Points in Focus Photography

If you’re looking at the Canon manufacturer lens pages, trying to decide on a lens, you may have noticed that at the bottom of the Overview tab for every lens are several icons that provide some information about the lens’s construction or feature set. I have yet to find a comprehensive guide anywhere on the internet that explains what each icon means; nor has Canon elected to make them informative in any way shape or form other than to just be icons.

So here is as best as I can decipher them, what the icons mean.

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Today we have a lesson in target fixation, namely why it’s important to continue to be aware of your surroundings while your out shooting. Friday I went down to Everglades national park again for the express purpose of trying to get a picture of a Bald Eagle. My thinking being that the USGS bird sheet for Everglades National Park shows them as being common year round (50% of the time there’s a sighting) coupled with their recent removal from the Endangered Species list, meaning there should be more of them, that it should be possible to find a spot somewhere between a nesting site and the ocean where I assume they are fishing, and sit tight and wait for one to fly by.

Well the morning was blown searching for possible nesting sites, hey Eagle nests are huge and hard to miss. But alas none were visible from any of the easily accessible areas (i.e. off the park road or any of the boardwalks or trails), and I wasn’t really in the mood to go hiking out across the endless sea of grass to find one either. So I settled for plan B, Osprey’s; and this is where the target fixation comes into play. While sitting on an Osprey waiting for it to take off–which it did some 6 hours later (yes I waited that long)–I was overflown by my eagle. And yes, I totally missed the approach and flyover because I was so busy waiting for the bird in the viewfinder to take off. Talk about shooting one’s self in the foot.

Missed
The missed shot, A southern Bald Eagle flys out to sea to fish. (Flamingo Visitor Center, Everglades National Park)
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