AlaskaHunter
Well-known member
When taking photos of the retriever and bird, I like to get below the dog's eye level.
I try to capture the landscape story the bird came from, some unique aspect of the bird,
if possible reflection in the dog's eye.
Here is an example with a hun where the covey flushed across the stream.
The unique aspect of the bird is the orange face.
![hun.JPG hun.JPG](https://www.hunttalk.com/data/attachments/224/224357-381d551c04e90a78ada531ac401e8036.jpg)
Here is another example where the unique aspect of the goldeneye is the long orange feet.
![goldeneye.JPG goldeneye.JPG](https://www.hunttalk.com/data/attachments/224/224358-56012f13a106a8c1a44788cf72a7981a.jpg)
I try to capture the landscape story the bird came from, some unique aspect of the bird,
if possible reflection in the dog's eye.
Here is an example with a hun where the covey flushed across the stream.
The unique aspect of the bird is the orange face.
![hun.JPG hun.JPG](https://www.hunttalk.com/data/attachments/224/224357-381d551c04e90a78ada531ac401e8036.jpg)
Here is another example where the unique aspect of the goldeneye is the long orange feet.
![goldeneye.JPG goldeneye.JPG](https://www.hunttalk.com/data/attachments/224/224358-56012f13a106a8c1a44788cf72a7981a.jpg)