Bird of India Part III

Bird of India Part III



Pangot Woodlands

With the beautiful mountains of the Himalayas surrounding us, along with incredible fresh air, we ventured into the woodland areas searching for interesting subjects. With Caesar, and 3 drivers, 2 guides, we were able to locate several excellent species.

Study and Patience.

While we all would trek around looking for something cool to photograph, I would look for these birds to show me some kind of habits. A couple species were nesting, and feeding babies, so we could take advantage of this situation. Keeping a good distance from the nest is critical, so we so not interfere with the “work at hand!”

As an instructor, I feel it is a top priority to teach good birding ethics to my groups. First and foremost, is to always be a respectable distance from our subjects. In time, we can move in closer, but the key is to let the birds get used to our presence, they will eventually realize that we are not a threat.

We can tell by their body movements, and how often they will return with food. If they come in to the nest with reasonable comfort, we know we are maintaining proper ethics. I try to teach folks how to read the birds minds, using simple interpretations of their actions, and calls. we have all seen distressed birds, every time we open a door to our back yards, birds flush.

The key here is to give them time. Each species, and each individual bird has its own comfort zone. A photographer would be wise to stay way back and watch, then learn how to become part of the landscape, and enjoy the encounter with nature. Success with this approach is very rewarding, not only with fine images, but knowing you are interacting with our birds in a non-invasive manner.

Bird of India Part III
Spot-winged tit – India

Verditer Flycatcher India
Verditer Flycatcher – India

Mistle Thrush India
Mistle Thrush – India

Raymond Barlow Photography Tours will connect you with the wildlife photography that you dream about, Tanznaia, Costa Rica, Newfoundland, India, or the Grizzly Bears of British Columbia.

We offer several tours around the world, private workshops, group rates. Please review the latest tour info on this webpage, and thanks for your visit here with “Focus on Wildlife”.

Raymond Barlow

Raymond Barlow

Ray Barlow's passion for capturing birds and wildlife began at the Manila Zoo in 2004. Since then he has established himself as a professional bird and wildlife photographer. Ray is based near to Toronto Canada and hosts photography travel tours and workshops around the world. He goes to places like Yellowstone, Tanzania, Costa Rica, India, and British Columbia. Action photography including animals in chase or birds such as hummingbirds in flight is Ray's specialty. Now being sponsored by Jobu Design gimbal Heads.

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