New Monthly Competition Guidelines
The Mile High Wildlife Photography Club Board of Directors has approved a new set of Monthly Competition Guidelines.
The major change is to do away with "Hand of Man" as a discriminator between the two wildlife categories and instead use "Captive or Controlled." The regular Wildlife category is for animals whose normal, everyday movements are not controlled by man and are free to roam. The new Wildlife - Captive or Controlled category is for wildlife under controlled conditions, including, but not limited to, zoos, game farms, captives, rehab centers, and domesticated wild animals in a natural setting. For both categories, the animal(s) must be the primary focal point, and evidence of the hand of man or the controlled environment, if any, must be secondary.
The complete set of guidelines are given below with changes shown in red.
Monthly competitions are open to all club members and are divided into two levels:
- Club for the general membership
- Masters for veteran club members whose past history of competition entries has demonstrated their photographic abilities at an extremely high level
The Wildlife and Scenic categories are part of each competition. The Wildlife - Captive or Controlled and Open categories alternate.
Images submitted in categories other than Open may be enhanced or changed using any of the tools available in a post processing graphics editing program, except one cannot copy or significantly alter the primary subject or primary parts of the image in any way, nor can one import items from another image. The intent of the original image must be maintained. Images may be color, black-and-white, or toned (i.e., sepia).
There are no post processing restrictions for the Open category. Creativity is encouraged.
Up to three images may be entered by each member, with a maximum of two in any one category.
If in doubt about the suitability of an image for a particular category, bring the image to someone on the competition committee for their recommendation prior to entering it. If approved, it may be entered into a subsequent competition.
Entries must be submitted according to the Digital Image Submission Guidelines.
Entries that do not receive an award (1st, 2nd, 3rd, or HM) may be re-entered in future club competitions.
- Wildlife whose normal, everyday movements are not controlled by man and are free to roam.
- No domesticated, captive, or controlled animals.
- The animal(s) must be the primary focal point, and evidence of the hand of man, if any, must be secondary.
- The intent of the original image must be maintained.
- Images may be color, black-and-white, or toned (i.e., sepia).
- The competition judge will be the final determiner of whether an image is appropriate to the category.
- Wildlife under controlled conditions, including, but not limited to, zoos, game farms, captives, rehab centers, and domesticated wild animals in a natural setting.
- The animal(s) must be the primary focal point, and evidence of the hand of man or the controlled environment, if any, must be secondary.
- The intent of the original image must be maintained.
- Images may be color, black-and-white, or toned (i.e., sepia).
- The competition judge will be the final determiner of whether an image is appropriate to the category.
- Scenic, geological, botanical, and meteorological subjects.
- Man-made objects or wildlife, whether they are incidental or are intended to enhance and be an integral part of the image, are acceptable as long as they are a minor compositional element and not a main focal point of the image, nor should they be of a distracting nature from the natural elements of the picture. Acceptance of such images will be at the judge's discretion.
- The intent of the original image must be maintained.
- Images may be color, black-and-white, or toned (i.e., sepia).
- Images of nature in any form.
- Any image that does not fit into the other categories can be entered in this category.
- Artistic manipulation is allowed.
Domesticated animals, such as dogs, cats, cows, and ranch horses, are not allowed in any category. The following list of examples, which is not exhaustive, is intended to provide additional information about the type of images allowed in the Wildlife and Wildlife - Captive or Controlled categories.
Example images that fit into the Wildlife category:
- Mountain goats atop Mt. Evans with no evidence of man
- Collared wolf in Yellowstone
- Zebra in an African park crossing a dirt track
- Wild bluebird sitting on a barbed wire
- Wild hummingbird feeding at a cultured flower or at a plastic feeder where the feeder is covered by a flower
Example images that fit into the Wildlife - Captive or Controlled category:
- Zoo animal where the animal dominates the image and the background is natural-looking
- Game farm animal with no evidence of man in the image
- Captive hawk sitting on a fence post
- Captive barn owl sitting in an old barn window
not to be downloaded or reproduced in any way without the written permission of the photographer.