
For the past several years, I have enjoyed taking my DSLRs and several lenses to our family vacation at Milford Lake, Kansas, and experimenting with different kinds of photography that I don’t normally get the chance to do back home in central Oklahoma. A couple days at the lake means there’s a host of photographic opportunities at one’s disposal including close-up shots of plants and animals, long-exposures of the sunset, telephoto pictures of wildlife, and lots more. Many of these shots have been featured in Weekly Fifty over the years, and this kind of photography is usually one of the highlights of my year.
But this year things were different. I still brought some photography gear, but not as much as I normally do. I also took some photos, but not with the same fervor as years past. Instead of spending time with camera in hand and eyes pointed at nature, I traded that for time with family in the pool, at the beach, and in the cabins playing games and catching up long after the sun had set. I also did a lot more with my GoPro this year, both in terms of video but also photos, and in the end I think I found a place (figuratively, not literally) where I tried to spend more time just being present with the people, rather than out and about with my camera. Not that the two are mutually exclusive, but I just found it to be much more pleasant and meaningful to put the camera down (or, more accurately, not pick it up in the first place) so I could be more involved with my family.
But when this opportunity presented itself…boy howdy. You better believe I ran inside and grabbed my camera! My brothers, or maybe one of the nieces or nephews, found some snails crawling on and around various objects outside after a thunderstorm blew through, including this one making its way across a crack in a fallen tree that had been carved into a bench seat some years ago. I knew right away that the combination of late afternoon sunlight, glistening post-precipitation texture, rich natural greens, browns, and grays, and the two little antennae sticking up would make for a fun photo. And, if you don’t mind me saying so, I think I was right :)
I shot this looking straight down at the snail using my Nikon D750 and 105mm macro lens, dialed in to an aperture of f/13, 1/125 second, ISO 6400. Thankfully the snail wasn’t exactly moving fast, but even so it was a little tricky to get the focus just right given the super thin margins I was working with for depth of field. I really like how you can see the texture of the snail’s body and shell, and even now looking back at this I find myself cheering on the little crawler for making it across that gap. Way to go, little fella!
On a side note, I have been leaning more and more into Lightroom Classic’s AI-powered Denoise feature and this shot is yet another example of how effective it is. Though ISO 6400 is pretty great on a D750, it’s obviously not as crisp and clean as ISO 100, but whatever algorithms Adobe has developed for the Denoise feature work wonderfully.