Photo of the Day - Leopard In A Tree
Leopard In A Tree
Serengeti National Park, Tanzania. February 2012
Pentax 645D, 400mm f/5.6, 1/250 @ f/5.6, ISO 400
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.
Leopard In A Tree
Serengeti National Park, Tanzania. February 2012
Pentax 645D, 400mm f/5.6, 1/250 @ f/5.6, ISO 400
Lilac Breasted Roller
Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania
I have been digging through some of my Lightroom catalog images of the past few weeks, looking for images that need to be reprocessed with the latest Lightroom 4 processing engine. Here is an image that I took back in June 2006, and it is likely my favorite image of a lilac breasted roller. The lilac breasted roller is most striking when its wings are spread out, and I am always on the hunt for one who is on a perch near eye level in the hope that it will fly off in a side or downward direction as to get the tops of the wings. With this image I used a flash to stop the action, but I did drag the shutter a little bit to show a sense of action and speed. I could have used a high speed sync on the flash, but I decided to keep the shutter a 1/200 sec to strike the balance between sharpness and blur.
Today was the last day here in the Sabi Sand Game Reserve in South Africa, and it was sad to do the last game drive of the trip. I am writing this entry from my seat on my flight back home on South African Airways, somewhere over the middle of the Atlantic ocean. My 17-hour flight can only be made up of so many bad movies with Nicholas Cage in them. UGH.
We had a sparse crew of takers for our last game drive, but those that went out were rewarded with good light and good sightings. What did we see? You guessed it: cheetah! Bird in hand, my friends. We were able to locate our friendly cheetah down by the break between Singita and Londolozi, and watched him pose on different trees for over an hour as he paraded around the open grass plains. The zebras nearby weren’t so thrilled, so that created yet another nice opportunity to have alert zebras in our frame.
Blurred Cheetah
Nikon D4, 70-200mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/5 @ f/14, ISO 100
Cheetah Peering Over A Log
Nikon D800, 300mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/1000 @ f/3.5, ISO 1250
Cheetah In A Tree
Nikon D4, 70-200mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/1000 @ f/5.6, ISO 800
Cheetah In A Tree
Nikon D800, 300mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/1600 @ f/5, ISO 800
Curious Zebras
Nikon D800, 300mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/1000 @ f/6.3, ISO 800
We were back at camp around 8:30, so we had enough time to pack up, eat breakfast, say goodbye to the amazing staff and shove off for the airstrip around 11am. I have led so many safaris in the past 10 years and know what it feels like to leave a place after a long safari, but this one was different in that I had a deep connection with Castleton and all who work there. Thank you to Claude, Marinda, Jane, Constance, Gloria, our guides Leon, Wade and Ricardo, and especially our trackers Johnson, Lawrence, Renneck and Emmanuel. You all are amazing people who make my business and enjoyable one. Thank you thank you thank you. Since Castleton is closing down at the end of this year, I will have to wait until 2014 when the new camp is built for me to return.
I am planning out my 2013 safari year, and if you have any interest for yet-to-be-announced safaris, I would love to hear from you. You can contact me at info@andybiggs.com.
Camera bags on this safari are sponsored by Gura Gear, which I started in 2008. Check us out. We make the best camera bags on the planet.
Some of the gear on this safari has been provided by Borrowlenses.com. I rely on borrowlenses.com for both my own needs as well as my safari travelers’ needs. When we need big lenses, cameras or anything else photographic, we turn to borrowlenses.com to help out. They are the best resource in the industry for traveling photographers.
Ok. All I want to talk about today was our experience with a mother leopard and her two four-month old cubs. Nothing else even came close to that kind of quality of sighting, well, except the mother/daughter rhinos that walked up to the edge of our vehicle in the afternoon. J
We had heard of the Ravenscourt female leopard and her two young cubs, and there had been a sighting of hear earlier in the morning on a fresh impala kill in the grass. We made our way to the edge of the Sand River where she had been seen, and it took some time to figure out where she might be. We were successful locating the impala kill, but initially we didn’t find any signs of the three leopards. We found them playing in a very thick area of the bush, and for the next 90 minutes we had one of the most wonderful viewings of a young family at play. The 4-month old brother and sister cubs ran circles around their mother, they played in the low branches of the trees and chased each other around our vehicle. The dappled light made for difficult exposures, as well as the erratic movement, but I couldn’t stop smiling the entire time.
Leopard Cub In A Tree
Nikon D4, 70-200mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/800 @ f/5.6, ISO 3200. Hand Held
From a technique standpoint, I had to rely on autofocus with manual focus tweaks. The foreground grass was often in the way, and I just couldn’t rely on autofocus to do everything for me. I also tried to stop down to get more depth of field as a precaution, as I would have hated to shoot at f/2.8 or f/4 and not have their eyes sharp.
I have been on many many safaris in the past 10 years, and this sighting was difficult to top. Leopards are incredible. Leopard cubs are incredible times ten. Or one thousand. Or more. Yes, I have seen leopard cubs in the past, as in last week, but this one stands on top of all others, due to the length of time, the behaviors witnessed and our ability to see it all clearly only a few feet from us.
