A Cinerous Tit (Parus major) sitting on the balustrade of the balcony outside Jogi Mahal, a medieval hunting lodge in Ranthambhore National Park, India.
Long focal length lenses are hardly talked about in bokeh terms. They all render distant backgrounds blurry and smooth. In wildlife photography, the subject usually gets overwhelming importance within the frame and all other composition considerations take a secondary position.
In this instant, the Nikon ZF and the 300mm f4 PF did well to gradually smoothen out the pillars/ decorations on the stone balustrade. It was late in the day and I had stopped for a cup of tea. The Tit was attracted by biscuits and hence ventured close. This was at MFD. Had the background been more mixed, then the bokeh would have been far more busy, a featured tyical to PF lenses.
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