Check-in at Malee's is noon so after a pleasant drive by motorcycle I arrived late in the day, too late for birding I thought. As I was shuttling my gear to the bungalow I immediately encountered John Williams, a fellow Chiang Mai resident and ex-pat from the U.K., who was sitting in a lawn chair pointing a long-lensed camera at one of Malee's flowering trees. I asked him what he was seeing and he replied, "sunbirds". I dropped my bags on the spot and ran back to the bike to fetch my camera and binocs. Thus began my first real birding holiday. I'm hooked on birding now and if past experience is any guide, this will be only the first of many. Here's what John was looking at:
Olive-backed Sunbird (male) - Malee's Garden Canon EOS R, Tamron 100-400mm @400mm, f/6.3, 1/160 sec, ISO 800 |
Olive-backed Sunbird (male) - Malee's Garden Canon EOS R, Tamron 100-400mm @400mm, f/6.3, 1/160 sec, ISO 1000 |
An Olive-backed Sunbird builds her nest Canon EOS R, Tamron 100-400mm @400mm f/6.3, 1/2000 sec, ISO 3200 |
An Olive-backed Sunbird builds her nest Canon EOS R, Tamron 100-400mm @400mm f/6.3, 1/1600 sec, ISO 1600 |
I also bought a Canon EOS R, a recently introduced mirrorless full-frame camera that uses Canon's new RF mount. It comes with an RF-EF adapter so people can use the high-quality EF lenses that Canon has been making for many years and that I use with the Tamron. The few RF lenses currently available from Canon are super high-quality and extremely expensive so I'll be mostly using EF lenses with it. The "R" is a fine camera and has many features my M50 lacked. All the photos in this post were shot with the EOS R and the Tamron.
Below is the bird that got me hooked into bird photography, the lovely Blue-winged Leafbird. When Nut & I visited Chiang Dao back in November I got an image of this bird with my M50. It was a nice image but it left me wanting photos with more visible detail, more resolution. If you open this image by clicking on it you'll be able to see individual feathers. That's the kind of resolution I was wanting.
Blue-winged Leafbird - Malee's Garden Canon EOS R, Tamron 100-400mm @400mm f/6.3, 1/640 sec, ISO 1000 |
On my second day at Chiang Dao, I drove my motorcycle to a nearby temple and just as I pulled into the parking area I spotted a small, dark bird sitting on a fencepost. I parked a few meters away and grabbed my binocs out of the top box. And there he was, a handsome male White-rumped Shama! His beautiful orange breast contrasted vividly with an indigo blue body. He was in deep shade so these first few images were very dark and were shot at too high an ISO (I use the Auto-ISO feature on my "R", more below), consequently they were quite noisy. My experience at the Arboretum taught me that Shamas are creatures of habit and aren't particularly shy. So I returned the next day, spotted one near a temple outbuilding and was able to get some good images even though he was in the shade (again). Turns out there are several male Shamas living in the area, and all of them apparently prefer shady surroundings. In all, I saw four males but no females.
Male White-rumped Shama Canon EOS R, Tamron 100-400mm @400mm, F/6/3, 1/100 sec, ISO 800 |
Male White-rumped Shama Canon EOS R, Tamron 100-400mm @400mm, F/6/3, 1/60 sec, ISO1200 |
Here's a photo of the Arboretum female for comparison. I was quite close to her, only six or seven meters away, so the Canon 70-200mm lens worked perfectly for this shot.