Leopard Cubs Playing
Nikon D800, 300mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/400 @ f/4.5, ISO 1000
Leopard Cub
Nikon D4, 70-200mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/500 @/f4.5, ISO 1600
Wade With A Smile (Leopard Cubs Will Do that To A Person)
Nikon D4, 70-200mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/500 @ f/5.6, ISO 2500
Ok, I will talk about another great sighting today: rhinos next to our vehicle. Not just rhinos, but a mother and her young calf. At one point the calf came up and sniffed the edge of our rear tire, and when we lightly giggled he got started and walked off.
One must always remember that a slow day in the bush beats the best day in an office, and the best day in the bush has no equal. Today has no equal.
Camera bags on this safari are sponsored by Gura Gear, which I started in 2008. Check us out. We make the best camera bags on the planet.
Some of the gear on this safari has been provided by Borrowlenses.com. I rely on borrowlenses.com for both my own needs as well as my safari travelers’ needs. When we need big lenses, cameras or anything else photographic, we turn to borrowlenses.com to help out. They are the best resource in the industry for traveling photographers.
Ok, let’s talk a little bit about camera gear and techie nerdy stuff. I have following gear with me:
I have the D800 on the 300mm f/2.8 and the D4 on the 70-200mm. The reasoning is that things that move quickly will be more likely to be closer and thus need better autofocus and more frames per second with the shutter. It’s not like the D800 is a piece of junk, but the D4 really is a more professional wildlife camera. When I am reviewing my images I am emotionally responding to the D800 more favorably, primarily because of the humongous file sizes. If I need to crop I don’t feel bad about losing some pixels. Let’s be frank: cropping a 36mp raw file to a ‘puny’ 25mp isn’t a big deal at all. I love the D4, but I would be more likely to come here again with a pair of D800/D800e bodies than to have a D800/D800e and a D4. My print sales business does better when I am able to feel comfortable about printing off 20x30, 24x36 and 40x60 canvas. It’s the 40x60 canvas prints that make up much of my print sales these days.
As far as today went, we had awesome leopard sightings of the Kashane male leopard, as we picked him up three times in the same day. We had a surprise bush breakfast that completely came as a surprise to the group, and it was great to see huge smiles on their faces from the unexpected treat.
A Bush Breakfast
Nikon D4, 24-70mm f/2.8, 1/250 @ f/8, ISO 320
Kashane Male Leopard In The Tall Grass
Nikon D800, 300mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/500 @ f/4.5, ISO 200
Kashane Male Leopard
Nikon D800, 300mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/320 @ f/4.5, ISO 800
Camera bags on this safari are sponsored by Gura Gear, which I started in 2008. Check us out. We make the best camera bags on the planet.
Some of the gear on this safari has been provided by Borrowlenses.com. I rely on borrowlenses.com for both my own needs as well as my safari travelers’ needs. When we need big lenses, cameras or anything else photographic, we turn to borrowlenses.com to help out. They are the best resource in the industry for traveling photographers.
I think this morning was probably the coldest morning so far on the trip, and I suspect it hovered around 40F just after sunrise. It wasn’t extremely cold, but it does get chilly in an open Land Rover when driving 30mph down a remote road. Our best sighting / experience for the morning had to be a mother rhino and her month-old calf. The little guy had more attitude than anything else. He would eat, challenge our vehicle, go back to eating and then challenge us yet again. When I say challenge I really mean that he would run towards the vehicle with grass in his mouth, stick his head up and turn around quickly to go back to grazing with his mother. It was the cutest darned thing one could ask for.
Since they were grazing in an open field away from a nearby road, we were obviously driving offroad. The problem was that the field was littered with large rocks and boulders, and eventually one ended up underneath our axel. That rock prevented us from moving forward, and took a while to get unstuck. Well, the rhinos were close by and we ended up shooting from outside of the vehicle, hand-held. It’s a cool experience to photograph rhinos from on foot, however this wasn’t what I had in mind this time around. Perhaps we will do a proper on-foot rhino tracking outing before this safari ends. I think my guests would really enjoy it.
Nikon D4, 70-200mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/320 @ f/8, ISO 320
I continued my fascination with oxpeckers, and we took the time to stop at a large herd of buffalo to photograph them and their constant companions, the oxpeckers. Oxpeckers have a fun personality to watch and photograph, and when one waits to see these unique behaviors one can be rewarded with interesting interaction.
Nikon D800, 300mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/160 @ f/5.6, ISO 320
I feel like today we hit our stride, and had some great sightings to be happy with. It’s always a difficult thing for me and the guides who help us out, because we sort of live and die by the quality of sightings that we have. If the sightings are good we are patted on the back and if they don’t live up to expectations we are on the losing end of the stick. What I have to do as a safari leader is to shape expectations on what we can and might see and try to instill in people a realization that nature is beautiful in more ways than how the BBC, National Geographic and Discovery channels portray. In other words a successful game drive doesn’t always have to be about big cats. I hope that my guests go away from each game drive with an experience and knowledge of something they didn’t know about beforehand. It could be about a species of tree, unique mating behavior of a small-ish mammal or a survival strategy of a social weaver bird. Nature is awesome if we take the time to notice.
