Showing posts with label Critter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Critter. Show all posts

Thursday, April 9, 2015

Crops & Clips: April, 2012 Meme Mashup

My weekly potpourri gathered from the archives features... Looking back three years through the retro-spectroscope to the month of April, 2012...  Striving to find photos to match the various themes: Critters, Fences, Reflections, and Skies... Hoping to have two in each category, but will put no bag limit on critters, which I photograph in abundance.

CRITTERS:

Tricolored Heron in back yard, April 1, 2012

Tricolored Heron in back yard 4-20120401

Brown Thrasher, April 2, 2012:

Brown Thrasher close 20120402

Black-necked Stilts, April 2, 2012:

Black-necked Stilts 20120402

 A male Queen (a contradiction in terms?), April 9, 2012:

Queen male 20120409

Green Heron taking flight, April 10, 2012:

Green Heron taking flight  (view large) 20120410

Green Heron female on April 11, 2012:


Green Heron female 6-20120411

...and a few of bonus Critters, like all these photos, from our local wetlands...

White-tailed Deer, doe, April 15, 2012:

White-tailed Deer portrait 20120415

Raccoon, April 19, 2012:

Raccoon 20120419

Here is a video about some precocious week-old Green Heron babies in the local rookery (April 19, 2012). Now these are really "critters!":



Linking to Misty's  CAMERA CRITTERS,

Linking to Eileen's SATURDAY'S CRITTERS, ________________________________________________ 

FENCE:  I wasn't looking for fences in those days, so they are mostly accidental images. I only found one photo that included a fence. Sunrise over the gravel road (note the entry gate), April 11, 2012:

Sunrise HDR 20120411

Linking to GOOD FENCES by Tex (Theresa). 
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SKYWATCH:  Harbour Lakes wetlands, April 18, 2012:

Harbour Lakes Preserve HDR 20120418

Look up and tell me which bird is different! Snowy Egret with 8 Cattle Egrets, April 11, 2012:

Spot the intruder 20120411

Linking to SKYWATCH FRIDAY by Yogi, Sylvia and Sandy

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REFLECTION: Killdeer, April 4, 2012:

Killdeer 20120404

Mottled Ducks, April 11, 2012:

Mottled Ducks 3-20120411

Linking to WEEKEND REFLECTIONS by James ________________________________________________

Also:

Linking to BirdD'Pot by Anni

Linking to Wild Bird Wednesday by Stewart


Please visit the links to all these memes to see some excellent photos on display ________________________________________________

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Birding on a murky morning

We awoke to dense fog yesterday morning. I wasn't sure whether I even wanted to walk in the wetlands. My camera and  binoculars had spent the night in air-conditioned comfort, so I knew I would face foggy lenses and fuzzy photos. 

The visibility was so poor up ahead towards the Everglades that I figured there would be nothing to see on the wetlands lake:


Miramar Parkway in fog 20150325


Two days earlier I obtained this photo as the fog lifted over the lake:

Fog looking west sepia 20150323

For a change, I walked south on the SW 196th Avenue levee that runs all the way to the Miami-Dade County line. I proceeded about a mile with the expectation that the 1/4 mile visibility would improve after sunrise, at 7:20 AM. Instead the fog clung to the waters of the canal. 

Levee trail southbound fog 20150325


With the camera covered against the light mist that started falling as the upper level fog began to condense, I birded by ear. 


Spider webs were laden with dew. Using my little pocket camera (Canon SX 700 HS) I captured some of the still life. This is the view looking back to the north from the levee trail:


Orb and fog HDR 20150325


Dew dropped from the twigs:


Dewdrops 20150325


An orb festooned with dewdrops reflected a rainbow:


Rainbow Orb 20150325


Ahead, I approached the inlet between the canal and the "big lake" in our development:


Orb and fog HDR 2-20150325


Trying to see through the fog, I hoped to find an eagle that sometimes roosts on Lighthouse Island:


Lighthouse Island 20150325


Back at the computer I gave a "painterly" treatment to a portion of the photo:


Lighthouse Island Painting detail COREL


Over the course of almost two hours I recorded 23 bird species, almost all heard only, and photographed a single bird, this female Boat-tail Grackle, as she hunted for dragonflies at the water's edge:


Boat-tailed Grackle hunting dragonflies 20150325


Boat-tailed Grackle 20150325


Halloween Pennants were numerous:

Halloween Pennant 20150325

As I walked along the trail one flew towards me and appeared to hover right in front of my eyes. It had been trapped by a single thread of spider silk. Within 4 minutes it was wrapped and carried off by the spider:

Halloween Pennant hanging by a thread 20150325

The spider arrives 20150325

The wrapping proceeds 2-20150325

Bringing home the trophy 20150325

Since I have so little to show in the way of photos, here are a few from the past week. March 20 was also foggy, but I got this nice shot of the north shore of the wetlands lake just as the fog was dispersing:

North shore fog HDR 20150320


As expected on the Vernal Equinox, the sun rose directly over the back gate of the Harbour Lakes subdivision. 


