Ron, I was able to get about 40 frames of this one,
but as usual only a few were worth processing. He was
all over the damn tree, and the pic above was the one
time he stood still long enough.
Grant: Shooting in RAW is not difficult at all, but the
images will need to be processed. When you shoot a
.jpg with your camera, it takes the RAW data and processes
it through an algorithm in the camera, giving you the .jpg
image. With a RAW image you control the contrast, color,
etc.
FWIW, I use Adobe Lightroom (3.6 since I still use XP),
and it isn't hard to learn at all. An hour or two messing
with it and you'll be on your way to being a fan of RAW
shooting.
You can do a whole lot more with a RAW image in post-processing
than you ever can with a .jpg.
I used to shoot everything in RAW, but that mean a massive
amount of processing, so now when I'm just taking snapshots
of this and that I'll switch to .jpg's, but any serious pics
are shot in RAW (landscape, critters, etc.).