Saturday 10 August 2013

Photographing a Roe Deer

One of the reasons I like photographing Roe Deer is that it can be a challenge – frustrating, hit and miss and hours of waiting around, usually coming away with nothing – but when I do achieve some success, it feels all the better for it.

Normally I don’t bother photographing Roe Deer at this time of year in the woods.  For an animal that’s typically out at night, dawn or dusk, the long days of summer mean it’s not seen that often during the normal daytime hours plus, there’s a lot of vegetation to hide it and there is plenty of food so it spends less time out feeding.  Another reason is Mosquitoes – lots of them!

Despite the poor prospects I decided to give it a try and arrived on location relatively late, just after 7:00am.  To try and stave off the inevitable Mosquito onslaught I used some Mosquito repellent – not normally recommended as these usually smell, increasing the chance of the deer smelling me, but as there was barely any wind I thought it worth the risk.

I sat down and made myself comfortable at one of my favourite locations, my 500mm lens on a monopod, covered this with some netting to help break up my shape and and trained on a particular gap which I Knew was a regular path they would take at this time, and so I just waited.   The woods were almost silent but for the occasional sound of a pigeon or crow and, rather unnervingly the buzzing around my ears of Mosquitoes! 

After around twenty minutes and some Mosquito bites later (the repellent didn’t work), I heard some distant noise behind me followed by some voices.  It was some people in the adjacent fields and so ignored it and continued the wait.  A few minutes later I saw out of the corner of my eye a Roe Deer crossing the path to my extreme left.  I didn’t dare turn my head to look never mind move my camera as it was barely 15 metres away and, although I was well hidden from the front, it would have easily seen me from that angle.  It must have come up right behind me, not what I was expecting.  I was sure it would see me and bolt off, but as I kept completely still it eventually moved within my view point, presumingly not seeing me or at least not bothered.

Below is a panoramic view from where I was sitting.  Unfortunately, my SD card become corrupt on my compact camera and the last of the series taken that made up this image, was unusable and would have made up the last image on the far right which was the main section I had trained my camera on being more open and a more typical path I would have expected to see a Roe.  Where I spotted the deer out of the corner of my eye is between the two trees on the left.  I had to wait until it approached the two white rectangles you can see before I got a clear shot of it – a very narrow gap of opportunity, so used the shutter trick to try and get it to stop long enough to prevent both camera shake and subject movement as, despite what it looks like in the image (the sun had just come out) it was quite dark and I was barely getting 1/60th of a second which with a 500mm lens without image stabilisation, is well below what is recommended.

Panorama1

The white outlines show where the first set, then second set of images below were taken (500mm lens) though it looks further away than it actually was

The first few images below show my first attempts to get a decent photograph.  I trained my lens on the first gap I had hoped it would cross and as it did took a photograph to grab its attention.  This noise is usually enough to get it to stop but not scare it.  It did stop but not in a very photogenic position and it just looked forward.  Not wanting to make too much noise I let it continue onto the next gap.

SMP_7025

Wait until he’s close to position and press shutter to get his attention

SMP_7026

Stopped, but not a good position and no eye contact

As it approached the better gap, I took another picture to get its attention. Unfortunately it just carried on so I took another, then another before he finally stopped and looked at me.  I had to manually focus and try and steady the camera best I could which I felt I had done on the third image.  At 1/60th and ISO 6400, in poor light I was never going to get a great image.  I didn’t go mad with the frame rate, taking single shots and only three of it stationary and looking at me and decided to leave it at that, letting him to carry on, on his way.

For me, part of the enjoyment of taking photographs of wildlife is knowing that the animal was either undisturbed by my presence or unaware.  In this case he continued on his way completely indifferent to me.

SMP_7027

Further on – shutter pressed to gain attention

SMP_7028

Pressed again – still not stopped

SMP_7029

Pressed again – still not stopped

Roe Deer

Finally stopped and looking in my direction. Final image of three taken at this point due to camera shake at only 1/60th of a second, 6400 ISO

By this time I had only been sitting for around 40 minutes or so but word must have got out to every mosquito in a half mile radius,  that there was an ‘all you could eat’ buffet sitting around in the woods, as by now it was a feast for all so I had to move on.  Normally, I might had sat there for an hour or two but there probably wouldn’t have been anymore appearances anyway.

5 comments:

  1. A very nice end result, Frank and it is very enjoyable to read about your techniques in photographing these elusive animals.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Love the blog Frank, you are totally mad, remember Kielder forest, when I was eaten alive by midges........ Lol

    ReplyDelete
  3. I seem to recall them having a particular taste for you, helping them to keep away from me!

    ReplyDelete
  4. glenda thompson13 May 2015 at 21:58

    just found this blog, enjoyed reading it. I like to photograph roe deer. like you some days I will see several, and others none.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Thanks for your comment. Often it just comes down to luck with me. I know where to see them and when, but there's no guarantee I'll have any success.

    ReplyDelete