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- #16
I know everyone does this, but I honestly always feel like shooting at the zoo is like shooting fish in a barrel.
Lol.. strangely enough a lot of people seem to feel that way until they try it. Turns out it's actually a little harder than a lot of folks think, there are a lot of challenges involved. In many cases your shooting through pexiglass which can be a real pain, the stuff reflects light on multiple levels and that makes a CPL almost useless. You are often dealing with a mixture of both florescent and ambient light which just throws your white balance into a cocked hat. On outdoor shots your generally dealing with fencing, plus you've got all sorts of background issues you generally need to contend with, trying to get the right angle so you get the critter in an interesting way but that he isn't standing in front of something that just ruins the whole shot. Then you have the crowds to deal with, so when a critter does start doing something really cool or interesting you've got people jumping in front of you.
Granted the fact that you've got all those cool signs pointing to this critter or that critter is a huge advantage, you can go to point A for lions or B for Gorillas and you know they'll be there, which is great. Takes a lot of the guesswork out of it. But really to get good zoo shots does take a lot more patience and time than I think most people give it credit for because your positioning is so critical, and then you have to wait till you get the right shot.
Just my 2 cents worth of course, YMMV.