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Grand Prize Winner/Species: red-shouldered hawk, by Carol Graham Fryer
鈥淗e hung like a moth for a while,鈥 says Carol Graham Fryer, of the raptor she shot. 鈥淗e struggled and struggled to free himself from the moss. I was just trained on him, taking pictures. Then he was suddenly able to take off.鈥 Though Fryer takes photographs around the world, she ventured only as far as her Jacksonville backyard to get this beauty. 鈥淚 can see that tree from my kitchen window,鈥 says the 68-year-old retired singer. 鈥淗e was just sitting there, as pretty as you please.鈥
Grand Prize Winner/Species: red-shouldered hawk, by Carol Graham Fryer
鈥淗e hung like a moth for a while,鈥 says Carol Graham Fryer, of the raptor she shot. 鈥淗e struggled and struggled to free himself from the moss. I was just trained on him, taking pictures. Then he was suddenly able to take off.鈥 Though Fryer takes photographs around the world, she ventured only as far as her Jacksonville backyard to get this beauty. 鈥淚 can see that tree from my kitchen window,鈥 says the 68-year-old retired singer. 鈥淗e was just sitting there, as pretty as you please.鈥
Professional Birds Winner/Species: American kestrel, by Randall K. Roberts
鈥淚 had nearly decided to leave [the park] when I spotted a male American kestrel high in a tree,鈥 says the 55-year-old professional photographer. 鈥淚 was driving at the time, and quickly stopped the car and grabbed my camera. I had just enough time to make a few frames before the kestrel flew off. This was one time when a pure-white sky made a photo work.鈥
Professional Birds and Their Habitat Winner/Species: northern pygmy-owl, by Paul Bannick
Carefully balancing himself and his tripod, Paul Bannick, 48, took a deep breath. Exhaling, he clicked the shutter. The result: a photo of this female nesting high in a tree cavity. 鈥淓ach owl [species] represents a habitat,鈥 says Bannick, a conservation group鈥檚 development director. 鈥淚f I could tell the story of the owl well, I can get people intrigued with that habitat and what needs to be protected.鈥
Amateur Birds Winner/Species: great gray owl, by Jim Brown
鈥淕reat grays are on my bucket list,鈥 says Jim Brown, 鈥渢o get pictures of them.鈥 So when a network of Wyoming nature photographers found out that about a dozen had set up shop nearby, Brown made a beeline for the site, spending a patient鈥攁nd cold鈥攆our days shooting the owls. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e so big and elusive,鈥 he adds. 鈥淲hen they came out like this, it was our only chance. I鈥檝e been after them for at least 10 or 11 years.鈥
Youth Birds Winner/Species: house sparrow, by Timothy Brooks
鈥淚 was trying to catch that crazy, chaotic mood,鈥 says 17-year-old Timothy Brooks. He happened upon the frenzied scene at this feeder, fashioned out of a log, during the North American Nature Photography Association Summit. Brooks was one of 10 high school students who received a scholarship to attend and work with professional photographers.
Youth Birds and Their Habitat Winner/Species: greylag geese, by Cedar Byrum
During a family vacation in Northern England, Cedar Byrum, 17, put a digital camera his aunt gave him to good use. The then 14-year-old had no trouble nabbing this shot of the lake鈥檚 swarming gaggle.
La p谩gina que intenta visitar s贸lo est谩 disponible en ingl茅s. 隆Disculpa!
The page you are about to visit is currently only available in English. Sorry!