photo sharing and upload picture albums photo forums search pictures popular photos photography help login
Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Thirty Two: On Safari -- expressing the essence of nature > Leopard in flight, South Luangwa National Park, Zambia, 2006
previous | next
07-JAN-2006

Leopard in flight, South Luangwa National Park, Zambia, 2006

This leopard, the only one I was able to view in Zambia, raced down the trunk of a Sausage Tree (named for the shape of its fruit) only an instant after I had photographed it higher up on its branches. It is moving so fast that even at 1/60th of a second, the shutter records little more than a blur of spots. Yet that blur echoes its speed and strength. Leopards are powerful enough to haul prey as large as full-grown antelopes or baby giraffes high into the treetops, foiling scavenging hyenas or opportunistic lions. The diagonal placement intensifies the energy expressed by the leopard, as does the blur.
You wont see this shot on a postcard rack because it asks something of the viewer – we must see in our minds what we can’t see with our eyes.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ30
1/60s f/4.0 at 68.1mm iso100 full exif

other sizes: small medium large original auto
share
Phil Douglis30-Apr-2008 02:15
Thanks, Geonni, for feeling this image exactly as I intended. It is all about power, movement, and predation.
geonni banner30-Apr-2008 01:16
I think I like this image because it IS what the eye would see in this situation - a spotted blur, vanishing in an instant. I can feel my pupils contract against the brilliant light as the leopard streaks down the trunk. "Where is he?" My mind yells as he flashes across the brightness and vanishes like smoke. I am aware down to the cellular level that this is a consumate predator, and I am, after all, meat.
Phil Douglis15-Oct-2006 00:50
Thanks, Lisbeth, for returning to my galleries to leave this delightful comment. I agree - it is an unusual wildlife image. They are supposed to be tack sharp and perfectly exposed, right? But in this case, the blurred leopard expresses the point, and the burned out sky and leaves make it less picturesque and much more spontaneous in nature. The leopard is master of its environment, and this image conveys a sense of that.
Lisbeth Landstrøm14-Oct-2006 23:51
It is a very beautiful and unusual picture; a sausage-tree dressed up in a well-fitting living leopard. I think the meaning is enhanced a lot by the hard-edged sight of the sky shown between the tree and the leopard. And even by the burn out of the background to the left. To me this strengthens the connection between the leopard and the tree and lets the picture speak even more about adaptation and dependence. Best wishes.
Phil Douglis24-Aug-2006 20:38
Yes, Ceci, I knew you were talking here of big game in general. I just wanted to make the point that you were
very much a cat fancier. Thanks again for this comment.
Guest 24-Aug-2006 20:17
I didn't say this cat was male (I have no way of knowing its gender), but only that those hanging fruits were illustrative of all the big game on view in Africa, animals larger than most anything we have in North America -- excepting the bears. Wild, unconfined, unmanaged animals and their whole anatomies -- particularly elephants -- are accessible to our eyes and cameras. This is what I was referring to. Again, a fabulous action shot of a major predator!
Phil Douglis24-Aug-2006 06:43
"Twined fruits suggestive of testicular fullness....". Wow, Ceci, it's hard to match that. Are you sure its a male? I know you know your cats but I was hard pressed to define its gender. It all happened so quickly. 1/60th of a second and its still a blur --that's how fast it was moving. I like the fact that the leg is planted -- and sharp -- as it hurls its blurred form down that trunk. I am glad you felt the chill, too -- my heart was in my mouth as I made this image.
Guest 24-Aug-2006 06:21
My God, intention in motion, which emphasizes this top predator's camoflage of spots even more. I got a chill seeing this big cat diving headfirst for the ground, but it was one of admiration. The twined fruits dangling heavily above the leopard--suggestive of big game testiclular fullness--talk of the earth's gravitational force that is yanking the animal down. This is such an image of power and grace!
Phil Douglis27-Jan-2006 18:34
Yes, the leopard does fly like an arrow down that tree, and the diagonal thrust of the image compliments its blurred image. I faced the same situation regarding the branches and sky in the background here that I had in the previous image. I wish the washed out area of the image was not there, but it was, and I was not about to clone it or manipulate it because, once again, this image is all about nature, and everything in this image is part of leopard's world, distracting or not. And so it stays as I found it.
Jennifer Zhou27-Jan-2006 14:43
The diagonal composition and the blur do work for me! It is like an arrow flying out..
Phil Douglis26-Jan-2006 06:25
Interesting observation, John. The paw is sharp because it is not moving. It is giving the rest of the body, which blurred, its leverage.
John Reed 26-Jan-2006 04:11
You caught the Leopard's paw in focus, very nice accentuation of the rest of the body in violent motion. Nice job here.
Phil Douglis24-Jan-2006 22:46
Thanks, Dandan. I intend this image a bridge between the preceding and following photographs. It is the lynchpin of a three pictue sequence, propelling it into action, as you say.
Guest 24-Jan-2006 12:27
I am watching the story unfold from the previous one… He is in action!
Phil Douglis24-Jan-2006 03:22
Good point, Tim. The interplay between what is sharp and what is not creates contrast and heightens tension. Actually the entire picture is in focus -- it is just that part of it is blurred due to subject movement, and the other part did not move.
Tim May24-Jan-2006 00:11
I like that part of the tree is in focus - It gives me a referent for the pent up action.
Type your message and click Add Comment
It is best to login or register first but you may post as a guest.
Enter an optional name and contact email address. Name
Name Email
help private comment