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A green anole 🦎
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Howdy, I enjoy your imagery and it's always interesting to see Portrait mode used on things other than people, which still seems to be a bit hit and miss by the way it has randomly chosen what to keep in and out of focus in this image!

You have piqued my curiosity as to how you got Photos to export at 96dpi? I can't achieve that with my versions of Photos on either of my Mac computers, iPhone or iPad and is there now an ability to strip exif data in Photos too as this image doesn't have any attached? I don't use the Photos app much so always fall behind with its new features and how to do things in it. :rolleyes:
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Hi, thanks for the comment. I have no idea about the export settings, sorry can’t help. 🤔

Here’s another shot in portrait mode.
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We were lucky enough to have a fireworks show right near our house, so I setup my camera in my backyard and got what I could.

This was taken on a Canon 6D MKII, Bulb mode (a 15 second exposure) f/11 ISO 100, Canon 70-200 f/2.8L lens on a tripod with a remote shutter release.

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I had a real estate photo shoot in a neighboring town and returned via an alternate route, stopping at a county park. It is the springhead for Rock Springs Run and normally, with 300 parking spaces, packed with people - many day forcing "park full" closures as early as 10AM. While the park is open, swimming and tubing is prohibited as people converge around the water activities. With water activities prohibited, it is a photographer's dream...beginning with about 10 cars in the parking lot. (There will be several photos in the series over the next few days)
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There are people who think bison are as docile as cows. There are two problems with such a mode of thinking, the first being that cows aren't always docile, the other is that the thinking is wrong :). Bison are wild, very large animals with very small brains. Fit for purpose, but their first thought isn't your safety:). That's why each year there are the stories out of Yellowstone National Park here in the States of not-very-bright individuals getting gored or flipped by bison whilst trying to get "selfies" with camera phones. This is one of those situations where a camera phone absolutely isn't the right tool for the situation. D850, crop mode, Tammy 150-600, probably somewhere in the 400mm range, from vehicle!

Lounging Bison by Ray Harrison, on Flickr
 
There are people who think bison are as docile as cows. There are two problems with such a mode of thinking, the first being that cows aren't always docile, the other is that the thinking is wrong :). Bison are wild, very large animals with very small brains. Fit for purpose, but their first thought isn't your safety:). That's why each year there are the stories out of Yellowstone National Park here in the States of not-very-bright individuals getting gored or flipped by bison whilst trying to get "selfies" with camera phones. This is one of those situations where a camera phone absolutely isn't the right tool for the situation. D850, crop mode, Tammy 150-600, probably somewhere in the 400mm range, from vehicle!

Lounging Bison by Ray Harrison, on Flickr

So true... I can attest to the cows not always being docile.
Growing up on a farm working around cows daily and then later in my teens and 20's working on a cattle ranch where they ran around 7,000 - 8,000 head of Brahma cow/calf pairs and a few breeder bulls.
I have broken ribs, a broken shoulder blade, broken fingers, damaged knee, and many, many bruises and close calls from working around these animals. Some people just do not get it for sure.
 
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