So a person set a GoPro at the entrance to a burrowing owl's burrow.
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@elaterite Thanks for the information (I didn't know) and for sharing all those photos
️@ahimsa_pdx You are welcome--and thanks!
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@elaterite Oh, you might want to clarify your original post, since i thought that link was to the person who placed the gopro at the owl burrow!
@mikemccaffrey Oh, hell no. Wendy is an ethical wildlife photographer.
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Here's a photo I made--shot from an ethical distance--of a burrowing owl south of the Salton Sea last fall. Note that the owl is relaxed and looking around as they do early in the morning. If I were too close, the owl would be hunkering down staring at the camera or would have dived into its burrow.
#Birds #Owl #BirdPhotography #Wildlife #Photography #Darktable
@elaterite @ahimsa_pdx I love these guys so much
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@elaterite @ahimsa_pdx I love these guys so much
@hisstogramma Me too! Burrowing owls are the best!
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So a person set a GoPro at the entrance to a burrowing owl's burrow. There are dozens of comments about what a fantastic photo it is. Having photographed burrowing owls--from an ethical distance--near the Salton Sea ag fields, I know my friend Wendy down there would be horrified, as am I, by what the photographer did. It is wrong to disturb any bird to get-the-shot.
The only reason to approach a burrow is to plant a small flag warning people--& tractors--to steer clear. https://www.flickr.com/photos/wemesq/with/54997651429@elaterite I don't think a GoPro is that intrusive. They are tiny, silent cameras.
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Here's a photo I made--shot from an ethical distance--of a burrowing owl south of the Salton Sea last fall. Note that the owl is relaxed and looking around as they do early in the morning. If I were too close, the owl would be hunkering down staring at the camera or would have dived into its burrow.
#Birds #Owl #BirdPhotography #Wildlife #Photography #Darktable
@elaterite Hey owls have privacy rights too.

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@elaterite Hey owls have privacy rights too.

@kev Indeed.
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@elaterite I don't think a GoPro is that intrusive. They are tiny, silent cameras.
@mlanger It's not the camera, it's a person going to the mouth of the burrow, twice, to "get the shot." It is not ethical. It traumatizes the owls. They either fly away for a time, using energy they otherwise didn't need to use, or they dive into the burrow and don't come out for awhile. Ethical wildlife photographers stay back. If the bird or animal shows any sign of being disturbed, you step back further or go away and try again some other time.
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Here's a photo I made--shot from an ethical distance--of a burrowing owl south of the Salton Sea last fall. Note that the owl is relaxed and looking around as they do early in the morning. If I were too close, the owl would be hunkering down staring at the camera or would have dived into its burrow.
#Birds #Owl #BirdPhotography #Wildlife #Photography #Darktable
@elaterite That is a cracking shot, Bob

Really nice work 🤩 -
@elaterite That is a cracking shot, Bob

Really nice work 🤩@mikehindleuk Thank you!
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@mlanger It's not the camera, it's a person going to the mouth of the burrow, twice, to "get the shot." It is not ethical. It traumatizes the owls. They either fly away for a time, using energy they otherwise didn't need to use, or they dive into the burrow and don't come out for awhile. Ethical wildlife photographers stay back. If the bird or animal shows any sign of being disturbed, you step back further or go away and try again some other time.
@elaterite It's interesting that we're having a discussion about ethics when ethics doesn't seem to exist anymore in this world.
When I was learning to fly helicopters, the airport had a bunch of burrowing owls, some of which lived within 100 feet of the active helipads. I'm thinking that wildlife adapts to conditions. Perhaps this photographer placed and fetched his camera at night when the birds were sleeping? We don't know.
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@elaterite It's interesting that we're having a discussion about ethics when ethics doesn't seem to exist anymore in this world.
When I was learning to fly helicopters, the airport had a bunch of burrowing owls, some of which lived within 100 feet of the active helipads. I'm thinking that wildlife adapts to conditions. Perhaps this photographer placed and fetched his camera at night when the birds were sleeping? We don't know.
@mlanger I've read a number of articles about wildlife photography. Most stress ethics first, photo last. If you do anything that disrupts the animal's daily routine to get-the-shot, it's unethical. It's a big problem in both amateur & professional circles. People do all sorts of onerous things such a baiting animals & chasing birds with drones. Many do it for "likes" & some do it sell workshops or wall art. Ethical wildlife photographers stay aware & if the animal seems disturbed, they leave.
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