Nikon D800, 300mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/1000 @ f/6.3, ISO 320
Camera bags on this safari are sponsored by Gura Gear, which I started in 2008. Check us out. We make the best camera bags on the planet.
Some of the gear on this safari has been provided by Borrowlenses.com. I rely on borrowlenses.com for both my own needs as well as my safari travelers’ needs. When we need big lenses, cameras or anything else photographic, we turn to borrowlenses.com to help out. They are the best resource in the industry for traveling photographers.
I am on a tight schedule today, so this post will be on the short side.
May through October are my favorite months to be in the Sabi Sands, primarily due to the combination of cool weather and lack of rain. Right now it is early June and the vegetation is beginning to dry out a bit and the weather is cooling down as we approach winter. Another reason why I enjoy this time of the year here is also that the days are shorter, and that means that the warm light is longer at the beginning and end of each day, due to the angle of sun in the sky. This is great for photographers, as we need all of the help we can get with regards to warm light.
We photographed a beautiful female leopard on south and north sides of the Sabi River, and some of us captured her jumping over rocks to get from the south bank to the north bank. We could tell that she was hunting, as her behavior on the north side was indicating that she needed and wanted food. We lost her for a bit in the dense brush, but we picked her up again after 30 minutes of heavy tracking. My preference is to photograph leopards walking towards the vehicle, and we only had one opportunity to do this before we disengaged to head back towards camp. The afternoon was filled with many sightings, and the one we spent the most time with was a pride of sleeping lions. They were in the tall grass, asleep, and never lifted up their heads during our two hours of sitting and waiting. After the sun had set we decided to leave.
Female Leopard On The Hunt
Nikon D800, 300mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/2000 @ f/4.5, ISO 400
Close Encounter
Nikon D4, 70-200mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/1000 @ f/5.6, ISO 400, Hand Held
Betty, Barry and Leon
Nikon D4, 24-70mm f/2.8, 1/250 @ f/7.1, ISO 250
Camera bags on this safari are sponsored by Gura Gear, which I started in 2008. Check us out. We make the best camera bags on the planet.
Some of the gear on this safari has been provided by Borrowlenses.com. I rely on borrowlenses.com for both my own needs as well as my safari travelers’ needs. When we need big lenses, cameras or anything else photographic, we turn to borrowlenses.com to help out. They are the best resource in the industry for traveling photographers.
Up at 5:30 this morning and in the vehicle around 6. We decided to take a simple breakfast with us, as my small group of 3 of us didn’t want to eat so early nor come back to camp later on in the morning. We poured our coffees and got settled into our vehicles for the morning’s game drive. The temperature this morning was in the mid 40’sF, so the wildlife early on wasn’t exactly very active at first light. We headed towards the northern part of Mala Mala, where there are some open areas where cheetah like to spend time. Near Clarendon Dam we didn’t locate any cheetah, however we did have a nice sighting of a rhino who was intent on sniffing out another of his own kind. I find rhinos difficult to photograph, as there aren’t many angles that are good to photograph from. Trying to line up the vehicle for a head-on view was our preferred approach, but we mostly ended up with side shots of his head and horn.
Rhino Profile
Nikon D800, 300mm f/2.8, 1/1250 @ f/4, ISO 400
After our rhino sighting we went towards an area that had a confirmed sighting of one of the adult male lions who had taken down a nyala the evening before, and when we arrived we actually saw a leopard in the vicinity. The young-ish male leopard was curious yet calm, so we sat and watched him for the next couple of hours. He sat behind a log and didn’t give us a good angle for quite some time, but I enjoyed working with blurred grass in the foreground to try and create a dreamy look to the scene. Eventually he sat up and looked at a flying bird overhead, and that probably yielded the best view of him. At one point he looked into the bushes and noticed the male lion sitting there, which was only about 40 meters away. The leopard inched forward over the next 10 minutes to see what the lion would do, and you can suspect what happened next. The lion burst out of the bush and chased the young male leopard away. I couldn’t help but laugh at how young cats tend to take bigger risks than when they are older.
Male Leopard
Nikon D800, 300mm f/2.8, 1/2500 @ f/2.8, ISO 500
This afternoon we decided to drive back to the wild dog den, and when we arrived we had 4 adults lying in front of the entrance. The view wasn’t the greatest, so after a short while we moved out for somebody else to come and take a look. As we were leaving we drove a road towards the Sand River and intercepted the same dogs as they were heading out for their evening hunt. The light was superb, and watching the now 6 dogs trot towards the river was an invigorating exercise. The dogs made it to the water and crossed over as the sun was fading. What a huge honor to be in the presence of one of the most endangered predators in Africa. The last research I have read has indicated there are around 4,000 wild dogs left in the wild.
Wild Dogs (Lycaon Pictus) Heading Out For A Evening Hunt
Nikon D4, 70-200mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/1600 @ f/5, ISO 1600
African Wild Dog (Lycaon Pictus) In The Late Afternoon Light
Nikon D800, 300mm f/2.8 VRII, 1/1000 @ f/3.2, ISO 800