The sign obviously hasn’t worked!
This was on South Wabash, Chicago around the same time this photo was taken.
Aperture | ƒ/5 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 18mm |
ISO | 400 |
Shutter speed | 1/60s |
I was there too
The sign obviously hasn’t worked!
This was on South Wabash, Chicago around the same time this photo was taken.
Aperture | ƒ/5 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 18mm |
ISO | 400 |
Shutter speed | 1/60s |
Urban ducks and wild fowl are luckier than their country brethren. People think they are cute and feed them!
This is the same duck I posted before at the Crown Fountains, Chicago.
Aperture | ƒ/5.6 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 18mm |
ISO | 100 |
Shutter speed | 1/80s |
I love when animals and birds look at you with a tilt of their heads as if inquisitive. What is this duck saying?
“There’s that guy with the camera again! Why does he keeping taking photos of me and my man?”
“What’s that thing he’s pointing at me?”
“I wonder if he has any bread?”
Ah yes, such is the life of a bird in an urban environment!
Aperture | ƒ/5 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 180mm |
ISO | 100 |
Shutter speed | 1/100s |
A duck in Millenium Park, Chicago last May. Bet you’re wondering what is casting that red glow on the water? All will be revealed on Monday after I post a cute picture of it’s mate!
Aperture | ƒ/5.6 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 235mm |
ISO | 100 |
Shutter speed | 1/60s |
Dolphins leap into the air at the Shedd Aquarium in Chicago.
Aperture | ƒ/6.3 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 75mm |
ISO | 400 |
Shutter speed | 1/200s |
This was taken yesterday in my back garden. We had some beautiful light after a very dull start to the day and I took advantage of it.
I used the Canon 75-300 IS lens but the bird feeder is about 3m away from my backdoor so I can’t get as close as I’d like. This is a very close crop of a much larger image. The original crop is 1188×1188 pixels but I really like how this came out.
There is purple fringing on the highlight around his mouth, and in his eye but it’s not too bad thankfully!
Aperture | ƒ/7.1 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 300mm |
ISO | 200 |
Shutter speed | 1/400s |
A seagull roused by traffic noise flies up from the River Lee.
Aperture | ƒ/7.1 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 200mm |
ISO | 800 |
Shutter speed | 1/250s |
Street lighting and STOP sign pictured on the quays just up from here last Saturday.
I wanted to make the stop sign jump out a bit more but didn’t want to force it too much. I do like the leading lines the guide the eye to the top of the pole!
And in other news, voting for the Irish Blog Awards has commenced! I’ve been nominated in 3 categories including “Best Photo Blog” for this blog!
Aperture | ƒ/3.5 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 18mm |
ISO | 400 |
Shutter speed | 1/800s |
Glendalough derives it’s name from the Irish name for the area, “Gleann Da Loch” which roughly translates as “glen of the two lakes”. It was a cold enough day so we only got a good look at the lower lake, but I’m looking forward to visiting again!
Aperture | ƒ/6.3 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 18mm |
ISO | 200 |
Shutter speed | 1/125s |
We spent last weekend driving – up to Bray in Co. Wicklow, visited Glendalough, The Sally Gap and promptly got lost a few times on the way to Avoca!
On Sunday we returned to Cork, but took a detour via Tullow and Carlow to visit Killkenny. We called to friends in Fermoy and arrived home late last night.
The N11 on the east coast is very impressive! Getting to Killkenny from Bray is a chore however. There are only secondary roads the whole way, but the scenery is amazing and we saw bits of the country we hadn’t been to before!
This is the first photo from that trip taken at Glendalough.
The round tower in the background was built sometime between the 8th and 12th centuries. Round Towers were built to protect monastic scriptures, gold and property from Viking raiders. The only entrance is far off the ground, and easily defended.
Aperture | ƒ/6.3 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 18mm |
ISO | 200 |
Shutter speed | 1/100s |
A beached whale on Garretstown Beach last November.
A notice which is being read by the man in the foreground reads that this is a female long finned pilot whale and asks that people do not remove or bury it as it is required by researchers.
I was reluctant to post this picture in the past 2 months but after what happened in London when a whale died it spurred me to find this photo again.
This was taken on the same night as this photo and this one.
Aperture | ƒ/5.6 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 18mm |
ISO | 1600 |
Shutter speed | 1/80s |