At my mealworm feeder today:
Lumix GH5 100-400mm
Experimenting with various aperture priority settings, I thought there was something wrong with my camera as it went silent, but it had automatically switched to the electronic shutter with a shutter speed of 1/13000 at F1.2
Lumix GH5 Leica DG Nocticron 42.5mm
While taking this photo I was buzzed by a hummingbird, heading to another flower (Justicia Chrysostephana)
Lumix GH5, Leica DG 100-400
The first one looks like a Bob Ross painting! Lots of happy little trees.
Great lighting and the sharp windmills add to the picture. It looks like your sensor needs cleaning, however. There are quite a few dust spots, especially in the upper left portion of the sky.
Nesting pair with two eaglets, along Mississippi River, southeast LA.
Lumix GH5 100-400mm, significantly cropped.
Parents and one eaglet, the other eaglet is deeper in the nest
(
Download)
Eaglets and departing parent
(
Download)
Even the moon turned red with rage after the missed pass interference call in the NFC championship game.
First image is partial eclipse, 70 minutes before the second shot. The color shift was dramatic, and enhanced by an increase in exposure (F14, ISO 500, 1/2000 sec vs. F6.3, ISO 3200, 0.6 sec.)
My first sighting of a bald eagle. Image is significantly cropped, showing about 1/4 of the full frame.
Capitol Lake, Baton Rouge, LA
This pelican was moving in on a large group of pelicans fishing together.
All four frames were taken in the same second.
Angel Island, San Francisco Bay
Three different species (actually four, if you count the white pelicans in the distance) in one shot. Photographed at Capitol Lake, Baton Rouge, LA
Here's another edit of my photo by a fellow Hedgehogger, using Aurora HDR. I have tried to reproduce this effect in Luminar, without success. There seems to be more detail evident in the structure and leaves. Thanks Mrjcall!