Africa Photo Safari Tips – live from the Bronx Zoo


Photograph © Jeff Muschar

Today, while I giving a private workshop at the Bronx Zoo, the student (now my friend), Jeff Muschar, took the opening shot for this blog post. Great job Jeff.

Jeff took the workshop as a prelude to his Botswana safari, which he is doing with his son in a few weeks. I know they will have a great father/son time – and come back with great images.

Jeff asked me to jot down some photo and safari tips. I said sure!

For those of you who may venture off on a safari, I thought I'd share the tips with you, too. Here goes.

Safari Tips:


• Be prepared to get up early and come back to camp early. Most of the action happens early in the day - and late in the day (and at night).

• Be prepared for lots of downtime (downloading time), because you probably will not go on a game drive until late in the afternoon.

• Definitely do the night game drives. Pack your flashlights.

• Ask at the camp when they switch power generators. A power surge can zap your charger.

• Talk to your doc about antibiotics. I travel with Cipro. Always.

• Talk to your doc about other travel issues, such as malaria.

• Pack light. Go to www.onebag.com to learn how to pack . . . in one bag :-)

• Do a web search on the camps. Some let your dive off road, others do not. You often get closer to animals when you can drive off the road.

Photo Tips:

Photographs © Rick Sammon

• Try to get a photo of the animal looking up or toward the sun. If you do, you'll get better light on the animal's face – and catch light in the eyes (as illustrated above).

• Keep your camera clean and change lenses only when absolutely necessary. It's very, very dusty in Africa. Don't use liquid cleaners on your sensor. You can make matters worse.

• If possible, take two camera bodies: one with a tele zoom, one with a wide-angle zoom.

• Take close-up shots and environmental portraits.

• Pack a power strip (or two) so you can charge more devices.
Of course, also pack the correct power adapter (take two).

• Remove all filters when shooting into the sun.

• Bring back everything.


• Carry one of your hard drives with you all the time. You don't want your pictures to "walk off."

• Use your photo vest a third carry on.


• Keep your flash very handy. You will need it more than you think – even on sunny days. Master daylight fill-in flash photography.

Photograph © Rick Sammon

Well Jeff, have a great time with your son. Here's a shot I took while on my previous trip to Botswana – with the same tele zoom you are taking, Canon 100-400mm IS.


To get a shot like this, you need more more thing: LUCK!

Let me know here (via a comment) if you are interested in a photo walk at the zoo on September 7th – the day before my Hudson River Photo Workshop.

Explore the light,
Rick

P.S. If you have a photo or travel tip for Jeff (and others) please share it here via a comment.

Life Lessons We Can Learn From Mother Nature – iPad App Now Available

The bird hunting a locust is unaware of the hawk hunting him. – Chinese Proverb

Vermont
Canon 1Ds Mark II
Canon 100-400mm IS lens @ 375mm
Aperture Priority Mode
ISO 160
f/6.3 @ 1/250th sec.

Photo tips:
• Focus on the eyes.
• Blur the background to make your subject stand out in the scene.
• Shoot at eye level as possible.
• Try to light the eyes, with either natural light or a flash.

• • •

Life Lessons We Can Learn from Mother Nature, my latest iPad app, was recently released on the iTunes app store. The concept: On each page of the e-book-type app you’ll find an inspirational or motivational quote accompanied by one of my wildlife or landscape photographs. I tired to match each photograph to the quote, which was a challenging but rewarding process.

The photographs are from my travels over the years; the quotes are gathered from a lifetime of looking for inspiration from others.

To celebrate the iPad app, co-developed with Juan Pons (the dude who started the Digital Photo Experience with me), I’ll be posting a picture and quote from time to time here on my blog – pictures and quotes that are not in the app. I’ll also include the location in which each photograph was taken, as well as the camera data – as I do in the app.

To order the app, which also features my favorite Photoshop techniques for wildlife and nature photography,
click on the iPhone/iPad photos on the right.

If you have an inspiration quote you’d like to share, please share it here via a Comment.

Explore the light – and explore the iPad!
Rick

Life Lessons We Can Learn From Mother Nature – iPad App Now Available

Happens to everyone. Horses, dogs, men. No one gets out of life alive. – Irving Ravetch

Double JJ Ranch, Rothbury, Michigan
Canon 1Ds Mark III
Canon 100-400mm IS lens @ 320mm
Shutter Priority Mode
ISO 400
f/8.0 @ 1/500th sec.

Photo tips:
• Use focus tracking when photographing moving subjects.
• Crop out the dead space in a scene to draw more attention to the subject.
• Don't change lenses when it's dusty.
• Use a shutter speed of at least 1/500th of a second to stop action.

• • •

Life Lessons We Can Learn from Mother Nature, my latest iPad app, was recently released on the iTunes app store. The concept: On each page of the e-book-type app you’ll find an inspirational or motivational quote accompanied by one of my wildlife or landscape photographs. I tired to match each photograph to the quote, which was a challenging but rewarding process.

The photographs are from my travels over the years; the quotes are gathered from a lifetime of looking for inspiration from others.

To celebrate the iPad app, co-developed with Juan Pons (the dude who started the Digital Photo Experience with me), I’ll be posting a picture and quote from time to time here on my blog – pictures and quotes that are not in the app. I’ll also include the location in which each photograph was taken, as well as the camera data – as I do in the app.

