Quote:


Yes, but that gets into the assistants: if you have the individual skills to do all three, that's great. I've done it as well and it is a rare skill among show photographers. But finding assistants to handle any one of those photographic areas is difficult enough. To find those that are capable of shooting two or three is almost impossible.




Jim,
I guess I'm lucky with my assistants.
I shoot all over Oregon & Washington states
near Seattle I have 4 (that live up there) that are awesome, and in the Portland area I have another 4 ... plus my 20yr old daughter

my assistants all have day jobs, they all know their way around cameras on manual, they've all shot some sort of action in the past ... they all took on the challenge of mastering agility in a low light horse barn at ISO 6400, 1/250th & f/2.8 ... they'd try it, be frustrated & keep coming back until they had a great keeper rate and had that mastered

after that, herding, disc dog, flyball etc all came easy

all of my assistants wanted studio lighing lessons, so we have mini-clinics ... they learn all about setting up, metering & taking portraits (usually dog) ... so I teach what they don't know and have a great crew of reliable photographers for the big shows

just finding the right people is the tough part, keeping them hooked is easy LOL


I shoot Canon

PDXDogPortraits