Originally Posted by
Bill W
HiFiGuy;
Never use honey and here's why;
A honey water solution served up in hummingbird feeders can quickly become toxic and deadly. Honey rapidly ferments and also cultures a deadly bacterium. Contrary to popular belief, honey is not "more natural" than the cane sugar that is sold as white sugar. Honey has been chemically altered by honey bees: it is flower nectar and whatever ever else the honey bee ingested, digested, and spit back out again. Honey is nothing like the sucrose found in flower nectar and white sugar.
Plain white table sugar dissolved in water in a four-to-one solution is about as close to real flower nectar as you can get.
Here's a link if you want to read up on feeding HBs;
[url="http://www.hummingbirds.net/feeders.html]http://www.hummingbirds.net/feeders.html[/url]
100-400 lens; I enjoy the versatility, this lens is on my camera 90% of the time when I'm outdoors.....I even use it for landscapes at sunrise and sunset.
Concerning the sharpness, the prime will always be sharper, but my capture above (w/my eyes and monitor) is sharp enough for me....and remember the photo is enlarged 100%.
Regards
Bill
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