We encountered this female Southern Ground Hornbill on a trip to the Serengeti National Park in Tanzania in 2018. Hornbills are large, aggressive hunters that feed on lizards, snakes, insects, and when they can get them, baby birds. You can tell it’s a female hornbill by the blue patch under her bill. She was being aggressively dive-bombed by a smaller Wattled Lapwing. Wattled Lapwings nest on the ground, and the young birds are extremely vulnerable to attack. The lapwing was doing her absolute best to pester the hornbill into giving up. Which in fact, she did.
I like the image of the hornbill, but there was not as much separation from the background as I would have liked. Rather than masking and blurring the background in Photoshop, I decided to overpaint the bird, and put her on an entirely created background.
After watching countless hours of You Tube instruction, I invested $1.00 in a set of custom tree and grass brushes marketed by Aaron Blaise, (an extraordinary digital artist and video instructor). Best $1.99 I have ever spent! There were 58 brushes in the set, and eventually, I think I used nearly all of them.
I took the image with I used a Canon EOS 7D Mark II with a Canon 100 - 400mm EF f/4.5-5.6 L IS II USM lens. The exposure settings were 1/500 sec at f/6.3, ISO 500, 400 mm.