Show Para
Question Numbers: 121-128
Read the passage given below and answer the question that follow by choosing the most appropriate option from the given one:
1. My Love of Nature, goes right back to my childhood, to the times when I stayed on my grandparents' farm in Suffolk. It was my grandmother who encouraged me more than anyone.
2. I got my first camera from my father after I'd graduated, when I had to go diving in Norway and needed a method of recording the sea creatures I would find there. I went off to take my first pictures of sea anemones and starfish. I became keen very quickly. Obviously I didn't have much money in those days, so I did more black and white photography than coloured, but I was still using the camera as a tool to record what I found both by diving and on the shore. I had no ambition at all to be a photographer then, or even for some years afterwards.
3. Unlike many of the wildlife photographers of the time, I've tried from the beginning to produce pictures which are always biologically correct. There are people who would alter things deliberately. They are actually falsifying-changing the natural surroundings to make them prettier.
4. It is important to think about the animal first. There can be a lot of ignorance in people's behavior towards wild animals. More and more people are now going to wild places. The sheer pressure of people, coupled with the fact that there are increasingly fewer places where no-one else has photographed, life has become much more difficult for the professional wildlife photographer.
5. Nevertheless, wildlife photographs play a very important part in educating people about what is out there and what needs conserving. Although photography can be an enjoyable pastime, but it also plays a very important part in educating young and old alike. Of the qualities it takes to make a good wildlife photographer, patience is perhaps the most obvious-you just have to be prepared to sit it out. I'm actually more patient now.
The narrator got her first camera after she graduated.
Read the passage given below and answer the question that follow by choosing the most appropriate option from the given one:
1. My Love of Nature, goes right back to my childhood, to the times when I stayed on my grandparents' farm in Suffolk. It was my grandmother who encouraged me more than anyone.
2. I got my first camera from my father after I'd graduated, when I had to go diving in Norway and needed a method of recording the sea creatures I would find there. I went off to take my first pictures of sea anemones and starfish. I became keen very quickly. Obviously I didn't have much money in those days, so I did more black and white photography than coloured, but I was still using the camera as a tool to record what I found both by diving and on the shore. I had no ambition at all to be a photographer then, or even for some years afterwards.
3. Unlike many of the wildlife photographers of the time, I've tried from the beginning to produce pictures which are always biologically correct. There are people who would alter things deliberately. They are actually falsifying-changing the natural surroundings to make them prettier.
4. It is important to think about the animal first. There can be a lot of ignorance in people's behavior towards wild animals. More and more people are now going to wild places. The sheer pressure of people, coupled with the fact that there are increasingly fewer places where no-one else has photographed, life has become much more difficult for the professional wildlife photographer.
5. Nevertheless, wildlife photographs play a very important part in educating people about what is out there and what needs conserving. Although photography can be an enjoyable pastime, but it also plays a very important part in educating young and old alike. Of the qualities it takes to make a good wildlife photographer, patience is perhaps the most obvious-you just have to be prepared to sit it out. I'm actually more patient now.
The narrator got her first camera after she graduated.
Go to Question: