Levee, Fog, and Sandhill Cranes

Levee, Fog, and Sandhill Cranes - A row of sandhill cranes pass above a levee on a foggy winter morning, Central Valley of California.
A row of sandhill cranes pass above a levee on a foggy winter morning, Central Valley of California.

Levee, Fog, and Sandhill Cranes. Central Valley, California. January 28, 2012. © Copyright 2012 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

A row of sandhill cranes pass above a levee on a foggy winter morning, Central Valley of California.

This is yet another photograph in which my landscape photographer brain perhaps took over from my wildlife photographer brain. I wrote elsewhere that even when I shoot wildlife, I often catch myself thinking about the landscape in any of several ways. While the birds are overhead, I’m purely in wildlife photographer mode, but during pauses in the action my eyes drift off to fix on elements of the landscape that might make interesting photographs.

Sometimes I put the two together and use a technique that, perhaps oddly, I also apply when doing some kinds of street photography. In essence, I think about what I can control in the scene, namely the fixed landscape elements, and I more or less create a composition with a “hole” in it where transient elements like birds might fit. Now I obviously have no control at all over what the birds will do or when and where they will pass through the frame, so there is an element of chance in all of this. Using a zoom lens helps, in that I can quickly reframe the scene if the birds happen to be lower or higher when they pass by. Needless to say, there is a lot of waiting involved, some of it which could be slightly frustrating as birds fly past just above the frame or too far away, or too low. But every so often they do pass though in an appealing location. To further blur the landscape/wildlife photography lines, I frequently do what I did in the sequence of images from which this frame comes – I pan with the camera on the tripod as the birds move along. In this case, I have to make instant landscape decisions as the background, formerly-fixed elements are now moving in the frame. Yes, landscape photography as an action sport!

G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer whose subjects include the Pacific coast, redwood forests, central California oak/grasslands, the Sierra Nevada, California deserts, urban landscapes, night photography, and more.
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Text, photographs, and other media are © Copyright G Dan Mitchell (or others when indicated) and are not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

2 thoughts on “Levee, Fog, and Sandhill Cranes”

  1. David, I think have identified one of the most important composition aspects of this image (aside from my bizarre choice to show only a tiny sliver of the levee…), which is the way the birds balance and somewhat mirror the “weight” of the plants at lower left.

    Dan

  2. Love this shot, Dan. I was interested in the effect of the position of the birds in the frame. It occurred to me that the mood would be different for me depending on whether the birds are coming into the frame or going out. Interesting! Additionally, in this case, the position of the birds (offset to the right) balances with the position of the trees (offset to the left).

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