Lobster Traps on Timber Island, ME
Saturday mornings growing up we watched those old black and white African adventure films on TV, the ones where they were always looking for the Elephant Graveyard and imagined Ivory wealth. Our walk on Timber Island this week made me think of them…not the black and white part…though the winter palette of grays and blues was pretty basic…but the graveyard part. Timber Island is evidently the place old lobster traps come to die. There are piles of them on the shore. Might be intentional piles…as in someone piled them up to get them out from underfoot…and might be current piles, just as they were deposited by the sea as it churns around the island at high tide. Hard to tell. For sure, there are, as yet, nothing equivalent to Ivory hunters looking to claim the wealth of twisted metal and bright plastic. More’s the pity. I’d be happy to play the part of the native boy and lead them too it…if for nothing else that to get them out from underfoot. 🙂
Sony HX400V at 24mm equivalent. In camera HDR. Processed in Lightroom on my Surface Pro 3 tablet.
From Timber Point looking up the Little/Pellagrini River
I only discovered Timber Point and Timber Island this fall, though it was apparently added to the Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge in 2011, and the trail officially added to the National Recreational Trail System in 2013 after a long campaign, headed up by the Trust for Public Lands and local stakeholders, to raise funds for its purchase and protection. To complicate matters, the property includes the Ewing summer home, a classic seaside estate…and the Fish and Wildlife Service is currently in the study phase of drawing up a plan to use (or remove) the buildings. There is an active public group attempting to convince the FWS to allow them to operate the estate as the Timber Point Center…a retreat and educational nature center…in partnership with the FWS, and that is one of the proposals being studied. The FWS’s preferred plan is to maintain only the exterior of the buildings and increase interpretative activities at the site. It is, as you might expect, an interesting study in local and federal environmental politics.
I plan to add Timber Point to my list of frequently visited places...otherwise known as my local photoprowls…as it is just within range of my scooter for summer visits.
What we have here is the view from the tip of the point back up the Little and Pellagrini Rivers. This is another case of a river having one name along its course, and another were it meets the sea. Branch Brook and the Merriland River join to become the Little River by the time they reach the sea in the Rachel Carson Headquarters property in Wells, and here the Pellagrini River mysteriously (and confusingly) also becomes the Little River at its mouth. ??
Sony HX400V in camera HDR. Processed in Lightroom and PhotoShop Elements on my Surface Pro 3 tablet. (PSE was used to remove my shadow from the far left corner of the fame 🙂
ob Chipper standing.
This was the last shot from a photoprowl around the loop at Rachel Carson NWR headquarters on a gloomy day at the tail end of October. Made the whole walk worthwhile! (Not that it was not already worthwhile 🙂
Sony HX400V at 1200mm equivalent field of view. Shutter preferred. 1/500th @ ISO 3200 @ f6.3. Processed in Lightroom on my Windows tablet.
Short and sweet today as I am at the airport on my way to the Rio Grande Birding Festival in Texas. 🙂
Funny story. Carol and I went for a walk on the Carson Tail at Rachel Carson National Wildlife Headquarters yesterday afternoon. The day was struggling, with a bit of momentary sun here and there to lift it from its late October gloom, and rain threatening on the horizon. The maples are passing fast, and the oaks this year, most places, are going direct from green to brown. Still, it was good to be out. A Hairy Woodpecker flew ahead of us for a ways, until it was displaced from a particularly attractive (apparently…and to woodpeckers) dead branch tip by a Red-bellied Woodpecker. We don’t see many Red-bellieds here in Southern Maine, compared to Hairy and Downy that is, so that was a special.
We turned the corner by the overlook at the junction of Branch Brook and the Marriland River, where they join to become the Little River, in time to see 4 people…two couples, old and young…clustered around something on the trail, clearly excited about it. As we approached, they were debating what it was…mouse? mole? vole? They moved on and left their find to us. It was tiny and it was fast, but it did not seem to be going anywhere in particular. It certainly was not trying to get away. It scampered repeatedly across the trail and burled under and ran over the litter of fallen maple and oak leaves, as though looking frantically for something it had lost…its house keys perhaps, or a coat button. And it was strange. It was mouse like, but had tiny ears and a long mobile, almost prehensile, snout. Its tail and nose were both too long by far for a mole or vole, and it was so small…barely as wide as quarter, and only two quarters long, not counting the tail. We stood watching it, and I, of course was trying to get a shot of it as it zipped around under us.
