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ZEISS DTI thermal imaging cameras. For more discoveries at night, and during the day.

The Quest Continues. (2 Viewers)

I am moving forward with my quest to photograph garden birds in flight, instead of just having them sitting on a perch. I have recently bought a new remote sensor system. It is a LiDAR sensor from Cognisys, called the Sabre. It is fairly expensive, but great. It is similar to radar, but uses an infrared beam instead of a radio signal. it is much better than a PIR sensor. It does not need a separate receiver unit and importantly, it is not affected by changes in light or foliage moving in the background.
Something I find really useful is the ability to set up a “window” to restrict the area where the signal triggers the camera. It also has a narrow beam. I have already worked out a method of setting it up which only takes a couple of minutes and early results are very promising.
The most limiting thing at the moment is a distinct lack of birds. With lots of natural food around at the moment, I am getting fewer birds at the feeders and those that do come have little need to queue.
If I can refine my technique by winter, I hope to really capitalise on the method once the usual visitors return.
Until then, I will have to make do with my resident blackbirds and starlings. Mind you, when they oblige like this blackbird, then I really don’t mind.
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Your flight photos show so much detail (and what a nice bokeh!) that you could score moults based on them. Do you know Species Files – Guia Blasco Zumeta de Aves ? The file for Blackbird is attached below (although Blackbird in particular looks pretty tough to tell for me personally because of all the shades of brown).
 

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Your flight photos show so much detail (and what a nice bokeh!) that you could score moults based on them. Do you know Species Files – Guia Blasco Zumeta de Aves ? The file for Blackbird is attached below (although Blackbird in particular looks pretty tough to tell for me personally because of all the shades of brown).
I have looked at the file and like you, I find it difficult to really tell whether my photo is of a juvenile male or a female.
 

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