Posts in Category: dawn

Dawn Mix

Blackpoint Wildlife Drive, Merritt Island NWR.

Early morning action along Blackpoint Wildlife Drive at Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge. We were out for the World Digiscoper Meet competition at the Space Coast Birding Festival. This is pool of mixed waders: Snowy and Great Egrets, Wood Storks, and White Ibis.

In camera HDR. Sony HX400V. Processed in Lightroom on my Surface Pro 3 tablet.

Bosque Sunrise Sunday

Sunrise at Bosque del Apache NWR

Sunrise at Bosque del Apache NWR

Just a week ago, last Sunday morning, I was standing along the edge of the ponds on Route 1 headed into Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge, before dawn, waiting on the sun and the birds. The congregation had gathered. The parking lots were full, and all up and down the dyke between the road and the ponds the faithful, photographers and birders, stood hushed and expectant. As it was the weekend of the Festival of the Cranes, there were more visitors than usual…just folks who had traveled down from Albuquerque early…many of them making a once a year pilgrimage to Bosque for the dawn and the birds…kind of like the way the congregation swells around Christmas and Easter in any church. (You can always tell a visitor…they have no binoculars and they are attempting to photograph the Geese and Cranes in the half-light with phones, God bless them ๐Ÿ™‚ We stand on the dyke, and the Cranes stand as darker shadows in the shallow ponds between us the mesa and the mountains behind. They too are waiting on the sun. Behind us, across the road and the rail-road track, well away at the other side of the valley of the Rio Grande, the sun itself is climbing up to crest the eastern mesas, seeking the open air between the land and a shelf of clouds along the horizon, filling the sky with gold. As a photographer, I am attempting to take it all in…the whole experience…and I spin there on the alter, between the sunrise itself and the waiting birds. All up and down the dyke I see other worshipers like me caught in the same liturgical dance, some just rotating in place and some, the long lens folk, dancing around the fixed point of their tripods. The birders, more refined in their habits, largely ignore the rising sun and concentrate on the birds, punctuating the dance with stillness. There is a hush among the gathered, but it contrasts with the continual chatter and mutter…the rising chorus of caw and quack and honk…of the cranes and the few geese and ducks among them as they quicken with the coming day.The visitors among us, like visitors to any congregation, are not quite sure what to do. Many watch us as much as they do the sunrise and the birds, seeking clues to what brings out the faithful in the dawn. Some put us to shame in their devotion…this being a once a year event…they are visibly transported. They could not lift their binoculars or cameras if they had them for the wonder. This dawn there is no real climax to the celebration. The sun slides golden above the mesa. Light strikes across the water to illuminate the Cranes as they begin to think of flying out for the day. Far off against the gilded sky large flocks of Geese arise and wing. In moments it is day. The Bosque dawn has come and gone. Slowly, with a lot of chatter now, the congregation begins to disperse and head back to parking lots and cars, stamping feet, thinking of coffee and hot chocolate, and the reminder of their Sunday on the refuge. They will drive the tour loop a few times. Stop at the Flight Deck, the Decks on the far side, and perhaps catch the Snow Geeseย flocksย on the ag fields in full panic, when an Eagle puts them all up in the air at the same time. It will be a good day, fulfilling the promise of the Bosque dawn. And next year, we will all be back, God willing, even the visitors among us. Happy Sunday!

๐Ÿ™‚

Sony HX400V. Processed in Lightroom and Phototastic on a Windows tablet.

Good Morning Sky Thanksgiving!

Pre-dawn sky over the yard, Thanksgiving.

Pre-dawn sky over the yard, Thanksgiving.

Happy Thanksgiving! Like most of the north-east, we got snow yesterday and into this Thanksgiving morning. We woke to trees heavy and ground covered. I got 3/4s of the driveway snowblown with our electric blower before the power went out. I fear there might be a lot of undercooked turkeys today ๐Ÿ™‚

Being out, I could not resist the sky as the sun rose. The top frame is a sweep panorama. The bottom frames are in-camera HDRs. Sony HX400V. Processed in Lightroom on my Surface Pro 3 tablet (finally back from repair). Assembled in Phototastic.

I am posting this, by the way, on the mobile hotspot I use for travel. Make do!

We have a lot to be thankful for today. In particular I am thankful to see this Thanksgiving (as a heart attack survivor). I am thankful for enough health and vigor to get out this morning with the snowblower! And for family: the ones who gather, and the ones who are spread, literally, from coast to coast this morning. And for the goodness of life. For snow heavy on the trees. For dawn light in the sky. And, hopefully, for the power coming back on soon. ๐Ÿ™‚

Morning Glory

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I went to the kitchen yesterday morning for my tea, and was confronted by this in the backyard. Glory! I ran for the camera and snuck out on the back deck, still in my bathrobe, to catch a few shots. It was just the right combination of color, mist, and sun to make magic…to strike glory in the backyard. ๐Ÿ™‚

Sony HX400V. In-camera HDR. Processed in Adobe Express on my new Surface Pro tablet.

Spider Web in the Morning: Happy Sunday!

