blankdot
The Latest from Freddie Bowles The Cambridge Man in Athens The Last Days LitTunes On the Road with Beau Bosko Our Readers for the Mind and Spirit
By Joseph Dempsey nocam

Sunday, March 11, 2012

A U T H O R ' S    N O T E :
This week we are dragging out some nearly 20-year-old images. (Again. We first dragged them from cloistered archives in 2010).
 
They were shot on film. You remember film? Remember waiting for your prints and slides to be developed? Remember the little film canisters which were perfect for storing all sorts of stuff? If you are in your late teens now, and can remember film, you probably just barely do.
 
The occasions were three zoo trips: one to the Little Rock Zoo, one to the Memphis Zoo, and one to Audubon Park Zoo in New Orleans. On these trips, the critters were kind enough to pose. They are not always that accommodating. We are grateful when they are. Particularly the jaguar pictured at the top. Those wily creatures are about as camera-shy as it gets.
 
Over at Weekly Grist for the Eyes and Mind, you will see a couple of tiger shots and two really cool sunset shots, the likes of which will never be seen again, because there is now a building which would be square in the viewfinder with the same setup.
 
Thanks for looking,
 
Joe

divider
spacer

 
Originally Published on Sunday, August 15, 2010

Getting a shot of a jaguar is pure-dee luck. Photographers who go after them in the wild say they rarely see them in daylight since they are nocturnal by nature. In captivity, like this one in the Little Rock Zoo, they normally are drawn to shady areas and show you their rear. I shot this jaguar in 1993 (or was it ’94?), which means, gasp . . . . film. The jaguar was cavorting with a partner and I happened along at the right time. Luck is a good thing.

jaguar

Literally, a golden "afro:" Further north, at the Memphis Zoo in 1993, I caught this African Crowned Crane. Most zoos have them and they are probably one of the most photographed critters in a given zoo, and for good reason as you can plainly see. Apparently, they adapt quickly to humankind around them and are not skittish. This one was closer than normal, and I had a long lens, which sucked him in the rest of the way for a tight shot.

gorillas

"Momma, you told me not to do that in public." This mother and child gorilla pair drew spectators like bees to honey at Audubon Park, New Orleans' fine zoo. It was advantageous in those circumstances to be well north of six feet tall and have a long lens. I was shooting over some spectators and through the rest of the crowd to get this shot.

When I shot the photos on this page, the camera was loaded with film and my beard was still black (well, mostly). Times, cameras, and beards have changed, but the critters are still at the zoo, so if you have not darkened the gate of a zoo lately, may I politely suggest that you do so. If you heed this suggestion, take a child or grandchild with you. If you have neither, borrow one or more from a relative or close friend. All concerned will surely benefit.

N O T E S:  
Notes (as I remember them). Jaguar, Nikon F2, Nikkor 80-200 f2.8, Fujichrome; Crowned Crane, Nikon F2, 300 mm f 4.5, Fujichrome; Gorillas, Nikon N90s, 300mm f2.8 Tamron SP, Fujichrome. All scanned at 100% / 4000 dpi / 16-bit on a Nikon Super Coolscan 5000 ED and post processed with Photoshop CS4 Extended and Genuine Fractals Print Pro.

divider look see BUT WAIT, THERE'S MORE
at Weekly Grist
for the Eyes and Mind.
We continue
to crawl through the archives and see
a tiger times two, and a couple
of cool sunsets that will never
be duplicated. Click here to go there. At the bottom of the Weekly Grist page, be sure and click on BUT WAIT, THERE'S MORE and see
our high-resolution gallery of the week.
divider

Click the jump wings
to see the previous
Photo of the Week.
Click the camera
for an index to every
Photo of the Week.

Most of the time, there is more to the Photo of the Week story than can be told in an essay. And most of the time there are more pictures to be seen. Presuming that some folk will enjoy being privy to this trove of information, I have created a blog, “Weekly Grist for the Eyes and Mind,” where I am showing and telling “the rest of the story." There are also some blatantly commercial mentions of some of the things we do to earn our beans and taters. Click on the Weekly Grist logo and go to the blog.  — J. D.

 


Dempsey e-mail
Contact Dempsey


spacer
Go to the Index

CornDancer HOME

The Latest from Freddie Bowles

Photos by the Master

Poems and Old Saws

Planet Clio

Saturday's Guest Writer

Site Index

Who We Are
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
blank
spacer
dot CornDancer Writers Letters from Cricket Song Headlong into the Zephyr Joe's Jokes Planet IEP bot dot
t dot
blankdot