KCZooFan

Raggiana Bird-of-paradise

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How did you get this photo without the wire? It was a fine mesh when I was there recently.
 
How did you get this photo without the wire? It was a fine mesh when I was there recently.

If the bird was far enough away from the wire, I could get it to focus without showing the bars. Didn't work out on the other bop species.
 
My attempts at photos of birds at the Honolulu Zoo turned out abysmal in general. That zoo could use some zoomesh for their aviaries.
 
And even though the mesh is painted black, it's in the sun for much of the day so you can't help but getting washed out shots. And I had to manually focus many of them, because the lens kept hunting when it was on autofocus.
 
Manual focus is the way to go when shooting through mesh.
 
In the 1960's the Honolulu Zoo had 27 birds of paradise (of 9 different species), easily the largest collection of those birds in the USA. Some of the birds were leftovers from when the zoo was known as Waikiki Bird Park (1935-1947) but the only other zoo on the planet with more birds of paradise at that time was Taronga Zoo in Sydney, Australia. In the past 25 years Honolulu Zoo has bred 3 different species of birds of paradise: Superb (14), Raggiana (8) and Magnificent (32 offspring).

The Honolulu Zoo: Waikiki's Wildlife Treasure 1915-2015
is a fantastic history book that is large (8.5" x 11"), hefty in weight (364 pages), somewhat expensive but a must-own for any zoo enthusiast. It was extensively reviewed in a recent issue of Zoo Grapevine magazine.

honoluluzoobooks.com
 

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