FIELD NOTES
“Search for your favorite Critter”
Ecuadorian Hillstar 05
Ecuadorian Hillstar 05
I took so many photos of this particular Hillstar. It seemed to be the only one in the area. This was high up on a mountain at a brisk elevation. There were no Hummingbird feeders in sight.
Hummingbirds, and some other bird species, often perch on the same exact spots. That makes planning shots a bit easier. I was able to position myself in many different areas awaiting its return to the perches it liked most. I feel like I got quite a few shots that I’m proud of. My goal was to capture many photos with movement because it's more challenging; therefore, I'm sharing those photographs. Though, I also have some pretty portrait photos of this Hillstar just perched too.
BAM☺︎
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Ecuadorian Hillstar 04
Ecuadorian Hillstar 04
Another shot of the same Ecuadorian Hillstar from all the other posts. I told you that I have many to share. This is actually a photograph of that Hillstar in a sequence with the photograph in the previous post. In that other photograph the Hillstar is taking off from its perch and as it took off I held my shutter button down on my camera and followed it in my view while it dove down. This gave me a series of photographs because my camera takes a lot of photos as the shutter button is held down.
We all know how fast Hummingbirds fly, right? Well if you don’t now then I’ll tell you that they fly very fast. In fact, they are very mobile and are the only type of bird that can also fly backwards (people love to tell me that fact). So following them in my viewfinder while trying to hold down the necessary buttons on my camera is very difficult. It takes a lot of thought process so at the time I do not even know what I end up capturing. This sequence is a very good example of that. I had no idea at the time that this Hillstar was on the hunt. In fact, I would have never even thought that was a possibility as I thought it only ate out of flowers. But I have proof that this Hillstar was hunting because I captured it taking off of its orange perch, swooping down, and opening its mouth directly at a small bug that was flying right in front of it. You may not have even noticed the big in my photograph but it is there, just behind the orange blog on the right. That orange blob is an orange flower that happen to be real close to me and that’s what happens with my lens when its focusing on something a little further. This creates a cool depth effect but also takes up a bit of real estate in my photographs. However, it still manages to capture the little bug that existed behind the orange flowers because it is very good.
I have some bad news though… You may not get to see any more photos in this sequence. The other photos are not as good. The next photograph in this sequence would have been really cool because it is of the Hilltar in another pose as it was about to eat the bug. Unfortunately all that action is behind an orange blob, similar to the bug in this photograph. Therefore it is not very good so I will probably never share it.
BAM☺︎
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Ecuadorian Hillstar 03
Ecuadorian Hillstar 03
Another shot of the same Ecuadorian Hillstar from the previous post. I took a bunch of photos of the same Hillstar so I’ll have even more to post.
BAM☺︎
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Ecuadorian Hillstar 02
Ecuadorian Hillstar 02
Another shot of the same Ecuadorian Hillstar from the previous post. I took a bunch of photos of the same Hillstar so I’ll have even more to post.
BAM☺︎
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Ecuadorian Hillstar 01
Ecuadorian Hillstar 01
High in the Andes Mountains in Ecuador lives this Ecuadorian Hillstar. Known as the Páramo, the ecosystem which this Hillstar lives is unlike anything I’ve ever seen before. It has a desert like feel to it due to the types of plant that grow there but the Páramo only exists at an elevation of around 10,000-13,000 feet so it’s very high in elevation and fairly cold. In fact, the nearby volcano was covered in a lot of snow. My friend Dennis, who was the organizer of the birding photography tour that I was a part of in Ecuador, and I were mesmerized by the Páramo and I think that it was both of our favorite places we visited in Ecuador. The Ecuadorian Hillstar only lives in the Páramo regions which seems like it would be rough on a small hummingbird but there are plenty of flowers around for it to sustain itself.
BAM☺︎
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