Posts in Category: Virginia

Leaves on Thin Ice

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I am not sure what I find so attractive about this shot? It is pretty simple. A scattering of rich brown leaves? A thin coat of ice over asphalt, showing some lacy patterning? The quality of the noon-day Virginia light?

Canon SX50HS. Program with – 1/3rd EV exposure compensation and iContrast. ISO 100 @ 1/200th @ f5.6. 210mm equivalent field of view. Processed in Snapseed on the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 2014.

Practicing for the squirrel Olympics!

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I actually quite like squirrels. But I do find that their antics are a lot more attractive, a lot more fun, in a park in Virginia far far away from the birdseed on my back deck than they are at home. Strange how that works. Virginia had a cold snap while I was there, being at the edge of the Polar Vortex…it was 5 above zero on Tuesday morning, but by mid-day Thursday the temperatures were back up in the mid-forties, and the Squirrels were making up for lost time. Lots of foraging going on…but also lots of what I can only call play…unless of course there really is a Squirrel Olympics…then it would definitely be practice. This aspiring Squirrel acrobat was testing him (or her) self against gravity. How long can I cling? How flat can I get? It was such an odd pose that it tempted me to take way too many pictures…all of which are just about identical.

Canon SX50HS. Program with – 1/3rd EV exposure compensation and iContrast. ISO 320 @ 1/1000th @ f6.5. Processed in Snapseed on the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 2014. Cropped slightly for composition.

Red-heads have more fun…

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We do not get Red-headed Woodpecker in Maine. Finding them actively foraging in a small park in Virginia when I visited on yesterday’s mid-winter day was a real treat. Such bright birds! I was doing a small, priavate, one-on-one photo workshop, based around the Canon SX50HS, and the camera certainly comes into its own in shots like this. Hand-held at 1200mm equivalent, the camera catches a very satisfying image of a relatively small bird at a good distance. I am not sure what kind of berries the Red-heads were collecting, but they were very busy birds.

Canon SX50HS. Program with -1/3rd EV exposure compensation and iContrast. ISO 500 @ 1/1000th @ f6.5. As above, 1200mm equivalent field of view. Processed in Snapseed on the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 2014. Cropped slightly for scale and composition.

Decorated Leaf

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The light was lovely by the time I got to the little pond by the office on Tuesday after work and the dragonflies were out in Virginia numbers…lots of Amberwings and more Blue Dashers than you see at three such ponds in Maine. On the other hand that was about it. There were a couple of Slaty Skimmers, but no other “large” flies. Still we takes what we can gets 🙂

This Blue Dasher posed nicely and I love the light in the leaves…in especially like how the dasher is cupped by the light.

Canon SX50HS. 1800mm equivalent field of view. Program with my usual modifications. Processed in PicSay Pro on the 2013 Nexus 7.

Little Blue Butterfly. Happy Sunday!

I am just back from a week in Virginia at our corporate offices. We moved recently, to an upscale business park west of Richmond, and our building is right next to the last in an extensive system of landscape and drainage ponds that run the length of the park. There is a surprising amount of wildlife around those ponds…from Canada Geese, by way of Belted Kingfisher, to Dragon and Butterflies. I always try to spend a lunch hour or two, or some time right after work, around the ponds on every office visit.

This is an Eastern Blue butterfly, and it is really tiny…less than a half inch wing tip to wing tip, so looking at it on the lcd of my 14 inch laptop it is about 2x life size. The little tails make the identification easy as the other Blues common to VA do not have them.

I like how the butterfly floats above the out of focus busy background and how the powdery blue stands out against the light tans of the fallen reeds.

The image was taken from about 5 feet, at about 1800mm equivalent field of view (1200mm optical zoom plus 1.5x digital tel-converter function). Canon SX50HS. Program with iContrast and –1/3EV exposure compensation. f6.5 @ 1/640th @ ISO 160. Processed in Lightroom for intensity, clarity, and sharpness. 

And for the Sunday Thought: I always find a week in the corporate office twice as tiring as week working from my office at home (more tiring even than a week of back to back birding festivals where I am out early and in late, and spend hours at day talking to birders 🙂 I don’t work any harder in the corporate office than I do at home, and I certainly don’t get any more done (generally not as much), but it takes more out of me. And it is not that I get less rest, living in a hotel. My evening routine processing images if I have any, then watching a few Hulu or Amazon Prime shows is the same, and I get to bed at the same time. ?? Though I talk to my wife less, we do talk at least twice a day, and often longer at a stretch than when talk at home some days.

