But, taking about 80 pictures last night, the culprit was not my camera, but was all around me, spitting and thrusting, zigging and zagging my subjects. No matter how fast I tried to force the shutter speed by opening the aperture, the wind was foiling my efforts. You want motion as part of your garden ambiance? You want to capture motion in your photographs? Come move next to me on the Flint Hills and try a few photos of your garden.
Look closely at the picture above, taken of the bright red rugosa-floribunda cross 'Hunter' in my front landscape bed. Some branches, especially the stiffer variegated euonymus just behind the rose and a few of the flowers in the center, are perfectly still, while others are being thrown from side to side, just a blur on the photo. And below, starting to bloom is the miniature climber 'Jeanne Lavoie', the tied-up canes in the center in focus, while one of the new canes in the foreground is whipping side to side.
There has been so much wind this Spring that I'm developing a persecution complex. Several days, driving home from a day of work, I notice that the wind seems calm. The first thing I do on those days, even before supper, is to grab a camera and rush to the garden, only there to find the wind seems to gust every time I aim the camera in anticipation of a shot. Even when there aren't random gusts, there is a constant steadier wind that has been interfering with my closeups day after day. What evil lies in the hills and grass, that it can detect my presence in the garden and summon up a breeze to frustrate my photography?
Please, God, give me just a few calm days here in the Springtime during the rose bloom. I know that August will come inevitably with 100F temperatures and a complete lack of breeze for weeks, but the pictures taken then will often still show motion as the flowers open and quickly dehydrate and shrivel. I'm just asking for a windless day, say Saturday, when the roses are in peak bloom and the sun is perfect and the wind is still. Please?