Tagged: safari

Marcelle “hiding” :)

Anthony not “hiding” :)

I recently spent a few quality days at Mabula Private Game Reserve as a guest of friends / rangers / photographers Marcelle and Anthony Robbins. They gave up careers in Hairdressing and IT 5 years ago for an about face of pace and a life in the bush. A link to their website(s) can be found at the end of this article.

As a wildlife / outdoor photographer or simply an enthusiast who’d like to get more out of their camera, you can’t get a photographic bush experience better than this. It’s close; only an hour and a half from Pretoria. Well appointed; the 1st class lodge, plush furnishings with beautiful views and pristine bush, home-cooked meals (joint effort pardon the pun), comfortable 2 sleeper units, peace and tranquillity will wow you. One of the few places you will really unwind with friends, family and wildlife / photographer centric people. Naturally you will get the chance to see Mabula’s rich fauna and flora from Aardvarks to Zebra and Acacias to Ziziphus as well as the Big 5, however the little things like the Natal Spurfowl, Yellow and Red-Billed Hornbills greeting us at every meal, the Kudu drinking from the pool to the calls of Lion in the veld; those things in life that are most memorable mark the passage of a day in Mabula. Even a precision flyby of Southern Ground Hornbills was on the cards in the short time I was there :) You can actually see the stars here at dusk and at midnight and the Milky Way is crystal clear, perfect for the Astro or Star Trail Photographer.

Minimalist Star Trails & Milky Way from Mabula PGR © Harvey Grohmann

I saw three lifers (birds) in the space of a day and that’s in winter, I can’t wait to see it in summer. The Waterberg area is renowned for it’s rich bird-life, such as in the Nylsvlei area and expectations are high. From the back of the 9 seater OSV the photo ops come fast and regularly. Marcelle is a versed and jovial ranger and her driving skills are measured and photo centric; she puts you in the zone for your shot because she  herself is a dedicated and accomplished photographer with years of experience in this reserve.

Magpie Shrike Triptych © Harvey Grohmann

Magpie Shrike Triptych © Harvey Grohmann

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I recently noticed a few shots online that had the dreaded dust bunnies in them and this prompted today’s posting. Note this only applies to DSLR or Medium Format with interchangeable lenses and mirror mechanisms, not to your mirrorless Point and Shoot or Bridge Camera UNLESS they have interchangeable lenses where the sensor is visible and prone to contamination.

A few days after I bought my Tokina 12-24mm f/4.0 ATX Pro DX, I was at the coast. With the intention to do UWA scapes with the D80 (It’s ISO 100 and long exposure is superb on the CCD). The camera is seldom used and I also rarely remove the Sigma 28-70mm f/2.8 that’s on it. Less lens changes, less dust, or so the theory goes. Camera has done under 6000 images in 4 years.

So I get up at 4am and head off to the local lake district in Sedgefield for a few pre-dawn landscapes. Take a few shots, chimp at the screen. Everything looks awesome (LCD’s always make everything look awesome…)

Get back to the apartment and fire up the laptop, offload the images…enlarge…and there they are…”dust” bunnies.

King Fisher River Lagoon – Dust Bunnies – Click Image for full size – Blue circle is a “Hot” Pixel – more on that in another posting.

 

What a waste of time! No wait, I can clone them out in PP. But still, what a waste of time if I had just spent a bit more time on checking the SENSOR pre-shoot. I honestly thought that because I rarely remove the lens (more…)