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👋 Welcome — grab a seat by the campfire
The Wildlife Lens is where wildlife photographers and naturalists come to actually connect, learn, and help each other find more of what we love. Built by Gareth Parkes and Fiona Etkin, this isn't a faceless info hub. It's a community of people who'd rather be cold, muddy, and watching a Lilac-breasted Roller at dawn or watching otters in a Dorset stream by than scrolling Instagram from the sofa. 🤝 Share Your Passion — Or Just Soak It In Whether you're a seasoned field naturalist eager to share decades of knowledge, or someone who just loves wildlife and wants to learn more — you belong here. If you love to share: - Post your field reports, best shots, and hard-won location tips - Teach what you know about your local patch or favorite species - Help others with ID questions and fieldcraft advice - Contribute sighting intel and seasonal updates If you're here to learn: - Absorb expertise from people who've spent decades in the field - Ask beginner questions without judgment (we all started somewhere) - Follow along with expedition stories and species guides - Lurk, learn, and jump in when you're ready — no pressure If you're somewhere in between: - Share the occasional find that excited you - Ask questions that help everyone learn - Celebrate others' wins - Build confidence at your own pace - This isn't about proving expertise or performing for likes. It's about genuine love for the natural world — whether you've been birding for 40 years or just bought your first pair of binoculars last month. Your curiosity is enough. Your passion is welcome. Your questions help others learn too. Your next steps: → Introduce yourself in START HERE (where do you shoot? what do you love?)→ Browse Species Spotlight for identification tips and behavioral insights→ Share your latest field report or ask about your mystery sighting→ Jump into discussions — we're genuinely happy to help Fair warning: We talk a lot about dawn starts, muddy boots, missed shots, and species that refuse to cooperate. We believe the best wildlife experiences involve questionable weather, occasional equipment failures, and the very real possibility of ending up ankle-deep in something unexpected.
👋 Welcome — grab a seat by the campfire
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📸 Photo Gallery & Critiques - Let's See What You've Got
Right, here's how this works. Share your photos. Good ones, mediocre ones, "I have no idea what went wrong here" ones. All welcome. If you're waiting until you've got the perfect shot before posting, you'll never post. We all started somewhere rubbish. Tell us what you were trying to achieve. Context matters. "Here's a robin" gets polite thumbs up. "Here's a robin - I was trying to freeze the wing movement but it's blurry, what did I miss?" gets actual useful feedback. Include your settings if you want real help. ISO, shutter speed, aperture. If you can't remember, that's fine - just say so. But if you want to know why your heron looks like a grey blob, settings help us tell you. Celebrate other people's wins. When someone nails a shot, tell them. We're not competing here. Their success doesn't diminish yours. Community means genuinely being pleased when someone gets it right. Equipment doesn't matter as much as you think. I've seen stunning shots from phone cameras and terrible ones from £3,000 setups. Technique beats gear every single time. So don't apologize for your camera - just show us what you captured. One rule: Be kind. Critique the photo, not the photographer. "This composition would work better if..." is helpful. "You clearly don't know what you're doing" is not. We're here to get better together, not tear each other down. I'll kick things off with a few of my own shots - including some disasters - so you can see it's safe to share the imperfect stuff. Who's posting first? Gareth
📸 Photo Gallery & Critiques - Let's See What You've Got
Fairly new to bird photography, been a birder for 5 years
Hey y'all! I've been a birder for 5 years now and recently upgraded to the Nikon Z6 III which has got me really into bird photography. I've dabbled in bird photography before this, but never been quite this serious. Anybody else here big on birding? ~Caleb
Newbie
Hello I'm not a wildlife photographer, but I love wildlife- and I love to see how professional photographers capture the most intimate moments in the wild. I'm a retired chef 45 years. Currently, learning be a Potter for ( about 18 months now) I have a studio I built in my garage, and I'm getting my axx handed to me through Clay! I thought it was gonna be easy, alas it is not-! Clay is teaching me many things I need to learn. But at my age, you think I'd already know them! Lol 1- patience 2- perseverance 3- letting things go 4 -chilling out and its ok not to be perfect. Everything that's opposite of the culinary world, and I'm grateful for it. I'm posting a couple pictures of my latest kiln unload, for wildlife enthusiasts, one is a hand sculpted whale that os an oil burner, and the other one is a dragonfly. décor for a garden . Thank you for accepting me into this group.
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Have fun, Find wildlife. Grow skills. Connect with people who get it. A warm community for naturalists and photographers who'd rather be out there.
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