Species: Squirrel Monkey | Location: Amazon Basin, Near The Amazon Lodge, Ecuador
This shot was taken in the morning from our boat in the Amazon basin near The Amazon Lodge. Our Nat Hab guide spotted the monkey first and the boat paused as more monkeys appeared. We must have been there for at least 10 minutes as a dozen or so monkeys played and frolicked in the trees above us. They were also apparently out hunting for food. I was fortunate to capture this image just as this monkey began to eat a leg of the doomed grasshopper in his grasp. And that makes this photo special to me.
I like how this shot does not have any tree branches or leaves getting in the way of the subject and how the subject's depth of field helps it pop amidst the less focused jungle growth around it both in front and behind. I also like how there's almost a perspective illusion of the shot being taken from up in the trees looking down rather than from down below looking up. I originally cropped this photo much closer to have the action dominate the image more but after experimenting with different crop options I found zooming out to a wider view made for a more interesting and better story telling capture.
About The Photographer
I have been a passionate photo hobbyist on and off for over 50 years. My primary interest has always been nature and wildlife. After retiring in 2013, following a 39 year long career at Warner Bros, my retirement gifts to myself were a new set of golf clubs, a fancy new road bike and some new Nikon photo gear. I have been playing golf 3 days a week for most weeks of the past several years. I rode my bike about a half a dozen times and it has been gathering dust in my basement ever since as I still think about taking it out again but never do. And photography remains a dear hobby passion growing more satisfying than ever as I move on into my seventies. Over the past couple years I updated my Nikon gear again and found my interest in photography take another leap. I found myself devoting more time with it as I became more critical of what it took to satisfy my vision of what defined a "good shot" for me. At my local Marin County Fair in Northern California this year I entered a photo competition for the first time and got 2 honorable mention ribbons. And for the first time one of my photos went up for sale and sold (for $250). A little validation can go a long way, and yet like my bike that I think about riding again but never do, I continue to think about setting up a photo website of my own, or an Instagram page, or a Flicker page, or even a Facebook page but never do. Maybe one of these days, just not yet, not today, maybe tomorrow. This summer my wife and I went on our first Natural Habitat trip and it was the best vacation a photo hobbyist who loves taking pictures of birds and wildlife could possibly imagine. We spent nearly a month in Ecuador and Peru, visiting The Cloud Forest, the Amazon, The Galápagos Islands and Peru. I literally took almost 20,000 photos. I have spent the past month going through them all, deleting most, and trying to find the "good ones". The ones where good natural lighting, good camera settings, good subject and a special moment in time and place all converge, Today I am submitting 5 of those that I think are amongst my good ones from that trip in this contest.Vote for this photo in the Nat Hab's 2024 Guest Photo Contest People’s Choice Awards! You can vote once per day, and each time you vote you’ll be entered for the chance to win a $500 Visa Gift Card or a $500 WWF Donation.