Even by 9am there was no evidence in the sky of where the sun was, let alone if it had risen! And lastly, all the birds were huddled in small patches of water that hadn’t frozen! So getting my frosty bird shots was out the window as through the viewfinder they were just colourless birds in grey water!
I resigned myself to the fact this shoot would just be to give my friend some advice and show what a few settings did and how they affected exposure etc. However, as we headed back to the cars I suggested we try one other smaller pond that was on the other side of the car park. It was here that I managed to find a couple of coots, one of which was kind enough to sit on the ice and allow me to get the shot above which I actually quite liked. And not having a tripod was a blessing as it forced me to lay on the floor so I was practically at eye level, giving excellent isolation of the bird from it’s surroundings. And the dull flat light allowed me to hold lots of detail in the black feathers without blowing the whites massively in the head, which is always the trick with coots.
So, when all seems lost, never give up! Even if the weather is rubbish or your subjects aren’t doing what you want…keep at it. If you have the energy to carry on walking around, then do so. Because you never know what you might find even when all seems hopeless!





It was all worthwhile in the end and not a total bust, that coot shot is sperb.
Jon
(linked via the DVDforums)
That’s very funny! Not so long back I had to hike back a few miles to find my monopod having put it down and forgotten I’d brought it with me until I changed lenses and needed it. And you’re right it’s often when you think the day is a washout that an interesting shot comes along.
Anyway. Thanks for an interesting blog and for making me laugh!
Ian
That’s a pretty nice shot!
It just shows what a good photographer can capture without fanciful accessories. A tripod in this case…
Hats off to photographers like yourself that get out there in all weathers. I prefer weddings and indoor work myself. I used to have nightmares about getting to a wedding and finding I had no camera though!