I think it was meant to be placed on this thread - Name that zoo - because they were next to each other on the "new posts" list at the time of posting.
If this hypothesis is correct, the post in question is not just misplaced but ungrammatical too, since the image in question clearly shows two species.I think it was meant to be placed on this thread - Name that zoo - because they were next to each other on the "new posts" list at the time of posting.
Sorry wrong thread.A deliberate riddle for us to solve, or have you merely forgotten to mention the species?![]()
Due to exhibit restrictions, for Giraffes and Rhino, young or old, I focus on specific aspects of the animals. The head for Giraffes as well as their fur pattern. Rhino's have their horns, ears eyes, and even tick skinned hides to focus on.
Fast small animals are harder to 'compose' in my opinion, especially through a wire fence in a 'messy' enclosure. I went to see the bear cubs at Noah's Ark (UK) and the grass was as tall as them adding to the challenge of the fence and other obstacles. Great to see short glimpses of them scampering around, but a pain to photograph.I always struggle with extremely large animals (elephant, rhino, hippo, giraffe, polar bear) because they take so much space and I find that makes it really hard to compose photos.
Some animals I have been unlucky with:
- Snow leopards: one big string of zoo visits with poor enclosures for photography (wires/fences/dirty or scratched windows) or poor cooperation of the snow leopard (not a nice position/always sleeping/hiding behind mock-rock)
I agree with the elephant sentiment particularly in city zoos such as Berlin Zoo - they have a nice bull elephant there with a nice pair of tusks - but he seems to walk around the same area [when I visited anyways] and so a full shot is hard to get, though 'detail' shots are doable. In another yard were a herd of cow-elephants, in the distance - so easier to photograph, but not really doing anything notable imo. That said, I have seen elephants at Whipsnade very active and acting nicely - nice to see, and perhaps to photograph.- Elephants: big for a total photo with surrounding, so often not a nice scene. Character hard to catch in a photo. Detail photos all have been done in the past, difficult to do something new.
- Snow leopards: one big string of zoo visits with poor enclosures for photography (wires/fences/dirty or scratched windows) or poor cooperation of the snow leopard (not a nice position/always sleeping/hiding behind mock-rock)
Wow, you really hit the nail on the head with everything you said. This is why I consider zoo photography its own distinct genre of photography, separate from wildlife photography, While there's obvious overlap, zoo photography presents a unique set of challenges. It really rubs me the wrong way when people say that photographing animals in captive settings is somehow cheating. Sure, zoos do add a lot of convivence to photographing animals, but with that comes many constraints that don't exist in natural settings.Enclosures are a huge part of the problem; especially any where you've got two layers of protection. Often wire on the cage and then a further barrier (eg fence line) that keeps people back; because then you often cant shoot through the wire by getting your lens up close to it; and very few enclosures offer a very long depth to allow you to focus far into them to get to the subject.
The other things that often get annoying are reflections or marks on the glass (marks on both sides!) or very close-up enclosures (I tend to end up with a long lens fitted so don't tend to carry a shorter lens - weakness of DSLR and being lazy).
Indoors is also a major challenge because even if the animals are not light sensitive; most indoor areas that are bright enough for eyes are dim for cameras; to say nothing of the challenge of mixed light where you've got shade and natural light spilling in from windows.
I haven't really dealt with that until now as most enclosures like that at the St. Louis Zoo hold fairly large animals that aren't particularly active. However, a couple days ago I tried to photograph the new Amur leopard cubs and definitely found that to be the case Their exhibit looks like this for reference (it will say serval exhibit, the Big Cat Country mesh-topped enclosures are rotated fairly frequently).Fast small animals are harder to 'compose' in my opinion, especially through a wire fence in a 'messy' enclosure. I went to see the bear cubs at Noah's Ark (UK) and the grass was as tall as them adding to the challenge of the fence and other obstacles. Great to see short glimpses of them scampering around, but a pain to photograph.
'Babies' present the extra challenge of jostling with more visitors tooHowever, a couple days ago I tried to photograph the new Amur leopard cubs and definitely found that to be the case