You are welcome graphite. One practical tip for field use is this: turn on the histogram and the "blinkies" when shooting, and when the blinkies show up, know that with a MODERN Nikon d-slr sensor in RAW mode, there is at least a full f/stop of recoverable highlight detail that can be "pulled back down" in software, and that you can often add more exposure than the blinkies and or histogram indicate. I will explain why.
So for example, on the nifty shot of the net-wire fence and the goats with the beautiful sunset sky, with the camera tripod mounted and set to ISO 200, with the lens at f/4.5, you could have lowered the shutter speed say 1.3 to maybe even 2.0 Exposure Values ( slower on the shutter wheel) and the "blinkies" might flash on the sky-tones, indicating overexposure on the embedded .JPG file that is inside of every RAW file. But those "blinkies" are based on the JPEG data, and the way the camera's settings are affecting the JPEG file.
If say the Tone Curve were set to "Normal", and the Saturation were set to +3 notches, the embedded JPEG would most likely tend to have too much contrast, and the red channel would start to saturate, and the "blinkies" would come on, in large part due to the way the camera was processing the embedded JPEG file. BUT the best operating procedure would be to ignore the blinkies, and ADD MORE exposure in the field, and then, when the RAW file was opened, you could "pull back" the exposure, and gt a great sky and eliminate a lot of the noise in the shadows. This is the old "exposing to the right" advice, but with some explanation as to how the blinkies, and the histogram are not always an exact, set-in-stone indicator of what is possible.
The thing is, the in-camera JPEG's histogram, and the blinkies it displays, are an indicator of what the CAMERA and its software do to a .JPG image file; WHat post-processing software can do LATER, is another thing, so in the field, you almost want to ignore the blinkies, and once they first light up, you can often add MORE light, and come away with a better result.