


Looks a little like one of her grandsires, check out the pointed toe

Ya know old buddy, I don't recall seeing any photo's of dogs or country in Ireland.stevoman wrote:bumper52 wrote:well, maybe this is better....a boy and his best friend with some pheasants! it don't get any better!!!
great pics and great hunting. bring me back to when my grandfather used to always bring me huntingas a child and takes me back to the cold winter mornings whn i learnt the trade of pheasent shooting.
well done, cherish those days!
birddog1968 wrote:
Looks a little like one of her grandsires, check out the pointed toe
Heck, I dunno, I just hunker down in a corner of the house and wonder what my wife's gonna bring home next!! Tough sale to convince her to get a GSP - she's been around mine too much!!Did someone forget to doc the tail on that one Doug..... looks a little long for your style
SetterNut wrote:A couple pics of Indy (6 months) and Ace.
I just don't see how that sweet little thing could ever frustrate you!Gertie wrote:Being a pup is tough work...
Whats that L&W dog doin so far back? Don't she know there are birds up there?birddog1968 wrote:
She's got shorthair in her, cut her some slackACooper wrote:
Whats that L&W dog doin so far back? Don't she know there are birds up there?![]()
Gotta switch to manual focus in the thick stuff. I switch to manual then hunt thru the weeds with my viewfinder and focus ring trying to really lock on an eye if I can since that's what brings life to the shot usually. Depending on the lens your depth of field for sharp focus may only be a matter of a few inches and I think it makes for some cool shots.And autofocus mode always picks the foreground weed sticks to make crisp and clear!
Doug do you know if the D3000 has the feature? I was looking but could not find anything.DGFavor wrote:Gotta switch to manual focus in the thick stuff. I switch to manual then hunt thru the weeds with my viewfinder and focus ring trying to really lock on an eye if I can since that's what brings life to the shot usually. Depending on the lens your depth of field for sharp focus may only be a matter of a few inches and I think it makes for some cool shots.And autofocus mode always picks the foreground weed sticks to make crisp and clear!
I don't know what the right way to do anything is but what I like to do when I'm hunting and shooting pics "on the fly" is just put my camera in Action Auto mode so I don't have to do any exposure thinking on the fly, put it in continuous drive, continuous autofocus. When the dog is on point and everything is static, I hold down my manual focus override button which on my camera is under my right thumb and manually focus on the dog (on the eye if I can) to get crisp shots - when the birds flush and things start moving, I release the manual override and the cam switches back to continuous auto and I just start firing 5 frames/second and praying. Sometimes get a shot or two I like.
Elkhunter wrote:Doug do you know if the D3000 has the feature? I was looking but could not find anything.DGFavor wrote:Gotta switch to manual focus in the thick stuff. I switch to manual then hunt thru the weeds with my viewfinder and focus ring trying to really lock on an eye if I can since that's what brings life to the shot usually. Depending on the lens your depth of field for sharp focus may only be a matter of a few inches and I think it makes for some cool shots.And autofocus mode always picks the foreground weed sticks to make crisp and clear!
I don't know what the right way to do anything is but what I like to do when I'm hunting and shooting pics "on the fly" is just put my camera in Action Auto mode so I don't have to do any exposure thinking on the fly, put it in continuous drive, continuous autofocus. When the dog is on point and everything is static, I hold down my manual focus override button which on my camera is under my right thumb and manually focus on the dog (on the eye if I can) to get crisp shots - when the birds flush and things start moving, I release the manual override and the cam switches back to continuous auto and I just start firing 5 frames/second and praying. Sometimes get a shot or two I like.
Yup, that's the way my buddies D90's work I think. Personally I don't like it as well as the button system my Sony uses as I tend to continue holding the lens barrel/zooming as I'm firing and want to be sure the thing is autofocusing. With the Nikon system, I think I'd futz it up continuing to manually override the autofocus hanging onto the lens. More intuitive for me to release my thumb from the override button and continue working the lens but like anything, you adapt to using what you got!Just grab the focus ring at any time for instant manual override. Use the "M/A" position of the M/A - M focus mode selector on the lens.