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Eastern Ruby Throated Hummingbird - Female

Joe Trimarchi

Well-Known Member
Both have been cropped and post processed.

P8015322_filtered.jpg
  • OM Digital Solutions - OM-1
  • OLYMPUS M.40-150mm F2.8
  • 150.0 mm
  • ƒ/2.8
  • 1/1250 sec
  • Center-Weighted Average
  • Manual exposure
  • ISO 1000
P8015339_filtered.jpg
  • OM Digital Solutions - OM-1
  • OLYMPUS M.40-150mm F2.8
  • 150.0 mm
  • ƒ/2.8
  • 1/1250 sec
  • Center-Weighted Average
  • Manual exposure
  • ISO 1000
 
Beautiful. The fact that there's still visible motion blur even at 1/1250s tells something about how quickly they flap their wings :)
 
Beautiful. The fact that there's still visible motion blur even at 1/1250s tells something about how quickly they flap their wings :)
Thanks. It is around 50 per second for this species while some others are slightly more. Maybe I should try using the "Flicker Scan" feature in my camera! (LOL)
 
Lovely shots! You nailed the focus on the bird's head.

I have a female or immature coming to my feeders about once every five minutes throughout the day, but it's been months since I saw a male???
 
Lovely shots! You nailed the focus on the bird's head.

I have a female or immature coming to my feeders about once every five minutes throughout the day, but it's been months since I saw a male???
Thanks. I've had a lot of males around this year but in another 6 or 7 weeks they'll start migrating South.
 
Yes, they
Thanks. I've had a lot of males around this year but in another 6 or 7 weeks they'll start migrating South.
Yes they’ll be migrating soon, but here on the South Carolina coast we often get a few wintering over.
 
Lovely shots! You nailed the focus on the bird's head.

I have a female or immature coming to my feeders about once every five minutes throughout the day, but it's been months since I saw a male???
Same here - a lone female, all year so far.
 
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