Showing posts with label portugal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label portugal. Show all posts

4 August 2014

Grey Long-eared Bat (Plecotus austriacus)
Serra do Alvão NP, Portugal
Nikon D3s + Nikon 80-200mm f2.8 (at 150mm) + 2x Jama BIR2 + 8x Nikon SB-26
iso 400, 20 sec., f/11


A Grey Long-eared Bat roams an orchard in search of insects. This is one of the 25 species of bats occuring in Portugal.

4 July 2014

Pin-tailed Sandgrouse (Pterocles alchata)
Tejo Internacional, Portugal
Nikon D3s + Nikon 500mm f4 VR
iso 500, 1/1250, f/5

Camouflage... the weapons Nature invents are manifold...

12 June 2014

Griffon vultures
Tejo Internacional, Portugal
Nikon D300 + Nikon 14-24mm f2.8 + Jama Bir2 (IR cell beam)
iso 200, 1/125, f/14

After each session, I assess what went wrong. In this instance, two points needed correction: use greater speed (in this image the problem is not as obvious as in others, where there were rapid movements of the griffon vultures’ heads) and try a better composition, filling up the empty space, especially on the lower right corner, which partly resulted from the position of the goat’s body. When photographing wildlife, luck plays a lesser role than is sometimes thought…

17 March 2014


Garden Dormouse (Eliomys quercinus)
Portugal

The week was devoted to carrying on the work with micro-mammals. In my opinion, the most beautiful species occurring in Portugal is the Garden Dormouse, a relatively uncommon species that nevertheless may be found in large numbers in certain spots.

Nikon D300 + Nikon 60mm AFS + Canon 430 EXII + 2x Canon 580 EXII + Jama BIR2
iso 200, 1/160, f/9


29 January 2014



Common Genet (Genetta genetta)
Portugal

Lately I have been putting the final touches to a photographic work with mammals, for which I use cells of infrared beams. The species I have been photographing includ the Common Genet, a fundamentally nocturnal animal and a good climber. Common Genets will roam in the night in search of preys.

Nikon D300 + Nikon 60mm + Canon 430 EXII + 2x Canon 580 EXII + Jama BIR2
iso 320, 1/250, f/13

6 November 2013

Ocellated Lizard (Timon lepida)
Castro Laboreiro, Peneda-Gerês NP, Portugal

An Ocellated Lizard profits from the last hours of a day in August to bask in the sunshine. Soon it will go back to its burrow under some rock, where it will spend the night.

Nikon D300 + Nikon 10.5mm f2.8 + 2x Nikon SB-26
iso 200, 1/250, f/11

28 October 2013

photographing vultures with wide angle lens and infrared beam cells
Tejo Internacional, Portugal


The Griffon Vulture and the Eurasian Black Vulture are the two species I plan to dedicate more time to, in the near future. This is one of the approaches I am currently working on: using a wide angle lens and infrared beam cells to photograph these necrophages feeding. This system is easy to assemble, but some aspects have to be considered to preserve the equipment, since an attack by 50 to 100 birds, some weighing over 10 kg, can seriously jeopardize cameras.

17 October 2013

Common Kingfisher (Alcedo atthis)
Alentejo, Portugal

A rainy day at the dam. A Common Kingfisher has to bear with the rain when it alights on a Willow, after having dived to capture a small fish.

Nikon D300 + Nikon 500mm f4 VR
iso 100, 1/125, f/4.5

1 October 2013

Little Ringed Plover (Charadrius dubius)
Tejo Internacional, Portugal

At the beginning of the mating season, a Little Ringed Plover seems to use its tail to offer its pair a small shadow. A few days later, they will place their eggs in a next dug on the shores of this little dam.

Nikon D300 + Nikon 500mm f4 VR
iso 200, 1/500, f/4.5

9 September 2013

Common Snipe (Gallinago gallinago)
Tejo Internacional

A pair of Common Snipes, resting by a dam. Although common, this wader is not always easy to spot.

Nikon D300 + Nikon 500 mm f4 VR + hidrohide
iso 200, 1/320, f11

23 August 2013

Cattle Egret (Bubulcus ibis)
Pegões, Portugal


This heron appears to have stopped to ponder on something, after a long walk along a dam, when she found a small rock to use as a perch. In such occasions I frequently witness countless poses, scratching and pecking, quite appropriate for a few photos...

