Before heading back to our hotel, we returned to ’t Zwaantje—good food, warm light, and a well-earned rest after a long day. Sitting outside in the spring sun, something small joined us at the table: a mining bee, genus Andrena (metselbij in Dutch).

While most would simply enjoy the moment, I saw an opportunity.

My Canon 5DSR was within reach—as usual—so I quickly swapped from the Sigma 24–70mm Art to the Canon MP-E 65mm. From that moment on, it became a different kind of scene. I dropped low and went full paparazzi.

Christel laughed. “Are you trying to kill it?” she joked, watching me fire shot after shot.

And honestly, I understood how it looked.

But macro at this level is unforgiving. At high magnification, depth of field becomes razor-thin—sometimes less than a millimeter. Every breath, every slight movement shifts focus from perfect to lost. Shooting in bursts isn’t excess; it’s necessity.

Andrena bees are solitary ground-nesters, often overlooked compared to honeybees, yet essential pollinators in early spring ecosystems.

So there I was—chasing sharpness on a creature most people wouldn’t even notice.

A quiet moment at a table, turned into a study of life at the smallest scale.

#MiningBee #Andrena #Metselbij #MacroPhotography #ExtremeMacro #Canon5DSR #MPE65 #InsectPhotography #NaturePhotography #WildlifePhotography #CloseUpNature #TinyWorlds #DepthOfField #MacroLife #SpringSun #Pollinators #BeePhotography #NatureLovers #InTheField #OutdoorMoments #BehindTheScenes #PhotographyLife #PatienceAndPractice #NatureObservation #HiddenNature #FieldMoments #VisualStorytelling #ByMaikeldeBakker #MaikeldeBakkerPhotography #WonderingLens
A Speckled wood (Pararge aegeria), or bont zandoogje, resting briefly on a branch along the paths of the Mookerheide. Captured with a Canon 5D Mark IV and 100–400mm. These butterflies are territorial, often returning to the same sunlit spot—making patience and observation key to the shot.

#SpeckledWood #ParargeAegeria #BontZandoogje #ButterflyPhotography #InsectPhotography #NaturePhotography #WildlifePhotography #Canon5DMarkIV #Canon100400 #Telephoto #Mookerheide #DutchNature #ButterfliesOfEurope #NatureLovers #InTheField #OutdoorPhotography #WildlifeMoments #PatienceAndPractice #CloseUpNature #TinyWorlds #NatureObservation #FieldMoments #Biodiversity #SpringVibes #SunlitNature #ThroughTheLens #ByMaikeldeBakker #MaikeldeBakkerPhotography #WonderingLens
Some images are not just about what you see—but about the journey behind them.

This one was captured by my wife during a long, warm 25-kilometer walk across the Mookerheide near Nijmegen. Armed with her Canon 7D Mark II and Sigma 100–400mm, and a small backpack with just the essentials, she spent the day finding her own way in the field. I carried the heavier load—12.5 kg of gear—and together we climbed several steep inclines under the summer sun. By the end, “tired” doesn’t quite cover it.

And somewhere along that journey, she found this: Polygonia c-album, known in Dutch as the gehakkelde aurelia, or in English, the comma butterfly. Named after the small white comma-shaped marking on the underside of its wings, this species is a master of camouflage—often resembling a dead leaf when at rest.

I gave her complete freedom on this one. No intervention, no correction in the moment. Just: observe, try, and we’ll review later.

Back home, we looked at the image together. It works—beautiful subject, strong moment. And just as important, it carries the kind of lessons every photographer learns to see over time: a wing intersecting the eye, a slightly busy foreground, and challenging light. Not flaws to dismiss the image, but signs of growth—of learning to truly observe, to refine, and to recognize what makes an image stronger.

Growth lives in both the success and the imperfection.

And after all that? A well-earned rest and a wonderful dinner at ’t Zwaantje—highly recommended, even for vegan photographers like us.

#PolygoniaCalbum #CommaButterfly #GehakkeldeAurelia #ButterflyPhotography #InsectPhotography #MacroWildlife #NaturePhotography #WildlifePhotography #Sigma100400 #Canon7DMarkII #FieldWork #PhotographyJourney #Mookerheide #Nijmegen #OutdoorLife #HikingAndPhotography #BehindTheShot #PhotoCritique #NatureLovers #WildlifeMoments #PatienceAndPractice #CloseUpNature #TinyWorlds #VeganLife #ByMaikeldeBakker #MaikeldeBakkerPhotography #WonderingLens
Some lessons don’t start with words, but with a simple challenge.

As my wife is getting used to her Sigma 100–400mm, one of the hardest parts has been not the zoom—but finding and locking focus on something small, fast, and unpredictable. So I gave her something to return to whenever the scene felt overwhelming: a hoverfly.

I picked up my Canon 5D Mark IV with the Canon 100–400mm, found a member of the family Syrphidae (hoverflies), zoomed all the way in, took a shot, and showed her what was possible. “Whenever you’re unsure what to shoot,” I told her, “find a hoverfly and practice.”

Hoverflies are perfect teachers. They mimic bees and wasps, yet they hover with remarkable precision, holding position mid-air thanks to wingbeats of up to 200 times per second. Small, erratic, easily lost in the frame—exactly the kind of subject that forces you to slow down, anticipate, and truly see.

Throughout the day, I noticed her raising her camera at moments I couldn’t even follow. Practicing. Missing. Trying again.

And then, at the end of the day, she showed me this image.

Taken with her Canon 7D Mark II and Sigma 100–400mm, fully zoomed in.

Progress doesn’t always shout. Sometimes it hovers quietly in front of you—waiting to be seen.

#Hoverfly #Syrphidae #Zweefvlieg #WildlifePhotography #NaturePhotography #Telephoto #Sigma100400 #Canon7DMarkII #CanonPhotography #LearningPhotography #PhotographyJourney #PracticeMakesProgress #InTheField #NatureLovers #MacroVibes #CloseUpNature #InsectPhotography #FocusPractice #PatienceAndPractice #WildlifeMoments #OutdoorPhotography #PhotographyLife #ThroughTheLens #NatureObservation #ScienceInNature #TinyWorlds #FieldWork #ByMaikeldeBakker #MaikeldeBakkerPhotography #WonderingLens