Then suddenly it scampered up on my shoe and looked for a way up my pant leg. I was wearing field pants cinched with elastic around the ankle so It was defeated there, but then on its way down, it found one of the ventilation holes in my Crocs and nipped inside next to my foot…right inside my shoe. Perhaps that is an added benefit of the box toe on the Crocs: Room for visiting rodents. Fortunately, it popped back out and went off to explore the leaves beyond the edge of the trail. Carol was finding all this very exciting, but she was nearly and clearly, as they say these days, creeped out by the creature’s familiarity with my pants and shoes and wanted none of it for herself. She was rapidly backing way down the trail. The creature, however, apparently liked the experience in my shoe, because it came back for more, exploring several of the Croc holes before we moved on…though it never got right inside again. Maybe my socks smelled like insects? It kept me very busy, because, of course, I wanted a picture of it with my shoe. Priorities you know. And I got it going in…or thinking about it…but I never got it coming out…that would have been a picture! I think it would have played with us as long as we wanted to stay there, but I had visions of it actually getting caught inside my shoe, and hurt, so we moved on.
Of course I wanted to know what it was, so I did some research when we got home, first in Kaufman’s New England Guide, and then, when I could not find an exact match there, on-line. Kaufman’s got me as close as Shrew…not mouse, or mole, or vole…but certainly some kind of shrew. Eventually, by process of elimination, and consulting mammal lists for Maine, I narrowed it down to Masked Shrew…which is logical, as the Masked Shrew is the most common shrew in North America…and why should my first shrew encounter be anything other than the most common? The shrew population in New England is reputed to be among the most numerous of any mammal, but they are very rarely seen in daylight (though they are active around the clock), so they are, in fact, very rarely seen at all. They live among us, but we know it not 🙂
Last night, as I lay contemplating the writing of this story when I should have been sleeping, it occurred to me to wonder how “shrew” came to have its meaning, its monumental Shakespearean meaning, of “bad tempered woman.” I mean, there was nothing bad tempered about the Masked Shrew…on the contrary it was friendly and almost too cute for its own good. I am not sure but what, if it had gotten in my shoe once more, I would have been tempted to bring it home 🙂
Research. It turns out that shrew is a pure English word that seems to have sprung into existence, in either its rodent or anthropomorphic sense, about the time Shakespeare used it. There is some theory that moles and shrews were thought to have a venom that produced bad temper in women when bitten…and I suspect, from Carol’s reaction, that just being bitten by a shrew would be enough to produce bad temper in most women even without venom…but I simply can not imagine the shrew I encountered biting anyone…let alone a woman grown enough to cause her husband trouble. There has to be more to the story than that…and I certainly suspect the shrew has gotten a bad rap! One wonders, in fact, if Shakespeare coined the “bad tempered woman” usage based on his own dramatic conceit and the physical characteristics of a particular actor assigned the first role…perhaps that prehensile, unattractively mobile and narrow nose? The shrew is certainly in the habit of poking it where it does not belong, if my Crocs are any indication. Of course, we shall never know. Lost in the mists of time and among the many myths of Shakespeare.
It is Sunday, so of course, you are expecting the spiritual side of all this (or at least I am). I hope I have conveyed some of my delight in the shrew encounter. It filled me with quiet amazement…flooded me with pleasurable wonder. Exactly the opposite of bad temper…the shrew gave me the inestimable gift of good temper. Such a treat! You don’t often encounter wildlife that is willing to climb into your shoe. That sense of familiarity, of intimacy, is very special, and I feel wonderfully privileged to have been included. And that, my friends, is the pure essence of spirituality…the sense of being privileged to be included in something wonderful. Or that is what I think. Thank you, Masked Shrew, and I can only hope this piece does at least a little to undo the harm Shakespeare did your reputation. 🙂
Yellow-rumped Warbler
We do have other Warblers in Southern Maine during migration, but this year we are seeing huge numbers of Yellow-rumped Warblers coming through. I am not sure how that will play out nationally, but I suspect it was a super year for Yellow-rumps on the breeding grounds north of us. 🙂 This specimen was along the Timber Island Trail at Rachel Carson NWR last Monday, being cooperative as only a migrating Yellow-rump can.
Sony HX400V at 1200mm equivalent field of view. Shutter preferred. 1/640th @ ISO 125 @ f6.3. Processed in Lightroom on my Surface Pro 3 tablet.
Merlin!
