Hi Stan,

Are you using single-point focus? I can usually slip around branches to shoot a 
bird in the bush if I carefully place the focus point on the bird’s head. With 
multi-point focus, the camera will always lock onto whatever is in the 
foreground.

Paul
> On Feb 28, 2017, at 4:22 PM, Stanley Halpin <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
> 
>> On Feb 28, 2017, at 3:58 AM, Larry Colen <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> … I just went through the photos of one of the bands from this weekend, 
>> having shot a bit with the 80-200 on the K-3, with wider primes on the K-1 
>> that night, and was reminded of just how well the K-3 can focus on 
>> microphones.
>> 
> 
> Common Mergansers swimming/fishing on the river by our house a couple of days 
> ago. I grabbed the K-1 + 70-200/2.8, carefully slipped outside and did a few 
> snappies without spooking them. Then I heard the unmistakable sound of a 
> Belted Kingfisher. Finally spotted it through a gap in the bushes. I got a 
> wonderful in focus shot of the bushes. If you knew what to look for you could 
> see the out of focus Kingfisher further back.
> 
> Canon at one point had an AF mechanism based on the position/direction of 
> your eyeball as you looked through the viewfinder - a guy who worked for me 
> had one, was quite proud of owning such advanced technology. Which, he 
> admitted, didn’t work very well. But that notion needs to be revisited.
> 
> stan
> 
> 
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