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About Andy

 

I am an avid adventurer, conservationist, teacher, and outdoor photographer whose photography celebrates the African landscape and its rich wildlife, people, and culture. My photographic safaris allow my travelers to not only enhance their understanding of photography, lighting, and wildlife, but to develop a life-long admiration for Africa ‘s beauty and culture.

Banana Republic recently used my photographs as the cornerstone of their Urban Safari campaign, and my images were seen in all 750 stores around the globe, as well as in their billboards, catalogs and annual report. I was also the winner of the BBC Wildlife Photographer of the Year in the ‘Wild Places’ category in 2008 and a highly commended in the ‘Creative Visions of Nature’ category in 2007.

I launched Gura Gear in 2008, in an attempt to deliver lightweight camera bags to the market. I was looking for a lightweight camera bag to hold all of my photographic gear, and there was nothing desirable on the market that suited my needs. After spending 2 years with many prototypes, the Gura Gear Kiboko bag was born. More products are now available on the Gura Gear web site.

 

 

 

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Thursday
Mar272008

Mother Cheetah and her 6 cubs

While on on safari in February, we came across one of the most special and amazing wildlife viewing moments. We were lucky enough to witness a mother cheetah and her 6 cubs, which were around 2.5 to 3 months old. Young cheetahs do not have very good odds at surviving in the wild, so I cherish every moment I am able to spend with them. The challenge is that we, as photographers, yearn for the most closeup and intimate photographs that we can capture, but this is at odds with what is best for the cheetah. They need room, room and more room. Never interfere with their hunting. I wasn't able to get too close, and some of these images are heavily cropped for web viewing purposes. That is totally fine with me.
 

andybiggs20080128_174634_ndutu395.jpg

Canon 1DsMkIII, 400mm f/4 DO + 1.4x, 1/320 sec @ f/8, ISO 800

 


andybiggs20080128_174541_ndutu386.jpg

Canon 1DsMkIII, 400mm f/4 DO + 1.4x, 1/320 sec @ f/8, ISO 800

 


andybiggs20080128_173748_ndutu302.jpg

Canon 1DsMkIII, 400mm f/4 DO + 1.4x, 1/400 sec @ f/8, ISO 800

This was easy photography and yet it was difficult photography. Easy from a sense of mostly non-moving subjects. So autofocus was fairly straightforward. But difficult because we were in failing light. The sun was right on the horizon, and also behind a large cloud. Depth of field was my primary concern, as I would have cubs running in front of the mother and behind the mother. So at 60 or 70 feet I was trying to hold anywhere from 6 feet to 15 feet in focus. This is difficult with 560mm of lens. If I stopped down too much I would have atrociously slow shutter speeds, and if I opened up I would have too shallow of depth of field. So I settled in on f/8 and ISO 800. Not too much noise, but just about right.

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Reader Comments (1)

IP: 72.73.225.248EMAIL: kari@karipost.comURL: http://www.karipost.comAdorable shots Andy. I never think I saw a Cheetah with so many cubs. I hope at least a couple of them survive.
April 1, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterKari Post

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