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StephenElia

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Wildlife

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The tits, chickadees, and titmice, family Paridae, are a large family of small passerine birds which occur in the northern hemisphere to Africa. Wikipedia the net's Encyclopedia helps you even more. Cheers:)
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i guess you have the canon eos kit 18-55. There are bad news and good news. The bad news is i give you 3/3, the good news is that you have to put f8 when in 18mm and f11 when in 55mm, to have better results. It took me 3 months to learn this but you take it from here :-) Also the subject is not storytelling or aligned with lines or sth else but a stroll in the nature files will get you understand what I mean. (the bird is hidden like a leaf)--> you have bad lighting conditions. But it's a sincere shot nevertheles :-)
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I know this picture "Sucks!" I am looking for an identification. The picture was take with the 100-400L @400mm, f/5.6 with a shutter speed of 1/125 (all after sunset). I know it's soft, I know compositionally it's poor. I am looking for someone who can identify the bird in the picture. I have looked at all the warblers and tits and still do not know for sure which one this is. I plan to go back in the daytime to capture this bird again.
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I didnt see that message from the place I was. All the rates that are gone through the rating are going anonymous except until you want to comment something, and this frame of rating doesnt have any comments about the picture, so this was a photo along many other that were going to be rated. I just had to give that 3/3 and leave a comment as I would like for the others to do when I get a 3/3 :-) but didnt have the message about the bird identification...Maybe if you had this only for critique? (just a thought). I hope you have no hard feelings about me beeing honest :-)
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I do not have any hard feelings... People could give this a 1/1... If that made them feel better. I thought I had requested a BIRD ID with the critique request. I might have forgotten. Just hoping someone could identify this one. I have had a few suggestions, just not confirmed as to the identity of this bird. Thanks.
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Stephen, I looked in Peterson's field guide, it has a lot of similarities to a warbler---unfortunately another large group. They show quite a few that are crosses within the group that are close. It may be an immature one or in the process of changeing for winter. Sutton's warbler looks real close. Hope that helps.
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