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In the final episode of the series, we bring everything together in real-world wildlife situations where decisions have to be made quickly and under pressure.
Wildlife photography rarely happens in perfect conditions. Subjects move unpredictably, backgrounds become messy, light changes constantly, and there’s often very little time to react. The challenge is learning how to stay intentional when scenes become chaotic.
In this episode, we discuss:
- how strong photographers make decisions in fast-moving situations
- why field awareness matters more than reacting quickly
- the importance of filtering distractions and simplifying scenes
- when patience and repositioning improve a photo
- why choosing not to shoot is sometimes the strongest decision
- how anticipation and observation lead to more consistent wildlife images
We also connect the key ideas from the entire series — intentionality, process, diagnosis, and execution — and explore how they work together in the field.
Part 4 of the series: How to Stop Taking Random Wildlife Photos.
It's time for another podcast...
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