The Sandhill Cranes at the Woodbridge Ecological Reserve

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Last year I wrote a series of posts about winter photography involving waterfowl in Bute County and Colusa County. My goal is to make images for my project photographing the “Central Valley”, or more precisely, the Sacramento Valley

One important occurrence in the valley with regards to wildlife photography is the Sandhill Crane migration. During the fall, the cranes migrate South. In California, these birds can be spotted in several natural preserves throughout the Sacramento Valley. 

The lens

On the first week of November, I headed South to the Woodbridge Ecological Reserve in San Joaquin County near Lodi, to photograph the cranes during the sunset. I went armed with two lenses, the Nikkor 200-500 mm f 5.6 and the Nikkor 70-200 mm f/2.8. I took the two because I had not been there and I wasn’t sure which one I was going to use. 

At the preserve, I noticed that the water was far away from the viewing platform, actually very far, and quickly decided to go with the Nikkor 200-500 mm f 5.6.

The settings

For bird photography, I like to use the widest aperture of my lens, 1/1600 s shutter speed and auto-iso. This assumes low light and that the birds will be in movement. Rarely, when I am photographing, do I change these settings. Everything happens very fast, particularly at sunset shots, and there isn’t much time to think. My Nikon D750 does not have the tracking capabilities of modern cameras, and I use my regular AFS (Auto Focus Single). I know there are better options for auto-focus, but I am very comfortable with my AFS. I also used spot metering that day, which in retrospect, was in error, since my main goal was the landscape not the birds individually. 

The results

My favorite shot of the evening, the FEATURED IMAGE (f/5.6, 1/1600, ISO 2500), and all other images, resulted very noisy (see example below).

In the past, this would have been a problem, but Camera Raw’s function “denoise” worked beautifully cleaning all “the digital dirt.”

The silhouetted birds turned out sharp, the intended consequence of my settings.

I am generally satisfied with my results, but I am still considering how am I going to make some of these images work in black and white. I do intend to come back for more. Below, a few more images from the evening, in addition to the FEATURED IMAGE. 

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14 responses to “The Sandhill Cranes at the Woodbridge Ecological Reserve”

  1. shoreacres Avatar

    The light in the first photo is so nice. I like the impression of some of the birds following the line of the mountain as they move toward their landing spot, and the presence of even more birds in the distance. There are reports of some sandhill cranes coming into our area now, but I haven’t heard them yet.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Alessandra Chaves Avatar

      Thank you. They are loud, you will hear them!

      Liked by 1 person

  2. tierneycreates: a fusion of textiles and smiles Avatar

    The final three images are just breathtaking!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Alessandra Chaves Avatar

      Thank you.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. howg2211 Avatar
    howg2211

    Lovely shots!! I also find that the Lightroom DeNoise is quite effective!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Alessandra Chaves Avatar

      What I regret is the photos I threw away in the past due to high noise…

      Like

      1. howg2211 Avatar
        howg2211

        I’m a little crazy. I rarely delete.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Alessandra Chaves Avatar

        So now you have lots of material to go through

        Like

  4. nancyb422 Avatar

    Gorgeous! I’m taking a photography class, it’s a beginner class and more advanced but always have trouble remembering f-stop to shutter speed, etc., and I love your information.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Alessandra Chaves Avatar

      Thanks, I’m glad that you find the information helpful!

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Steve Schwartzman Avatar

    You did an excellent job in capturing the shapes of the silhouetted cranes. Those gorgeous sunset colors don’t hurt at all, even if you plan on some black and white conversions as well.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Alessandra Chaves Avatar

      I know, the colors actually help.

      Like

      1. Steve Schwartzman Avatar

        By the way, the hat and camera in your last picture are reminiscent of the same things in a picture that Eve took of me in Corpus Christi last week.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Alessandra Chaves Avatar

        lol

        Like

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