Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Patience



"I myself have never made a dead set at studying Nature with a notebook and fieldglass in hand. I have rather visited with her. We have walked together or sat down together, and our intimacy grows with the seasons. What I have learned about her ways I have learned easily, almost unconsciously, while fishing or camping or idling about. My desultory habits have their disadvantages, no doubt, but they have their advantages also. A too-strenuous pursuit defeats itself. In the fields and woods more than anywhere else all things come to those who wait, because all things are on the move, and are sure sooner or later to come your way."

- John Burroughs

I think this excerpt from The Gospel of Nature reflects the essence of my philosophy of nature photography – or rather what it has become. When I first began taking pictures of birds in the wild, I would run around willy-nilly trying to capture as many images of different bird species as possible. Within a year or two, this became very tiring (and expensive) and made photography seem more like a job - I felt defeated. It wasn’t Burrough’s words that inspired change to my approach, but a natural and gradual settling into a relaxed pace. More recently, perhaps having taken notice of a decrease in production, someone commented that I should photograph more bird rarities around Wisconsin. In my reply I included, "The bird that’s in front of my lens is the one I photograph, whatever it happens to be." The grasslands and meadows of Pheasant Branch Conservancy will reach an apex of color in a few weeks. There are Common Yellowthroats, Yellow Warblers, Indigo Buntings, Willow Flycatchers, Song Sparrows, Red-winged Blackbirds and more. The colors present last summer when I took the above photograph of an Indigo Bunting were breathtaking. I spent hours on end just sitting on the hill admiring the busy birds zipping around fields in full bloom. Eventually, the bunting was before me.

Indigo Bunting image © 2007 Mike McDowell

5 Comments:

At 5:10 AM, Anonymous knitsteel said...

Oh this picture is stunning- took my breath away. - the color combinations, the composition, just lovely.

Please let me know if you ever sell this image printed on a notecard, through yourself or another photo site. I got the impression that you don't sell them at all, but I just wanted to check.
If you do, you can reach me through my own blog at http://knitsteel.blogspot.com

 
At 3:55 PM, Anonymous Peace B W/U said...

I agree. BREATHTAKING! Blog title reminded me of "But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control; against such there is no law."

 
At 6:40 AM, Anonymous dguzman said...

I think I'm still in the willy-nilly stage, but I do try to slow myself down, appreciate what I'm seeing, and then try to capture it digitally. I'm helping a friend with her counts for our state breeding bird atlas, and that's helping me remember to just watch the birds do their birdy things.

 
At 6:25 AM, Anonymous Jeff Bouton said...

Guilty! I'm definitely willy-nilly too. I'm too hyper when I get outside to just 'sit and watch'. My other problem is if the birding is good I sometimes forget I have a camera at the hip... too much of a bird brain I guess. Just gorgeous Mike, well done (as always).

 
At 8:03 PM, Anonymous michael said...

i scrolled past the indigo bunting and immediatly backed up, such a wonderful bird, nature is full of such beauty that we take for granted

 

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