Nice Paul,
The hummer could be a bit darker,
Regards,  Bob S.

On Sun, Jul 17, 2016 at 4:40 PM, Paul Stenquist <[email protected]> wrote:
> This has been a minor obsession of mine. I know some list members have shot 
> hummingbirds. It’s definitely not impossible, although they rarely stay in 
> one place for more than a second. I don’t see a lot of the itty bitty birds. 
> But every once in a while a hummingbird will flit in among my bee balm before 
> disappearing. I’m usually focused on the tree branches near my feeders, 
> waiting for a finch, sparrow, chickadee or cardinal. By the time I refocus to 
> the bee balm, the hummer is gone. But not today. Finally got one. Decent, not 
> great. I’m intrigued by their speed and frail bodies. They are obviously all 
> muscle. The color isn’t beautiful, a subtle green on the hummers I see, but 
> it’s not awful. In any case, I got this guy with the K-1, the DFA 150-450 and 
> the 1.4X converter.630mm, f8, 1/500th, ISO 2000. A workable set of numbers.
>
> http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=18261742&size=lg
>
> Paul
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