I have always enjoyed studying images of wildlife. That moment, frozen in time, allows the viewer to examine closely the details of a hide, an eye, the ripple of a muscle of the construction of a gait. Photographs of birds, which are small, fast moving and often distant – but with perhaps more detail than any other creatures – are especially rewarding in the extra information that they reveal.
But quality, close up images of birds have always been the preserve of specialist photographers who choose hides over vehicles and select extremely long lenses, often with teleconverters attached.
However, the advent of very high resolution cameras has brought bird photography within reach of more “generalist” photographers. This is not to say that the pros will not still retain their rightful place on the covers of magazines and on the podiums of bird photography competitions, but that more people are able to enjoy the challenge and reward of adding birds to their target subject list.
Mirrorless cameras have taken it a step further with both very high resolution and exceptional autofocus and frame rates….all of which are key to good bird photos. The Canon R5 shoots 45 megapixel images at 20 frames per second, silently, and with constant autofocus. Add a 500mm lens, with a 1.4x teleconverter and 700mm, 45MP files bring birds well into range. Sony and Nikon have similarly good mirrorless camera set ups.
Birds are still a specialist subject and my safaris include birds when they are accessible – i.e. in good light and close enough to cover more than a few pixels of the camera’s sensor! But, with the new range of mirrorless cameras, it will be increasingly possible to “reach” more birds and add more of them to our portfolios.
Below is a collection of bird images from this year, showing a range of features that are often too small or discreet to see.