Big lesson learnt: know the behaviour of your target species for wildlife photography. I learnt a lot about ptarmigan behaviour through the year from studying some scientific papers after my day of wildlife photography was cut short by heavy rain. This vlog is about the lessons I learnt and some top tips to photographing ptarmigan in the future!
In my last vlog I was up Cairngorm Mountain doing some great landscape photography in the foggy mountains ([ Ссылка ]). I got very excited at one point because the conditions were doing everything that I wanted them to, but my plan for the day was to also do some ptarmigan photography.
This was a little ambitious of me to be able to capture 2 vlogs in the same place throughout the day but after the landscape photography success I was very hopeful and enthused for my chances to capture some amazing ptarmigan pictures.
I began scouting the higher boulder fields, and I explain what I’m looking for as I go, but the majority of the time I was just looking through my binoculars, scouting different boulder fields with the hope of spotting a bird. After several hours, I was having no luck whatsoever. I made my way back down from the steep mountainsides I was exploring to the corrie floor to have some lunch, with the intention of exploring the other side of the corrie.
But as I was eating my lunch the rain began, and continued to intensify, until it was not practical to stay. I had spent about 6 hours looking for birds without any luck and I felt miserable. I questioned my abilities and I was so frustrated.
When I got home I decided to do some research to find out where I went wrong, and so that’s really what this vlog is about. I’m sharing the knowledge that I learnt about ptarmigan behaviour throughout the different seasons, because as it turned out, the summer and autumn are the worst times to spot ptarmigan but there are a few ways that you can increase your chances!
I was deliberating not posting this vlog but I decided to make use of it as a lesson to study animal behaviour. That’s the best way to be successful as a wildlife photographer. There is a lot of valuable information in this vlog that should help you and myself capture some amazing ptarmigan photographs in the future!
I will be heading back out at some point, determined to make a second part to this vlog where I actually encounter some ptarmigan, so we can talk about compositions and styles of photography that work with these beautiful birds.
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