Partially I think it is the lack of natural light. At home I work in front of a window and can look up and out anytime. In the office I am buried in the back of a maze of hall ways, with no view to the outside.

Then too, at home I can walk to the kitchen and make a cup of tea when ever I want to. We have a kitchen, and when I remember to bring it, tea at the office too…but it is not the same. At the office I have to go out to eat for lunch…find a restaurant, and generally since I am eating with colleagues, talk a good deal of business over our enchiladas or pizza. At home I eat at my desk, and spend most of an hour outside about 3 days a week. Even if I don’t get outside, I read or watch something from Amazon and do not think about business at all for an hour.

Of course, the only connection to this picture is that it was taken on a day at the office when I ate alone and got back in time to spend a half hour outside.

The truth is, the weariness I feel after a week in the office, is not a physical weariness at all. It is a soul weariness. The soul (our inner self and the self we present to the world) is, or should be, the physical, temporal manifestation of the spirit, in all times and in all places. It should be the spirit at work in the world. The energy and life of the spirit fill the soul like rising waters fill a spring, like sunlight through a window fills a room with light, like the air I breath fills my body with oxygen, like electricity turns a lump of plastic or metal and silicon and copper (my laptop or my Kindle Fire) into a universe of music and images and ideas…into whatever I want or need from the world around me.

When I am in the office my soul is so focused (necessarily) on getting the job done and making the business work for all my colleagues, that the flow of life from the spirit is pinched, constricted. It is not that I stop breathing the life of the spirit, it is that my breathing becomes shallow, and sometimes it is too long between breaths. It is like I am trying to run my laptop on batteries without ever plugging in long enough to fully recharge, or like the electricity that the wall plugs supply simply does not have the amps to get the job done.

I don’t know that there is any cure for it. I suppose I would get used to it if I worked in the office full time. Or then again, I might just get used to being that tired all the time.

I know that when I have to spend a week in the office, it is the little blue butterflies at lunch time that help to get me through it.

Six-Spotted Fishing Spider

I am in Virginia for meetings at the office this week, and during lunch yesterday I went down to the little industrial estate pond at the edge of our parking lot. There were six species of dragonflies, including a lot of really fresh looking female Eastern Pondhawks (and a Belted Kingfisher!), but the highlight was this spider. According the wiki on the subject, Six-spotted Fishing Spiders should have been common just about everywhere I have lived or visited in North America, but I am certain this is the first one I have ever seen…or at least the first one I have ever looked at. They walk on water, but they live along the shore. This one is hunting. Apparently they will sit like this on the shore or over water, for hours, waiting for prey to come within reach. They can dive under a few inches as well. They are looking for tadpoles, invertebrates, and the occasional small minnow. Hence the name.

The striking pattern and large size (as big as a common Garden Spider) makes them easy to identify (once you actually look at one). I think it could be my best spider to date!

Canon SX40HS. Program with iContrast and –1 EV exposure compensation.  1680mm equivalent field of view. f5.8 @ 1/640th @ ISO 400. Processed in Lightroom for intensity, clarity, and sharpness.

6/27/2012: Orange Bluets in Tandem

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I am still in Virginia at the Virginia Crossings Wyndham Resort doing the corporate retreat. This is another find from my little photoprowel down by the golf course ponds. This is a pre- or post-mating tandem pair of Orange Bluets. There are many Bluets damselflies in North America, and most of them are a bold electric blue…or at least the males are. The Orange is clearly a member of the family despite its color. The male could be mistaken for many of the females of other species, and but none are quite as aggressively orange! Electric orange? It must be the height of breeding for Oranges, since tandem pairs outnumbered single damselflies.

Canon SX40HS in Program with – 1 /3EV exposure compensation. 1680mm equivalent field of view. f5.8 @ 1/60th @ ISO 800. Because the evening light was low I set the ISO manually to get workable shutter-speeds…and even then the Canon image-stabilization was stretched to its limits at such high magnification. This image begins to break down at larger viewing sizes, but it is a fun image on your average monitor or laptop. 🙂

Processed on my Xoom Android Tablet in PicSay Pro for intensity, clarity, and sharpness.

