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  • 'You might not want to zoom that lens out until you've wiped the the neck'

  • 'okay' Spring in Wyoming still feels a lot like

  • winter. We've traveled to Yellowstone with

  • wildlife photographer Jake Davis and the Panasonic Lumix DC G9. The G9 is

  • Panasonic's flagship stills camera. It's very different to Jakes normal DSLR gear

  • so we're hoping that along with a collection of high performance lenses

  • the G9's speed and tough build will help us capture some great wildlife

  • photographs. 'My name is Jake Davis I'm a wildlife photographer I live in Jackson

  • Hole and most of my work is based on the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.

  • I'm fortunate enough to spend a ton of time surrounded by apex predators and all

  • these incredible species most people are not and so there's a real disconnect.

  • Photography allows people to see the value and wildlife in the natural world.

  • in late April Yellowstone National Park is relatively quiet. The summer rush

  • hasn't yet started and large parts of the park are still under heavy snow.

  • The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem is vitally important - it's the largest intact

  • ecosystem we have left in the lower 48, it's roughly 22 million acres.

  • As always, when it comes to wildlife photography getting great shots means getting up

  • very early in the morning. The best times of day for wildlife are definitely first

  • thing in the morning and then the last couple hours of the day. The reality is

  • most of the action is between 5 a.m. and 7. We don't want to throw him off. Let's just sit for a second...

  • When it comes to wildlife photography the ideal situation is where my subject

  • recognizes or acknowledges my presence but it's also a situation where both day

  • and I feel safe so they accept me as part of their environment.

  • we just had a coyote mousing on the the opposite riverbank. When I say

  • mousing he's looking for rodents so in this case it actually was probably

  • pocket gophers. He's turning his head and listening for movement

  • underneath the ground and then once he pinpoints it he'll kind of pounce on it

  • At 400mm here I had an 800mm equivalent which is just crazy considering this

  • thing weighs nothing. They're probably one of the most adaptable species that

  • we have in the ecosystem - in one day I've watched a coyote

  • scavenging on a carcass catch a fish catch a rodent... 'play chess'

  • chess yeah - have a cup of tea...

  • Spring is a really exciting time in the ecosystem. Some days can be sunny and 50 or 60 degrees, the

  • blue birds are singing and then the next day is a full-on blizzard - a foot of snow.

  • We've got a bison jam. We have to share the roadway here. Oh he's a

  • big bull!. The G9 is a professional-grade camera and as such it offers extensive

  • sealing against dust and moisture. That's nice to have when you're photographing

  • bison in the driving snow. Six stops of image stabilization is pretty nice when

  • you're shivering in the cold too. So we've got a nice bison herd over

  • here along the Gibbon River. We did kind of a wider scene here, we included the

  • environment which I really like to do. That tells more of a story and in a

  • fresh dusting of snow which never hurts. So I think we got some pretty nice stuff here.

  • As the snow turned to rain we continued into the park. If you can't

  • handle discomfort wildlife photography may not be the career for you. Neither is

  • it a career for the impatient. 'Let's use this bank to kind of hide us as we

  • approach'. A lot of wildlife photography is is

  • simply just time you've spent in the field and eventually it pays off and so

  • you're just very aware - you keep your head on a swivel and opportunities

  • present themselves. Ninety-nine percent of the time is just really spent looking

  • and waiting. Maybe we get the binoculars out, get a scope out and we glass the

  • hillside. You'd be surprised at how much you will see if you just slow your pace

  • down a little bit and take some time and just be where you are and be present.

  • One of the most common mistakes you see in wildlife photographers is

  • just chasing wildlife. I've had to go in the woods after a lady with her iPad

  • chasing a grizzly bear - that's actually not that uncommon of an occurrence.

  • The quick route is to sit here and howl like a wolf or clap your hands at her like a

  • lot of people like to do, but that's not really rewarding in the end and you're

  • not proud of that shot. So we just kind of like to sit here quietly - oh she's

  • getting up on the bank. We headed for Grand Prismatic - the largest

  • and most famous hot spring in the park. On a chilly day like this the warm water

  • flowing out of the ground was steaming in the cold air. Even in such miserable

  • conditions wildlife was still abundant. That was a pretty nice scene you know with

  • the fog coming off and the blowing snow. I was hoping he'd go in and catch a

  • trout but evidently that was not a good fishing hole. And even on the coldest,

  • wettest of days the bacterial mats that give Grand Prismatic its distinctive

  • coloration are still beautiful.