So, the app is also like a mini-course in wildlife and nature photography.

To order the app, which also features my favorite Photoshop techniques for wildlife and nature photography, click
on the iPhone/iPad photos on the right.

If you have an inspiration quote you’d like to share, please share it here via a Comment.

Explore the light – and explore the iPad!

Rick
P.S. Click
here to see all my apps.

Life Lessons We Can Learn From Mother Nature – iPad App Now Available

A lake is the landscape's most beautiful and expressive feature. It is Earth's eye; looking into which the beholder measure the depth of his own nature. – Henry David Thoreau

Mono Lake, California
Canon 1Ds Mark III,
Canon 24-105mm lens @ 24mm
Aperture Priority Mode
ISO 100
f/8.0 @ 3 seconds

Photo tips:
• For maximum depth-of-field, set your focus 1/3 into the scene.
• When sharpening, sharpen selectively – the limestone formations in this case.
• Don't place the horizon line in the center of the frame.
• Check the web for sunrise and sunset times.
• Use foreground elements to add a sense of depth of an image.

• • •

Life Lessons We Can Learn from Mother Nature, my latest iPad app, was recently released on the iTunes app store. The concept: On each page of the e-book-type app you’ll find an inspirational or motivational quote accompanied by one of my wildlife or landscape photographs. I tired to match each photograph to the quote, which was a challenging but rewarding process.

The photographs are from my travels over the years; the quotes are gathered from a lifetime of looking for inspiration from others.

To celebrate the iPad app, co-developed with Juan Pons (the dude who started the Digital Photo Experience with me), I’ll be posting a picture and quote from time to time here on my blog – pictures and quotes that are not in the app. I’ll also include the location in which each photograph was taken, as well as the camera data – as I do in the app.

To order the app, which also features my favorite Photoshop techniques for wildlife and nature photography,
click here.

If you have an inspiration quote you’d like to share, please share it here via a Comment.

Explore the light – and explore the iPad!

Rick
P.S. Click here to see all my apps.






Rick's New iPad App: Life Lessons We Can Learn From Mother Nature


Life Lessons We Can Learn From Mother Nature is my first iPad app. It's a combination of an inspirational and motivational work combined with a mini-course on wildlife and nature photography. To order and for more info, click here.

To celebrate the app, Juan Pons (the developer) and I are giving away 10 redeem codes. Please read this first about redeem codes. This is Apple's redeem code process.

Here are the codes (Sorry. Update. Codes already grabbed):

96WM7HWRWFRL
F37WWRF9RWNK
FLHANHYX93MY
M9P3KXM9AP7W
T7P7AL3W4WRR
YATYH73MHXPN
RTKF6XPPKK9A
94APPHW3W69N
JYTHKJ4TAMK7
Y6EWPMMAYLYX

About the App

The app (actually an interactive e-book) has been a work-in-progress for about three years. It’s been a fun and rewarding project.

My original idea was to produce a coffee-table/gift book that motivated and inspired photographers – and all those involved in creative endeavors. After all, many of us need some motivation and inspiration from time to time. Right?

The concept was to put together meaningful quotes carefully matched with my favorite wildlife and nature pictures.

My original title for this work was, Every Animal Knows More Than You. It’s a Hindu quote that you’ll find in this e-book. It’s one of my favorite quotes because it’s so true when you think about it. A polar bear, for example, knows just about everything it needs to know when it is born.

Several friends, however, thought my original title was not serious enough, so I decided on Life Lessons We Can Learn From Mother Nature – because each quote really conveys a good life lesson we can learn from Mother Nature.

Even with more than 35 books to my name, I could not find a book publisher to take a chance on this idea. But I never gave up.

I did, however, put together the images and quotes into a slide show that I showed before my digital photography presentations. The attendees always commented on how they enjoyed the pre-show show – even though no photography information was included.

Enter the iPhone and the world of apps on iTunes. Everything changed. Now, photographers, and traditional book authors like myself, could self-publish their work – worldwide at an affordable cost. In addition, the author was in total control of the content.

But then a more important change came along: the iPad. Now, apps and e-books – and photographs – could look bigger and better than ever. Here, too, worldwide distribution was possible from a home computer.

Enter Juan Pons, my business partner in the Digital Photography Experience.

Juan is talented wildlife photographer as well as an app developer – and a good friend. In his spare time, Juan started an e-book publishing company and asked me if I wanted to do an e-book version of my Life Lessons book. Due to the success of my first app, Rick Sammon’s 24/7 Photo Buffet, developed with Dr. Dave Wilson, I said sure!

Juan put my pictures and quotes together into the e-book. (He also developed my Social Media Marketing for Photographers app, which is a series of Quick Time movies of my Social Media presentation that I narrate.)

In talking with Juan, we decided to add a photography tip for each picture in this e-book, as well as the camera I used and the exposure information. Then we decided to add some Photoshop tips, which also can be applied to Lightroom, Aperture and Elements. So, the book is part inspirational/motivational and part photo how-to.

I hope you enjoy this e-book. If you have an inspirational quote you’d like to share, I’d love to hear it. Please share it here.

Explore the light,
Rick