
La página que intenta visitar sólo está disponible en inglés. ¡Disculpa!
The page you are about to visit is currently only available in English. Sorry!

After retiring from a job teaching high school biology, Ron Dudley took his love of natural history to the field. He now spends most days photographing raptors from a Ford F-150 in his home state of Utah.
Using your vehicle as a mobile blind has distinct advantages, he says. “Birds are much, much less afraid of a vehicle than they are a person on foot, and so you can get much closer.” Rather than use a specialized beanbag to support his camera lens, Dudley hacked a pool noodle—slitting it down its length, covering it in duct tape to keep it from squeaking, and fitting it to the truck’s window frame. He also built a lens caddy for his console that holds the camera securely over rough roads but enables him to lift it out in an instant.
Shooting from a window limits the angle of the shot, but that’s nothing some “creative driving” can’t solve—and it helps to have side mirrors that fold forward out of the way. Dudley also eschews any ride with a diesel engine (too much noise) or daytime running lights that can't be turned off. “You’d be surprised at the things that go into my choice of a new vehicle,” he says.
Here are more of Dudley's tips for using your own mobile blind:
Follow these tips, and you might just capture a photo like this: