Black and Green or Green and Black

Green and Black Poison Dart Frog: Frog Heaven, Sarapiqui, Costa Rica, March 2025 — Much like Zebras, there might be some debate as to whether this poison dart frog is more green on black or black on green…but the official name is Green and Black. It is, even more officially, Dendrobates auratus. They are in the same family as the bright red and blue Strawberry (or Blue-jeans) poison dart frog, but a different species. They are slightly larger as well as being, of course, about as totally a different color as you can get. 🙂 Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 265 and 463mm equivalents. By the light of my Ulanzi Photo Flashlight (and led light not a flash), using my little travel tripod. Aperture preferred program with my macro modifications. f16 at 1/30th. Processed in Photomator.

Happiness

Eastern Bluebird: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, May 2025 — I am in the section of my Costa Rica photos where I was photographing frogs and snakes, and, being Sunday, I do not want to post a photo that I know will make some of you uncomfortable…so I offer this lovey, always faithful, bluebird from our back yard. 🙂 Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Cardinal

Northern Cardinal: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, April 2025 — I sometimes feel that no morning is compete without a bird photo, and since my pic for today was a frog, I will offer you this bright spring Cardinal from our back deck the other day. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Taken through a double glazed deck door and processed in PhotoQuality and Photomator.

Red-eyed Leaf Frog

Red-eyed Leaf Frog: Frog Heaven, Sarapiqui, Costa Rica, March 2025 — The Red-eyed Leaf Frog is probably the poster child for Costa Rican conservation…and maybe for Central American Conservation, or even Rainforest Conservation. It is just such a stunning subject for photography, with its unlikely combination of bright colors and quirky looks, and is the one non-bird species that almost every photographer who visits Costa Rica wants to photograph. Now I am going to tell you that almost every photo you have ever seen of a Red-eyed Leaf frog was posed. It is possible to find them, around the decorative pool at Selva Verde Lodge, or just out in the Rainforest, where they can be photographed “in situ” so to speak, but those are not the photographs you have likely seen. The folks at Frog Heaven brought this frog in to their little photo shelter in the rainforest and placed it on the woody vine for us to photograph. No flash was used, nor is flash allowed. These were taken by the gentle light of my made-for-purpose hand-held led. The folks at Frog Heaven are very careful in handling the wild fogs…it is their business…and they truly care about the wellbeing of the frogs on their property. No harm was done, but the frog’s night was disrupted. I do have mixed feelings about that…but these are without doubt my best photos to date of Red-eyed Leaf Frogs. I offer them as an incentive to protect the rainforest, as the people at Frog Heaven do every day…without photographers eager to photograph frogs and the skill of the Frog Heaven workers, and the vision of the owners, this property would be what it was a generation ago…just another banana plantation on the river. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. My macro modifications to Aperture Preferred Program. f14 and f20 for increased depth of field. -1 to -2 EV to balance highlights and shadow under the artificial light. Processed (including noise reduction) in Photomator.

Nature through new eyes

In my late 20s I put my camera down for several years. I had come to think that the camera and my constant looking for pictures was getting between me and my experience of the moment…all the living moments that make up life in this world. But then, in my 30s I picked a camera up again. I was in a brand new landscape, beginning, in many ways, a brand new life, and I missed the focused attention, the machine in my hands that forced me to be attentive to the moments as they passed…to be just that much more aware and vigilant to see and experience. And I missed being able to preserve and to share my experience of those moments. And I came to realize that photography is, for me, a form of worship…an act of praise…a pointing out…a highlighting of those moments when God is speaking in creation…whether it is a landscape revealed in ever changing light, or bird caught being a bird as only a bird can be (like this young male Purple Finch), or the unlikely beauty, the totally other beauty, of a bug in a flower bud. I learned to set my camera up so I don’t have to think about technical photography…only about putting a frame around the speaking moment. It is good practice, because, of course every moment speaks…God speaks every moment into being…new and never before seen…every moment is worthy of that frame, if we only practice to see.

Pine Warbler

Pine Warbler: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, April 2025 — We have at least one bright male Pine Warbler and several duller female or young male Pines hanging around the yard the past week or so. We saw some, surprisingly, in February, briefly, but these are becoming regular. This one was out under the pine where I have a feeding station. They really like suet and mealworms. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Northern Ghost Bat

Northern Ghost Bat: Frog Heaven, Sarapiqui, Costa Rica, March 2025 — When we visited in March the folks at Frog Heaven were hosting a Northern Ghost Bat. Ghost Bats are solitary, rare, and seldom seen, but this one had found a roost right next to Frog Heaven’s little photo pavilion in the rainforest. They are rare enough so that our guide, born in Costa Rica, a life-long resident, and a birding and photography guide for going on 40 years, in the rainforest or cloud forest almost every day of his adult life, had never seen one before. Such a treat! Such a gift. Notice how the bat is hanging. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent (cropped and upscaled for something like 2000mm equivalent…the bat was at least 30 feet above us and only about 3 inches long). Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Nature through new eyes

From this morning’s CAC reflection.

“Have you ever had an encounter like this in nature? Perhaps for you, it occurred at a lake or by the seashore, hiking in the mountains, in a garden listening to a mourning dove, even at a busy street corner. I am convinced that when received, such innate theology grows us, expands us, and enlightens us almost effortlessly. All other God talk seems artificial and heady in comparison. “

But, of course, in the reflection this is grounded in the twisted and uniquely beatutiful trunk of a great cottonwood in the back yard…a trunk that appears to have grown without rhyme or reason, following a path to the sun that we find difficult to understand, but which satisfies our sense of beauty…of rightness…or wholeness in a way the straight trunk of a pine often does not (but always should).

Somehow God reveals himself, to those with open eyes and hearts, in nature especially in the odd, the unique, the inexplicably beautiful, the unlikely thrust of life against the odds…the unreasoned patterns in bed rock, the unruly piles of clouds.

As a nature photographer I go out looking. I want to be “expanded and enlightened effortlessly”. That is what I am doing out there.

So here it is…the unlikely beauty of the common skunk cabbage, attesting to the unlikely reality of God’s love and care, God’s craftsmanship, in the smallest and most humble of places.

Carolina in the brush

Carolina Wren: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, April 2025 — I spent another hour in my blind by the feeding station under the pine, and this time got to see our Carolina Wren pair in their natural environment. I see them on our deck at least once a day, or sitting on the clothes line, but is somehow better to see them in the leaf litter doing what they do most of the time, even if the brush gets in the way. 🙂 Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Nature through new eyes

“Only your soul can know the soul of other things. Only a part can recognize the whole from which it came. But first something within you, your True Self, must be awakened. Most souls are initially “unsaved” in the sense that they cannot dare to imagine they could be one with God/Reality/the universe. This is the illusion of what Thomas Merton (1915–1968) called the “false” self and what I have taken to calling the “separate” or small self that believes it is autonomous and separate from God.” — Richard Rohr

What do you see in this photo? When the soul of the universe speaks to the soul of the photographer, the photographer frames the speaking moment, saves it, and shares it. That is all there is to photography. Just a frame that says “I saw this. You might too.” But ah…in the act of seeing and framing and sharing there is a miracle. Only that self that is one with God, the creator of all, can see the beauty, the loving touch, in creation. It is not something to boast about. I am humbled every time, with every photo, that such an imperfect and transient instance of the life of God as I am is allowed to experience, is equipped to appreciate, the overwhelming and ever living wonder of God’s loving creation. The act of seeing and framing and sharing nurtures the part of me that dares to imagine that I am one with God/Reality/the universe. I can only pray that what I photograpy will nurture that part of you too.