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A week ago I was in Arcata California. This is from Saturday morning there, after a night of gentle rain and a misty dawn. The spider webs at Arcata Marsh Nature Center were spectacularly jeweled and drapped the bushes in webs of refracted light. I could not resist framing a few with the long end of the 600mm equivalent zoom on the Olympus OM-D E-M10, and then, this morning, collaging three into this composite image.

And for the Sunday Thought: It seems like it ought to be something about transcience and fragile beauty…considering both the fragility of the webs and how temporary the jeweling of the moisture is. These webs, if they survive the morning, will be next to invisible once the moisture drys off the strands. They will go back to being the efficient insect traps they were intended to be.

But I am not feeling either transient or fragile (relatively speaking) this morning. That Saturday I was. I was suffering my first real experience of the full discomfort of acid reflux, and thought I might be having a heart attack…and I was certainly feeling my vunerabiliy, and every moment of my age. I felt like one of those webs…my moments of life like the beads of moisture hung suspended on a fragile web of being. I am considerably better now. Once I figured out what was happening to me, and started on Prilosec OTC and Zantac, the effects began to moderate, and and have receeded to memory now (though I do have a doctor’s appointment tomorrow morning just for reasurrance). I have lost the fragile, suspended feeling.

Now, when I look at these webs I see strength…astounding strength. I see a miracle of engineering in the service of life that comes close to defying the laws of physics. I see beauty in the way the light is collected, focused, in each bead of moisture…how together they turn the dim light of the misty morning into something to wonder at. And I am perfectly willing to see my life as one of those webs…my precious moments strung on a intricate network of intelligence, each strand the ample strength of a faith in the living God. Come breeze and blow. Come sun and dry. You can not erase the wonder of the misty dawn, caught in dew on a spider’s web. You can not erase me. Not because of who I am, but because of who God is! It is good to be alive today. Sunday. Happy Sunday!

Gloucester Dawn

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Bass Rocks, Gloucester Massachusetts. Dawn. I spent parts of two days with a small group of German birders who had come to Gloucester looking for Snowy Owls and winter ducks. We were up and out at first light, before breakfast actually, and on the rocks beyond Bass Rocks looking for King Eider soon after. This view looks out north-east into the Gulf of Maine past Thacher Island’s Twin Lights. As it happens, the line of cloud along the front was passing out to sea, and we had a few hours of sunshine before the next front moved over us. (We did not find King Eider…but later in the morning and further north, north of Rockport, we did find a nice pod of Harlequin Ducks…which made my German friends happy! For me the sunrise was enough.)

Sony NEX 3NL with 16-50mm zoom. 24mm equivalent. Sunset/sunrise mode. ISO 200 @ 1/100th @ f16. Processed for HDR effect in Snapseed and Photo Editor by dev.macgyver on the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 2014.

All in a Day in the Backyard.

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From dawn to dusk in our backyard yesterday. From an awesome -11 degree sunrise to a 5 PM blizzard. We do it right in Maine ๐Ÿ™‚ The way life is supposed to be. (And as I get the snowblower out of the basement to deal with 8 inches of fresh snow this morning I am thinking, “yeah, maybe not so much ๐Ÿ™‚

Still, it is good discipline to find the beauty where you are, and to celebrate it. Keep those eyes open and those cameras clicking! It is good for the soul.

Sony NEX 3NL with 16-50mm zoom. 24mm equivalent. Sunrise: ISO 1000 @ 1/160th @ f4. Blizzard: ISO 500 @ 1/160th @ f4. Processed in Snapseed and Photo Editor by dev.macgyver, and assembled in Pixlr Express on the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 2014.

Clearing Before Dawn

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Clearing up the snow that is. Carol had to play at an 8 am Mass, so I had the snowblower out Sunday morning before first light to clear up 4 inches of wet, clingy snow from the walk and drive. I finished just as the sky to the east was beginning to lighten, and had to try this hand-held twilight mode shot with the new Sony NEX 3NL. It takes 6 images and then processes them down into one with less blur and less noise than a single hand-held shot could manage in this light. I have had similar modes on other cameras. Some work well, and some do not. It looks like the NEX implementation is one of the good ones.

24mm equivalent field of view. f3.5 at a nominal ISO of 6400. Processed in Snapseed on the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 2014.

Sunrise of over Long Island

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It was late in the day yesterday before I realized that it was not, in fact, Wednesday…certainly long after I posted my Pic 4 Today in the #wildlifewednesday category on Google+ ๐Ÿ™‚ So it is not surprising that I also remembered,ย  about the same time, that I had a few shots form my last day on Long Island still on the camera and unprocessed. They were more out the window of the hotel shots, this time of the sunrise. This shot is a lot more Processed than usual…approaching overcooked,ย  but, as an image I think it holds some interest.

Samsung Smart Camera WB800F in Rich Tone mode. Processed in Snapseed, using the new HDR Scene filter, on the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 2014.

Dawn on the Prairie

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Just a quick post from the first field trip of the Potholes and Prairies Birding Festival. Samsung Galaxy S4 in HDR Mode. Processed in PicSay Pro on the phone.