23AU9080W-SharpenAI-Motion-denoise-severe-noise
Photographying these little guys in flight is a real chore. they fly at Mach 3 and turn on a needle head. Not to mention that my 500mm lens and camera weighs 10lbs.
The Barn Swallow is a medium-sized songbird (about 15 to 18 centimetres long). Males have a glossy steel-blue back and upper wings, a rusty-red forehead and throat, a short bill and a broad blue breast band above its tawny underbelly.
The male has long tail feathers which form a distinctive, deep fork and a line of white spots across the outer end of the upper tail.
The female’s tail feathers are shorter, the blue of her upper parts and breast band are less glossy, and her underside is paler.
Barn Swallows make the long flight to Central and South America each fall, returning to southern Canada – including Ontario – each spring.
Barn Swallows dart gracefully over fields, barnyards, marshes and open water to hunt for food. They often cruise at high speeds just above the ground or water and make sharp turns, swooping effortlessly to catch flies and other insects. When feeding their young, Barn Swallows fly from before dawn to after sunset, taking only brief rests.
This species can be beneficial to farmers since they eat large numbers of insects that could otherwise be harmful to crops or farm animals.
23AU9080W-SharpenAI-Motion-denoise-severe-noise
Photographying these little guys in flight is a real chore. they fly at Mach 3 and turn on a needle head. Not to mention that my 500mm lens and camera weighs 10lbs.
The Barn Swallow is a medium-sized songbird (about 15 to 18 centimetres long). Males have a glossy steel-blue back and upper wings, a rusty-red forehead and throat, a short bill and a broad blue breast band above its tawny underbelly.
The male has long tail feathers which form a distinctive, deep fork and a line of white spots across the outer end of the upper tail.
The female’s tail feathers are shorter, the blue of her upper parts and breast band are less glossy, and her underside is paler.
Barn Swallows make the long flight to Central and South America each fall, returning to southern Canada – including Ontario – each spring.
Barn Swallows dart gracefully over fields, barnyards, marshes and open water to hunt for food. They often cruise at high speeds just above the ground or water and make sharp turns, swooping effortlessly to catch flies and other insects. When feeding their young, Barn Swallows fly from before dawn to after sunset, taking only brief rests.
This species can be beneficial to farmers since they eat large numbers of insects that could otherwise be harmful to crops or farm animals.