Equinox dawn HDR 20150320


That day I fortunately got a second look at the two Black-necked Stilts that had visited a few days earlier. They did not wait for me, so this was a lucky shot between the blades of high grass in front of me. Happily, the blades did not cover the birds and they even added a bit of out-of-focus relief as the stilts coursed over a patch of rocks and lily pads in the lake:

Black-necked Stilts HDR 20150320


A Muscovy Duck, an established feral species, flew overhead. They usually fly low, so this was a treat:


Muscovy Duck flyover 20150318


On March 17 I found only one pair of Yellow-crowned Night-Herons in the rookery. I fear it has been damaged so badly that they will not nest here this year, if ever again:


Yellow-crowned Night-Herons 20150317


The male made a half-hearted display towards the female:


Yellow-crowned Night-Heron display 20150317


On the afternoon of March 16, a quick visit to the local Bald Eagle nest was very rewarding. I found the male on the nest, and he was soon joined by the larger new female, to the left in this photo:


Bald Eagle female joins male on nest 20150316


The female flew up to roost just to the left of the nest. Note that her tail feathers still have dark tips. She just turned four years old and is entering the full fifth year adult plumage stage:


Bald Eagle female returns to roost above nest 20150316


To balance the picture, the male flew up to the right...


Bald Eagle male lands on right branch 20150316


... and the two rested for a while:


Bald Eagle male roosts on right branch 20150316


Then, both returned to the nest and rearranged a few sticks:


Bald Eagle pair on nest 20150316


Unfortunately, a dump truck made a panic stop when the light turned red. Its jake brakes roared and the driver leaned on his air horn. This startled both eagles, and the male flew our to the left and the female exited to the rear of the nest:


Bald eagle male flies from nest 20150316


On my next visit to the nest I saw no eagles, but a Carolina Wren scolded me:

Carolina Wren 2-20150322

He posed on a fence (just to please Tex):


Carolina Wren on fence 20150322

Linking to Misty's  CAMERA CRITTERS,

Linking to Eileen's SATURDAY'S CRITTERS,

Linking to GOOD FENCES by Tex (Theresa). 

Linking to SKYWATCH FRIDAY by Yogi, Sylvia and Sandy

Linking to WEEKEND REFLECTIONS by James

Linking to BirdD'Pot by Anni

Linking to Wild Bird Wednesday by Stewart

________________________________________________

Please visit the links to all these memes to see some excellent photos on display

________________________________________________



Thursday, January 22, 2015

Crops & Clips: Testing my new camera

My weekly potpourri gathered from the archives features... test photos all taken by my new pocket camera, a 16.1 mpx Canon PowerShot SX 700 HS with 30X optical zoom (450mm equivalent). I am seriously considering leaving my big heavy DSLR rig at home on my next travel experience. Most were hand-held, and a few used a monopod. As the moon photo demonstrates, the image stability feature is excellent. Wish me luck!

To compare the images of the pocket camera with those of my DSLR Canon 60D with 420 mm f/5.6 lens, I rigged up this monopod so that both photos could be taken at nearly the same time and at the same distance. Not surprisingly, the DSLR produced sharper images, but I am pleased with the results and think the SX 700 will be my only camera (besides the iPhone) during our train trip through the Canadian Rockies. The pocket camera does great landscapes.

Double camera rig 20141207

Canon SX 700 HS with tripod extender 20141207

CRITTER:

Common Ground-Dove, at a range of 65 feet (about 20 meters, Monopod), December 28, 2014:

Ground Dove at 65 feet CROP Powershot 20141228

Little blue Heron (Monopod), December 18, 2014:

Little Blue Heron Canon Powershot DPP 20141218

Northern Mockingbird (Hand-held) , December 18, 2014:

Northern Mockingbird Canon 60D DPP 20141218

Northern Mockingbird (Hand-held, December 21, 2014:

Northern Mockingbird Powershot 20141221


Palm Warbler at 70 feet (21 meters, Monopod), December 21, 2014:

Palm Warbler 70 ft Powershot 30x optical zoom 20141221

Double-crested Cormorant (Hand-held), December 26, 2014:


Double-crested Cormorant 2-20141226

An example of the pocket camera's macro and image stabilization capabilities is this Monarch butterfly on an  Ixora blossom at a range of about 12 inches (30 cm, Hand-held), January 6, 2015:


Monarch butterfly PowerShot 20150106

Not a critter, but I think this hand-held image of a dewdrop, less than 1 inch, only 2 cm from the front of the lens (AUTO setting) deserves honorable mention, December 16, 2014:

Dewdrop macro Canon SX 700 HS 20141216

Linking to Misty's  CAMERA CRITTERS,

Linking to Eileen's SATURDAY'S CRITTERS,

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FENCE:

Our subdivision's entrance gate (Hand-held, January 6, 2015):

Monaco Cove entrance gate 20150106

Linking to GOOD FENCES by Tex (Theresa). 

________________________________________________

SKYWATCH: 

Wolf Moon rising (Hand-held), January 4, 2015:

Wolf Moon rising 220150104

An example of a sunrise over the local wetlands, (Hand-held), January 3, 2015:

Harbour Lakes 5 min before sunrise HDR COREL 20150103

Linking to SKYWATCH FRIDAY by Yogi, Sylvia and Sandy

________________________________________________

REFLECTION:

Great Egret (Monopod) , December 28, 2014:

Great Egret Powershot 20141228


Linking to WEEKEND REFLECTIONS by James

________________________________________________

Please visit the links to all these memes to see some excellent photos on display

________________________________________________