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The understanding was eelusive?BillTre said:Where eels came from was not well understood for a surprisingly long time.
Rive said:It's hot here
I thought they were more like this...BillTre said:
So what's going on there? It looks like the eagle is carrying some kind of prey(?) and the crow is trying to induce the eagle to drop it?BillTre said:[crow-on-eagle...]
I thought it was provisions for the way.strangerep said:So what's going on there? It looks like the eagle is carrying some kind of prey(?) and the crow is trying to induce the eagle to drop it?
I don't see the prey (the raptor's wings are in the down position covering any prey in the photo), but I do see the tether leather strap which means it's a raptor managed by a falconer. The raptor looks to be lining up on a branch that it will pass a couple mm below at high speed. Have a good day, crow!strangerep said:So what's going on there? It looks like the eagle is carrying some kind of prey(?) and the crow is trying to induce the eagle to drop it?
Ah, that explains it. To me, it looked like the tail of a small wallaby, though I figured this photo is unlikely to originate in Australia.berkeman said:I don't see the prey (the raptor's wings are in the down position covering any prey in the photo), but I do see the tether leather strap which means it's a raptor managed by a falconer.
A marvellous photo!berkeman said:
Agreed. After studying the beautiful photo more, do you all think that the photographer had the foresight to set up a fill flash tripod several feet to his/her left for this shot? The lighting on the bird is stunning, with the Sun backlight and the artistic front/left highlights. The fill flash highlights look too far off axis to the left to be from a flash mounted on the camera -- more likely mounted on a tripod a meter or two to the left, IMO.DennisN said:A marvellous photo!
Interesting thought.berkeman said:After studying the beautiful photo more, do you all think that the photographer had the foresight to set up a fill flash tripod several feet to his/her left for this shot? The lighting on the bird is stunning, with the Sun backlight and the artistic front/left highlights. The fill flash highlights look too far off axis to the left to be from a flash mounted on the camera -- more likely mounted on a tripod a meter or two to the left, IMO.
It could be luck without a set-up, just using the reflected light,berkeman said:And how did the photographer know to set up on this scene? Maybe the owl regularly hunts this area, so the setup had a good chance? Amazing all around.
Is that a real image? No adjustments?BillTre said: