This is a continuation of the article about the photos I took of animals at Inokashira Park Zoo, without any particular plan or thought. I used a PENTAX K-3III and HD DA55-300 PLM
I don’t know if this is actually the case, but don’t you think there are animals that look a bit like “wise men”?
Like this old monkey (actually, I don’t know if he’s old or young).
Like this old goat (actually, the same applies below)
This wildcat doesn’t look like an old man, but it does look wise.
The people in this area look so wise that they look down on the world from a high place without moving a muscle, so it’s easy for me to take their photos, but there are also some children who are restless and difficult to photograph, and I have a hard time taking photos of moving objects.
The Tsushima marten stopped for just a moment, so I was able to take a photo of it.
The rest of the games were not competitive, and we lost badly.
Oops, the subject was moving so fast that I panicked and the camera shook.
I also had trouble with the squirrel. I couldn’t quite capture it.
I should have increased the shutter speed more, but I couldn’t move for a moment.
I really admire people who take photos of birds in flight and so on. I wonder what kind of technique they use.
For me, the limit was this one sweet pin-up shot that I managed to get by chance.
So, I went back to my childhood and started chasing animals and touching cameras, and I went back to my beginner’s mind and started taking a lot of photos with the Japanese flag composition, producing a lot of out-of-focus and blurred photos.
It was a photo walk at Inokashira Park that confirmed both that technology has not progressed at all and that photography is fun regardless of that.