BACK TO THE HOME PAGE

Click here for our facebook link!

PHOTO ALBUM

OFF SEASON PREPARATION

ADDING ACCESSORIES


TUNING YOUR EQUIPMENT

SHOOTING ESSENTIALS

HUNTING TIPS AND TRICKS

  • BUILDING A PERMANENT STAND
  • CLIMBER STAND TIPS
  • CLEARING SHOOTING LANES
  • FIELD DRESSING 101
  • PHOTOGRAPHING YOUR DEER KILL
  • PROCESSING YOUR KILL
  • WHAT TO DO WITH THE MEAT


MANUFACTURERS INFO AND SPECS

MORE TO COME

CONTACT US

HELPFUL WEBSITES AND FORUMS

SHOOTINGTIME.COM'S
HUNTER OF THE YEAR

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

OTHER USEFUL LINKS


 

 

 

 

Taking good photos of your harvest

So you did all the right things before and during the deer season to finally get a nice animal under your belt.... Whats next? GET A NICE PICTURE OF THAT ANIMAL!!!

We often see too many people who create such a great memory in the field, but forget how nice it is to have a good picture to reflect back on with. Yes it may take some premeditated planning and some "unnecessary time" but a nice picture of a deer is easier to put online for friends to see than it is to drive around with the actual deer or mount.

 

 

Acquire a good digital camera

Digital cameras are a must for every hunter. They allow us to take hundreds of pictures without having to worry about "running out of film" and they make storing images on a computer or posting images to the internet a breeze. Select a camera that has at least 5 megapixels of resolution for quality prints and/or uploaded images.

deer camera

Select a proper background

A quality picture of downed game will have a background similiar to the area where the animal was harvested. Many times you will see a picture of a beautiful buck taken on the tailgate of a truck or hanging in a garage; this is very unprofessional when judging picture content quality. Take the picture in the woods or the field you harvested the animal or, if that is not an option, drive to the nearest property that allows you to use the same type of background in the pictures. A little effort goes a long way.

BAD BACKGROUNDS!!!!!!

whitetail deer picture

 

 

 

Execution of a high quality picture

1. Crop the picture

In the view finder or digital screen, close in on the subject so you are getting the hunter and the deer in the center. Most cameras have zoom features which can make a picture look more professional by creating a blurred background while keeping the subject(s) in focus, but make sure you are not zoomed out beyond the optical zoom. The optical zoom is normally indicated by a vertical line shown somewhere on the zoom meter.

With proper cropping, you will ensure that the hunter and animal are the focus of the picture and not the the first 40 feet of the oak trees in the background!

cropping wildlife pictures

 

 

2. Cosmetic checklist.

- Is the animal's tongue in its mouth?
- Are you wearing the camoflague you were while harvesting the animal?
- Is your weapon included in the picture?

Taking a minute to make the above preparations will result in a great looking shot!

 

 

3. Take the picture between eye level of the animal and the hunter

The angle that you take the picture at affects the quality. By taking this "same plane" picture, you are capturing the best "front on" view that you can with no distortion from bad angles. The hunter also can hold the animal a little further away from his body creating the illusion that the animal is bigger than what it acutually is.

Here are two separate pictures taken from different levels. Which do you think looks better?

taking proper wildlife photos

 

 

 

How to take a quality picture of yourself with an arrow and a camera!


1. Simply screw the nock of a fieldpoint arrow into the threaded tripod hole in the bottom of the camera.

monopod for wildlife photography

 

2. Stick the arrow in the ground. Set the camera's timer. Take picture!!

whitetail deer photograph

 

 

Take many pictures of many poses

With a decent memory card in a camera, you can normally take one hundred or more pictures if you wanted to. While we don't suggest spending hours trying to capture the perfect shot, we do suggest you get at least 20 pictures with at least 3-5 different poses. What may look good to you on the cameras digital playback may not look good on a 20 inch computer screen. Improper cropping, out of focus subjects, poor exposure, and many other unnoticed imperfections at the time may occur so by taking a higher number of pictures, you better your chances for that perfect picture.

GOOD LUCK!!

 

 

-SELECTING THE RIGHT BOW-- DRAW LENGTH SELECTION-- ARROW SELECTION--BROADHEAD SELECTION--QUIVER SELECTION--PROPER FORM -
-KNOT TYING 101--INSTALLING AN ARROW REST--INSTALLING A D-LOOP--INSTALLING A SIGHT--INSTALLING A BOW SLING--INSTALLING A PEEP SIGHT-
-TIMING YOUR BOW--PRESSING A BOW--ADJUSTING DRAW WEIGHT--YOKE TUNING A SOLOCAM--PAPER TUNING--ADJUSTING YOUR SIGHT-
-BOWTECH--HOYT--MATHEWS--PSE-
-BUILDING A PERMANENT STAND--CLIMBER STAND TIPS--CLEARING SHOOTING LANES--FIELD DRESSING 101--AGING OF MEAT-
-
PROCESSING YOUR KILL--WHAT TO DO WITH THE MEAT-
-
HARDWOOD FLOORS--HOCKEY PRACTICE TARGET-

All information on this website is copyrighted 2010 by shootingtime.com
email us at shootingtime@gmail.com