Nikon D3s + Nikon 500mm f4 VR, hidrohide
iso 200, 1/3200, f4

19 August 2013

Cattle Egret (Bubulcus ibis)
Pegões, Portugal

The white plumage of a Cattle Egret stands out among the green vegetation bordering a sall da. The morning light provides enough contrast to highlight the subject from its sorroundings. When using such strong contrasts, I often feel that colour is really no more than a mere accessory.

Nikon D3s + Nikon 500mm f4 VR + hidrohide
iso 200, 1/1250, f5

7 August 2013

White Stork (Ciconia ciconia)
Aljezur, Portugal

This is not snow but water, waves when reaching a vast covespread in an immense sea of foa. Atop a cliff, a Stork stands guard over its babies, still in their nest. As for the light, it was in late evening, just a few minutes before sunset.

Nikon D300 + Nikon 500mm f4 VR
iso 800, 1/250, f5

30 July 2013

Iberian Rock Lizard (Lacerta monticola)
Cântaro Magro, Serra da Estrela, Portugal

Last summer I dedicated some time to photograph this reptile. I sent two das chasing these likeable beasts, which are scarcely frightened by human presence. In Portugal they are only found in the higher regions of the Serra da Estrela, where they are abundant. The pattern diversity of this lizard and the mountain vegetation allows for many different compositions.

Nikon D300 + Nikon 60mm f2.8 AFS
iso 200, 1/1250, f5

17 July 2013

underwater landscape
Rio Olo, Serra do Alvão, Portugal

For a number of reasons, which include the cost of the equipment needed as well as some ignorance of its beauty and photographic potential, fresh water photography may certainly be considered as one of the most neglected areas of the art. Lately I have been exploring some rivers and rivulets in the north of Portugal. I already knew some of them and had always thought them to be idyllic locations, when I watched them from high above. Others, like the present one, I accessed with the help of generous friends and I have yet to regret it…

Nikon D300 + Nikon 10.5mm f2.8 VR + Subal housing ND300
iso 500, 1/8, f8

6 July 2013

Western Spadefoot (Pelobates cultripes)
Tejo Internacional, Portugal

I always enjoyed including human elements in nature photos, especially when they belong to the habitats of the subjects or when they implicit express the message I want to impart. This photo, taken in the beginning of last June, had been planned over a year previously. Although I had visited this granite shed, in Salvaterra do Extremo, on several full moon nights, I either did not get the cloudless sky I was looking for or else I failed to find these toads, although they are abundant in the region.

Nikon D3s + Nikon 10.5mm f2.8 VR + 5x Nikon SB-26 + Strobist flash filters (converting 5500K to 3200K)
iso 800, 91seg, f8

27 June 2013

Little Grebe (Tachybaptus ruficollis)
Tejo Internacional, Portugal

There is a huge advantage in photographing common species that allow us to come close easily: much of my attention can be focused on important aspects such as composition or illumination.

Nikon D3s + Nikon 500mm f4 VR + hidrohide
iso 100, 1/4000, f5, -0.7Ev

18 June 2013

Griffon Vulture (Gyps fulvus)
Tejo Internacional, Portugal

A new aproach, much less common than use telephoto lenses: photographing vultures with a wide angle lens. According to the specific circunstances in each case, i use infra-red beam cekks - like in the present example - or a remote control device. It is a simple technique, and yet there a number of particularities that make it hard to use, such as: the inpredictability about the day and hour of the incoming of the birds - hence the difficulty in predicting the angle of incidence of the sun rays -, the brutality of the attack and the risks it represents for the equipment, and the relatively complex logistics involved.

Nikon D300 + Sigma 12-24mm f4.5-5.6 (15 mm) + Jama BIR2
iso 320, 1/250, f13

8 June 2013


Little Grebe (Tachybaptus ruficollis)
Tejo Internacional, Portugal

Fifth afternoon with this family of Grebes. Of the five hatchlings, only two remain, the others must have been caught by some bird of prey or by a bass (damn exotics!). One of the chicks appears to be playing with the water while waiting for a new meal provided by its parents.

Nikon D300 + Nikon 500mm f4 VR + hidrohide
iso 800, 1/1000, f7.1

3 June 2013

Mediterranean Turtle (Mauremys leprosa)
Tejo Internacional, Portugal

On a cold, wet spring day, a Mediterranean Turtle roams the slabs on the bottom of a rivulet, in the Segura region.

Nikon D300 + Nikon 14-24 mmf2.8 (22mm) + Lee filter ND .6 (hard) + 2 x Nikon SB-28
iso 320, 1/80, f7.1, -1.3 Ev