Fight or flight
While it is relatively straightforward to take portraits of birds in our garden, David Tipling shows how to capture them in action. Don’t miss his upcoming AP workshops, too
Food for wild birds is at its scarcest in February and March, so the numbers visiting gardens peak. This creates good opportunities to capture birds in flight and with more hungry mouths, this inevitably leads to conflict around bird feeders. Some species are more feisty than others with goldfinches, greenfinches, starlings and blackbirds the most likely candidates for a scuffle. As well as photographing aggression, this is the perfect time for capturing flight shots. Plumage is at its best before the breeding season gets under way and as we start to come out of winter the sun is getting stronger, giving a bit more light to work with.
You can create a set with a woodland feel with logs and leaves or you might want to give a garden atmosphere to your pictures using flower pots, fork handles and so on. The important consideration is the position for the best light, ideally in the sun and with a good background.
Good backgrounds
I tend to have three or four bird feeders hung up when I am not photographing. When I come to photograph I remove them all except for one. This helps create a queuing system for birds arriving and having to wait to get to the food. You can make the bird food receptacle part of the picture by using a flower pot or other garden implement. For a natural look, hollow out part of a log to hide the food from the camera. This provides a natural-looking perch where birds congregate. This approach is better than using a garden bird feeder for photographing conflict as fights usually break out at the food source – so having something more natural in
the frame is beneficial.
Backgrounds are important to ensure there are no distractions. The cleaner the better but this can be challenging in a small garden. A false background created from a painted sheet or board can work well. Greens and browns or perhaps a pale blue to mimic the sky are all good options for a natural look.
Once everything is set up, where you plan to conceal yourself will dictate lens focal length to choose. You do not want to frame too tightly especially when two birds are squabbling. So having space for the subject to be cropped later is a good idea as the action is usually so fast, it is hard to assess where in the frame the birds are.
Keep it up
Shutter speeds need to be high. I usually try not to drop lower than 1/2000sec, however you can sometimes get away with a slower speed for larger birds. A good rule of thumb is the smaller the bird the faster the shutter speed you require. When I have enough light then I use a 1/4000sec shutter speed to freeze a blue or great tit’s wings. Aperture is always a balance between keeping your background softly out of focus and having enough depth of field to ensure two fighting birds are both sharp; this can be helped by making sure you are parallel to your food source.
Autofocus can work well for birds squabbling over food. However, flight shots of small garden birds arriving or departing from the feeder are best captured by pre-focusing. Place a perch a short way from the feeder but in the same line of focus so it is parallel to you, then capture the bird in flight between perch and feeder. To do this you can pre-focus on a garden cane placed midway between perch and feeder, pre-focus on the top of the cane, then remove it. You then need to fire away each time a bird leaves the perch to go on to the feeder. I tend not to use the viewfinder but I have the camera and lens locked down on a tripod then I fire the shutter as soon as the bird takes off from the perch, hopefully capturing it midway between perch and feeder.