Female White-rumped Shama - Huay Kaew Arboretum Canon EOS M50, Canon 70-200mm @200mm, f/6.3, 1/160 sec, ISO 4000 |
Purple Sunbird - Malee's Garden Canon EOS R Tamron100-400mm @400mm f/6.3 , 1/1600 sec, ISO 2500 |
Puff-throated Bulbul Canon EOS R Tamron100-400mm @400mm f/6.3, 1/320 sec, ISO 1600 |
Birding gets me out of the house early almost every day. I wake at 5 or 6 am, excited to get up and begin the day. I make a pot of tea, write in my Journal, answer mail, and decide where I'll go at first light. Then I pack all my junk, my camera and lenses, binocs, some water and snacks into the top-box on the Honda, and take off for my morning outing. Chiang Mai is a huge city. It's got a lot going for it from an ex-pat's point of view but peace and quiet are in short supply. I spend a lot of time at Chiang Mai University's nearby Agricultural Campus which is a quiet and pretty spot only a 10-minute drive from home. Its ponds, orchards and meadows are tranquil and relaxing. I'll have more to say about it and some other local birding spots in my next post. Below is the little shelter on that campus where I most enjoy hanging out. There's a certain bird, a female Siberian Stonechat, that I see every time I'm there. It's almost as though she intentionally comes out to greet me. I'll introduce you to her in a subsequent post as well.
Birdwatching Sala at Chiang Mai University Agricultural Campus |
Technical Addendum for Bird Nerds and Camera Junkies
If you're at all interested in bird photography, the rest of this post describes what I've learned over the past few months and how I've put it into practice. I gleaned a ton of knowledge from Youtube and the outstanding photographers, Photoshop experts, and reviewers of equipment that have taken the trouble to make instructional videos. Youtube contains a wealth of information about almost anything of interest. While the Internet has failed miserably in its potential to democratize information dissemination it has made learning about photography very pleasurable and entertaining.The full specification for my new Tamron lens is: 100-400mm f/4.5-6.3 Di VC USD. I paid $700 USD for it on eBay to which Thai Customs tacked on $100 for import duty. Like my Canon 70-200mm lens, it has autofocus and image stabilization (Tamron calls it "VC" for Vibration Control). That Canon lens maintained the same f/4 aperture throughout its entire focal range while the Tamron starts out 1/2 stop slower, f/4.5 at 100mm, and goes to f/6.3 at 400mm, making it almost 2 stops slower. That means that for a given amount of light coming to the lens, the Tamron will require either twice the time (slower shutter speed) or twice the ISO sensitivity to gather the same amount of light as the Canon at the 400mm focal length. Such compromises are necessary to make the lens affordable. However, for some photographers, this one is a deal-breaker.
Constant aperture zooms are expensive to make because they require a huge front element to capture sufficient light. Even the $1600 Canon lens I mentioned before (the 100-400mm), has a variable f/4.5-5.6 aperture making its loss of light one stop less than the Tamron's. But is that worth an $800 difference? I don't think so. Just for comparison, a non-zooming Canon 400mm telephoto having an f/4 aperture comes in at a whopping $7000 USD and one with an f/2.8 aperture at $12,000 USD. Now, that's some serious glass! And some serious coin.
I shoot all my images in what's known as camera RAW while most casual photographers shoot in JPEG mode. Because a RAW image contains the full complement of pixel-based data collected by the sensor during exposure they're large; mine run 20 to 25 MBytes. One problem with JPEGs is that the camera's firmware processes the RAW sensor data internally and in so doing makes compromises to achieve a usable image, which is typically a half to a quarter the size of the RAW file. It does this to make smaller image files and to spare users the chore of processing the data manually. Most people don't want to mess with this additional processing step and besides, the JPEG image is pleasant to look at right out of the camera. However, the firmware discards lots of potentially valuable data during JPEG processing. With RAW I can open an under- or over-exposed image in Photoshop and pull in pixels that would be missing in your JPEG thus effectively rescuing them from the Recycling Bin. There are many other advantages to shooting in RAW. For example, I never concern myself with White Balance because that setting is only needed to tell the camera what it needs to know to produce a pleasing JPEG that will hopefully appear close to the way you saw it. In Photoshop, a RAW file can be adjusted to appear as though it was shot in bright daylight, cloudy skies, or what have you.