  • The next day dawned very cold but clear and bright. With the landscape

  • transformed by the changing weather we headed back into the park to see what we

  • could find. We're on the Gibbon River which has some thermal influence and so

  • whenever we have a really cold morning you get all this fog which is just

  • beautiful and we have this bison herd. So I first saw this shot the fog was really

  • thick and there was no way the autofocus system could get to the Bison because I

  • could hardly really see them, but now the fog is thinning a little bit.

  • The contrast is still really low but the AF is actually nailing it which is

  • reassuring, because trying to establish manual focus in a scene with such low contrast

  • is very difficult because the focus peaking just has nothing to bite onto.

  • As the sun came up, the mist burned away and the temperature started to rise.

  • well we've got a pair of sandhill cranes over here behind you, so we've popped

  • on some teleconverters here - we're gonna attempt not to make them fly.

  • The G9's powerful image stabilization also means that we don't need to waste time setting

  • up a tripod. Since we arrived in the park we've been actively looking for wildlife

  • but sometimes it just comes right for you. 'Coyote!'

  • Park rules stipulate that visitors must remain at least 100 yards from bears or

  • wolves and at least 25 yards from all other wildlife including this coyote who

  • doesn't seem at all bothered by our presence. For the image itself I'm

  • looking to capture either some unique behavior, kind of a rare window into my

  • subject's world - you know they tell a story about the habitat that that

  • the animal makes a living on. 'Oh there's a bald eagle right there - see him in the

  • cottonwood tree? So he's sitting right there on the bank of the

  • Lamar River.' The eagle gave us the opportunity for some dramatic still

  • images but I also wanted to put the G9s video capabilities to the test focusing

  • on the hawks and ravens circling overhead. Jake's been taking stills and

  • I've been taking 4K video at 60p on this and I've been tracking these

  • birds as best I can at the equivalent of 800 millimeters. I think I got a couple

  • of quite good shots that will look nice when they're slowed down.

  • With our time in the park almost over we headed to the famous mammoth hot springs.

  • 'Let's use the hi-res shot mode for this since we're going to be on sticks. We can

  • still shoot raw, two second shutter delay'. Such a detailed subject provided a

  • great opportunity to try out the G9s high resolution mode. In high resolution

  • mode the G9 combines eight exposures to create a single 80 megapixel image by

  • shifting the sensor in half pixel increments eight times. 'Wow, that's a lot

  • of detail - incredible.' Yellowstone National Park spans millions of acres at

  • an average elevation of around 8,000 feet. Unlike us, the animals in this

  • ecosystem are free to come and go as they please.

  • Leaving the park we broke out into the sunshine and came across a herd of bison

  • enjoying the warmth at the lower altitude. And with that it was time for us to head

  • to lower altitudes too. Well it is a very difficult field to make a living in

  • and I think there's something to be said for that, but I also think that there's a

  • misconception that to do meaningful or significant wildlife photography you

  • have to travel and go to these exotic places all over the world. The reality is

  • there are stories to be told everywhere. There are species that

  • are in trouble everywhere. And so I would just encourage people to kind of embrace

  • where they are. Maybe you're on the way to look for bears and there's a bluebird

  • or there's a meadowlark... 'How many states does this park span?' 'Three - there's a meadowlark! Thats cool'.

  • If you go out with the mentality that no matter what is presented to me I will,

  • you know, receive that and figure out how to make a creative shot with it you'll

  • come home with a good shot every day. To see more of Jake's work visit his

  • website, revealedinnature.com. For more information on the Panasonic

  • Lumix DC G9 go to DPReview. Thanks for watching.

'You might not want to zoom that lens out until you've wiped the the neck'

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ジェイク・デイビスとパナソニックLUMIX DC-G9でイエローストーンの野生動物を撮影 (Wildlife photography in Yellowstone with Jake Davis and the Panasonic Lumix DC-G9)

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    NeoTsai に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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