My wife and I made a return to the Timber Point/Timber Island trail at Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge yesterday early, to catch the low tide and walk out to the Island. It was a perfect October day in Maine. Cold enough for gloves when we left the house, but warm enough so we were unzipping and shedding layers on the way back. Big blue sky with just a few clouds. Leaves drifting down from the trees, but still a lot of color in the foliage. Autumn personified. Timber Point and Timber Island are wonderful places. I have already written a photoprowl about the Timber Point trail, and I will be adding a section on the Island itself. Lots of birds, great scenery. Wonderful.
This bird was perhaps the highlight of the walk. A female Merlin, perhaps, if memory serves, my first in Maine, and only maybe my 4th nation wide. I have seen them now in CA, NM, NJ, and Maine. This is stretching the limits of the 1200mm equivalent zoom on the Sony HX400V but it was a close to the bird asf I could get, and it will do nicely for a memory shot.
Sony HX400V at 1200mm equivalent field of view. Shutter preferred. 1/640th @ ISO 80 @ f6.3. Processed in Lightroom on my Surface Pro 3 table.
It was so dark in the woods at Rachel Carson NWR on this overcast morning that I had to dial back the shutter speed to get this image. Even then it is at ISO 6400. And not bad at that. Who could resist the pose?
Olympus OM-D E-M10 with 75-300mm zoom. 600mm equivalent. Shutter preferred. 1/400th @ ISO 6400 @ f6.7. Processed in Snapseed and Photo Editor by dev.macgyver on my tablet. Cropped slightly for scale.
Getting a new camera, in many ways, is like having new eyes…or at least like seeing all the familiar scenes once more as though they were new. (On the other hand, maybe I just buy too many cameras 🙂 I always like to have a new camera several days around home before I take it traveling, because shooting a few of my favorite scenes gives me the measure of the machine much more quickly than shooting thousands of images in less familiar surroundings. I have a few test shots I take with every new camera, and then a set of standard scenics. This week I am getting to know a Sony NEX 3NL-B, one of the compact mirror-less cameras with interchangeable lenses. I have been looking at them for a while, mostly because of the promised improvement in image quality that is supposed to come with the larger sensors…but most of the kit zooms that come with them are just not wide enough to satisfy, and most of the entry level models do not have an articulated LCD. And even the entry level models are just a bit too expensive to justify the experiment. The Sony came with a compact 16-50mm zoom (24-75mm equivalent field of view) and a filp out LCD…and Amazon had really good, one-day-only, deal on it. Like I say, maybe I just buy too many cameras!
This is one of of my standard test scenes…the view from the deck on the back side of the Rachel Carson NWR Headquarters trail, overlooking the final loops of Branch Brook before it joins the Merriland to become the Little River…the scene is never ordinary…and here it is the light that elevates it. The final rays of the low winter sun across the marsh…the contrasting cold shadows of the season and the ice on the brook…it is an ideal HDR subject, and indeed, I used some HDR processing in Snapseed to bring out the character of the scene. Still the Sony had to deliver the raw materials for Snapseed to work on…and it did that very well! I will write more extensively elsewhere on my conclusions as to the promised improvement in image quality…but suffice it to say here that I can see the difference in comparison shots with this camera and my Samsung Smart Camera WB800F…though one thing the exercise has demonstrated is just how well today’s small sensor compacts actually do most of the time (and the Samsung in particular). That said, I will definitely be keeping the Sony NEX, and it stands a good chance of completely displacing the Samsung as my day to day landscape and creative tool 🙂
Sony NEX 3NL-B, 16-50mm zoom at 24mm equivalent field of view. Superior Auto. ISO 200 @ 1/80th @ f13. Processed in Snapseed on the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 2014.
This is another shot from my Friday exploration of the fresh snow fall. The loop of trail at the Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge Headquarters never disappoints. On this day, the woods were still, and the fresh snow was over everything…even piled on the branches of the baby Pines and the sapling Furs. The early light of mid-winter, with its long shadows and touch of warmth, keeps the scene from being frigid…and an HDR treatment brings up the vivid green of the evergreens and the rich browns of the tree-trunks. This is a winter where life is very possible…a winter a human can still enjoy 🙂
Samsung Smart Camera WB800F. ISO 100 @ 1/180th @ f3.2. 45mm equivalent field of view. Processed in Snapseed on the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 2014.
This is a vertical sweep panorama. I was looking at the dead pine in the center background and the image builds itself around that, but the most interesting thing to me is the distortions introduced in the surrounding trees by the sweep process. It is a bendy world the sweep panorama mode captures 🙂 The only difficulty in this kind of vertical sweep is getting your head back far enough without falling over.
This is at Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge on the trail at the headquarters.
Samsung Smart Camera WB250F. Processed in PicSay Pro on the Samsung Galaxy S4 smartphone.