6/26/2012: Sunset Heron

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I am in Virginia for a few days doing a corporate retreat thingy for work. We are at the Wyndham resorts Virginia Crossing facility which has a golf course and associated ponds, so, there being no official activities the first evening, after supper I took a walk down to the water to see what I could see. There was, surprisingly, a Kingfisher calling over the far pond, lots of dragonflies in the last of the sunlight (perhaps not so surprisingly), and eventually this Great Blue Heron standing against the setting sun reflected in the water. What could be finer?

Canon SX40HS in Program with – 1/3EV exposure compensation and ISO manually set to 800. f5.8 @1/125th. 1080mm equivalent field of view.

Processed on my Xoom Android Tablet in PicSay Pro for intensity, clarity, and sharpness.

2/24/2012: Crab Apples in Bloom, Virginia

I arrived in Virginia in a mini-blizzard, and spent my first morning trying to keep my feet dry and still get out to see a bit of the snow shrouded landscape. Of course the snow was mostly gone by the end of the day, and by Thursday, yesterday, the temperatures were in the more seasonable upper 60s. When I left work at the sun was still a half hour from setting, birds were calling, and the pansies in the industrial park plantings were bright. I had to take a little photo-prowl.

I am pretty sure these are ornamental Crab Apple blossoms. There are many of these trees in the industrial park, and, since the park is about 30 years old now, the trees are well grown and put on a brave show every spring. This is one of those industrial parks with landscaping. There are lawns and hedges, pine groves, a whole series of catchment ponds with fountains, rock walls, gazebos, ornamental reed beds, etc. And I would love to have the pansy concession! Here is another view of the Crab Apple blooms.

The difference between the shots is that the first was taken at the long end of the zoom, at 840mm equivalent from about 4.5 feet, for a telephoto macro effect…with the subject well isolated against a soft background. The second shot is a wide-angle macro, taken from less than a quarter inch, and I had to find a clump of flowers that I could catch sharp against the mass of flowers above and behind.

Canon SX40HS in Program with iContrast and –1/3EV exposure compensation. 1) f5.8 @ 1/125th @ ISO 800. As you see, the light had already about gone by the time I got to the trees. 2) f4 @ 1/50th @ ISO 200.

Processed in Lightroom for intensity, clarity, and sharpness.

2/21/2012: Three Birds on a Snowy Day in VA

So, I had planned this trip to Virginia for a week of meetings and face-time at the office. Flights on Monday were prohibitively expensive, so, I thought, I will just fly down on Sunday. We don’t have any children who actually go to school (we home-school) so we are not as attuned to the vacation and holiday schedule as some households, which is why it never occurred to me that the office would be closed on Monday. President’s Day! By the time I realized, less than 30 minutes before my flight, it was too late.

And then, of course, I flew from relatively spring like Maine into a raging blizzard in Richmond. They got 6 inches at the airport and I woke to snow shrouded trees, white lawns, and inches of wet slush in the parking lots of Chester. I did not pack my winter boots.

Still, in light of Sunday’s revelation about keeping more current with my photography, I got out for an hour to Henricus City Park and Dutch Gap Conservation Area to see what could be seen. I was dependent on finding bare paths and ground, as my dress crocs are in no way suitable for snow.

There were lots of Ring-necked Ducks on the big marsh (pretty much a lake after the storm) as you drive into Henricus City Park. There were also a few Northern-shovelers, Mallards, Coots, and Canada Geese. The Veery and Red-bellied Woodpecker were down near the boat ramp. And yes, I made it back to the hotel with relatively dry feet. My socks dried in less than an hour. 🙂

Of these three birds, I have always thought both the Ring-necked Duck and the Red-bellied Woodpecker were woefully miss-named. Who has ever seen the neck ring on the Ring-neck Duck?…while the ring on the bill is so obvious. What’s wrong with Ring-billed Duck? And the woodpecker? I guess there is some excuse. If you called every red-headed woodpecker “Red-headed Woodpecker” then where would we be… Still. Red-bellied does not leap right out at you when looking at this bird. Okay…I get the Veery. It is an ear thing, and I am okay with that.

All three shots with the Canon SX40HS at 1680mm equivalent field of view (840mm optical plus 2x digital tel-extender function) handheld. Program with iContrast and –1/3EV exposure compensation. 1) f5.8 @ 1/400th @ ISO 100. 2) f5.8 @ 1/500th @ ISO 200. 3) f5.8 @ 1/200th @ ISO 100.

Processed in Lightroom for intensity, clarity, and sharpness.