These days I shoot in full Manual mode with a single (small) autofocus point. But I didn't always do it that way. Like many people I started out using the built-in modes offered on most cameras, you know, Aperture priority, Shutter priority, or Automatic, and a large auto-focus area. I came to realize that the camera was deciding too many things for me and it was getting them wrong. There are good reasons for using Aperture Priority, which controls Depth-Of- Field, or Shutter Priority to freeze action or sometimes to blur action (but almost none for using full Automatic). However, those auto modes are not very useful in landscape photography or the kind of bird photography I'm doing. I always want the smallest aperture (highest f-number) to maximize Depth-Of-Field (D-O-F) and highest shutter speed to minimize motion blur. These are things one must set intentionally and manually — the camera will not do it that way.
Makers of modern cameras advertise the wide coverage of their autofocus systems and Canon are no exception when extolling the virtues of its EOS R. However unless you're shooting birds in flight, these multi-point focus systems will often focus on the background and miss the tiny bird in front of it. In my bird photography, I place the small square autofocus box on the bird and set my focus there, recomposing and refocusing only when necessary.
Even after carefully setting the focus sometimes the bird moves or my hand doesn't hold the long telephoto steady enough for the image stabilization to counter it. That's why birders use a high-speed continuous shutter for their work. My camera shoots about 5-6 frames/second if I keep the shutter depressed. Chances are good that one or two out of 10 or 20 images will turn out sharp enough to be a keeper. This sort of thing just wasn't possible in the days of film. I use this mode all the time.
Recently I've started using a technique called back-button focusing and I'm just starting to be comfortable with it. By default, most cameras use the shutter button both to obtain focus and measure the exposure when it's pressed halfway. Pressing it all the way down then opens the shutter and exposes the image. To use back-button focusing, you decouple the focusing from the shutter button and put it somewhere else. Most cameras including my "R" have a button called Auto-focus-On (AF-ON) or something similar. After assigning focus to AF-ON, the shutter button merely measures the exposure and opens the shutter. The beauty of this is that once you get the focus set you needn't fool with it again unless the subject moves. Intervening twigs or leaves don't grab focus as they sometimes do when using the standard functionality of the shutter button which refocuses every time you take a shot. It's easy to set up on most cameras and especially on Canon cameras which have touch-activated menu systems that are as easy to use as the menus on your cellphone.
Another feature I use all the time even in Manual Mode is automatic ISO, or Auto-ISO. The ISO is essentially the sensitivity of the camera's sensor to light. It roughly corresponds to what we old-timers used to know as ASA, which was a measure of film speed. Modern cameras can shoot at very high ISOs; mine goes to 102,000, a ridiculously high value that I would never use in practice. Using a higher ISO allows me to use the faster shutter speeds and smaller apertures I want for bird work. The drawback of a too high ISO is increased graininess or electronic noise in the image that results when the imaging sensor is forced to high sensitivity levels.
In the field, you would ideally set the ISO to as low a setting as possible to keep the noise to a minimum and then pick the shutter speed and aperture to get the correct exposure for the conditions. But if you're shooting a bird and it moves from the shade to bright sunlight, you might not have enough time to correct the aperture and/or shutter speed for the new situation. That's where auto-ISO comes in handy.
To begin I set my shutter speed and aperture as high as possible given the current light levels (fast shutter to stop motion, small aperture for high D-O-F), and set the camera on Auto-ISO and this generally works pretty well. If you're not careful though it can result in images that are so grainy as to be unusable. A couple of my photos of the male Shama were shot in very low light and I was so excited to even see the bird I forgot to check the ISO setting my camera had chosen. Later, after I got back to my computer I saw that it had used an ISO of 12,800, much much too high. According to the camera, they were correctly exposed, and indeed they were, but the images were super grainy and completely unusable without some heavy-handed noise removal.
Photoshop has the capability to remove this noise but it's tricky and far from perfect. I bought a piece of software, DenoiseAI, from an outfit called Topaz Labs that does a fantastic job of noise removal. It can be used as a plugin from Photoshop's Filter menu. I run all images shot at ISOs above 400 through TopazDenoiseAI now. The Bulbul image was shot with an ISO of 1600 because it was dark inside the foliage. The image was very grainy but Topaz cleaned it up nicely.