Some moments in the field stick with you — not because they were easy, but because everything aligned at just the right time.
This was the last image I made on week seven of eight winter owl workshops last week — rain falling, forest turning dark, everyone heading toward the airport in about an hour.
Sony A1 II
Sony 400–800mm at 641mm
ISO 20,000 | f/8 | 1/5,000s
High ISO still makes some photographers nervous, but the reality with modern sensors is this: ISO isn’t the enemy — poor exposure is. In situations like this — low light, rain, an owl moving fast — I make decisions based on freezing motion and preserving detail in-camera, not pulling shadows later at the expense of quality.
I needed 1/5,000s to hold the wings crisp and to render the rain as droplets instead of streaks. f/8 gave me the depth I wanted across the wings. The forest was dark. There was no soft golden light coming from anywhere. Exposure discipline was the tool that kept this frame from being just another passing shot.
Owls in the rain are magical. The air gains texture. The background simplifies. The bird feels like it’s floating in its own world. Nothing about it feels staged. Everything feels real — and earned.
That’s part of what draws me back to winter owl photography year after year. It’s not just about seeing the birds — it’s about being there with them in whatever light and weather they choose to show themselves. You learn to read the conditions. You learn to trust your gear. You learn to trust yourself.
This owl made one solid pass through the forest at just the moment we needed it — and then it was done. A quiet full-stop on a long week in the field.
On Exposure, ISO, and Getting It Right
Some photographers still worry about high ISO numbers.
Here’s the truth I share with every group:
You can shoot at ISO 20,000 today and get clean, rich images — but only if you expose with intent.
Underexposure plus heavy shadow recovery is when noise becomes a problem — not because of the ISO number itself.
Modern mirrorless sensors like the Sony A1 II deliver latitude and detail that reward careful exposure choices in challenging light.
Your histogram should be pushed confidently to the right without clipping critical highlights in feathers. Don’t guess — check. That’s how you capture usable detail in every zone that matters — especially in a dark background and rainy scene like this one.
Why These Moments Matter
Owls don’t perform on cue. They don’t wait for sunrise, perfect wind, or magical light. They are what they are, where they are — and our job is to see them, not force them.
Rain adds depth. Dark woods add mood. High shutter speeds bring out detail. But none of that works if your exposure falls apart.
This frame was not luck. It was knowledge and preparation meeting opportunity.
That’s why I love teaching these workshops — not just showing birds, but showing you what they look like when you get your settings right, when you trust your instincts, and when you stay present in the moment.
Join Me Next Winter
If images like this — real, wild, unpredictable, demanding — are the kind that make you want to keep learning and keep shooting, I’d love to have you out in the field next season.
We’ll be doing it again — rain, snow, dark woods, early light — and every workshop is a chance to grow as a photographer and deepen your confidence with your camera.
The owls will be here next winter.
I hope you will be too.