Posts in Category: Arizona

Montezuma Quail

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Maybe 35 years ago, on my first serious birding trip to the Chiricahua Mountains of Southeast Arizona, I got a glimpse of a covey of Montezuma Quail crossing the road in the headlights of the car. Hardly a satisfying view but my only view of the elusive bird…until this week when hiking in Madera Canyon, on the stream-side trail, right behind the Santa Rita Lodge. I am sure this was another covey, but the rest of the birds were well down in the brush and invisible. I was very thankful that this bird played Sentinel on its rock long enough for a few photos. The light under the canopy along the stream was challenging but I still got a few satisfying images.

Sony HX400V at 1200mm equivalent field of view. ISO 800 @ 1/250th @ f6.3. Processed in Snapseed on my tablet. Cropped slightly for scale and composition.

Broad-billed Hummingbird. Happy Sunday!

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Before the Vendor hours at the Tucson Birding Festival yesterday we went to Santa Rita Lodge in Madera Canyon and sat by the Hummingbird feeders for 30 minutes or so. (We also did a bit of hiking in the canyon and spotted a Montezuma Quail, a very good Southern AZ speciality bird…undoubtedly you will see that bird here soon.) The usual number of species were present at the feeders…which, in Madera Canyon is an impressive number. Two thirds of them though were Broad-billed Hummingbirds like this specimen. Brilliant!

Sony HX400V at 1200mm equivalent field of view. ISO 160 @ 1/250th @ f6.3. Processed in Snapseed on my tablet. Cropped for composition.

And for the Sunday Thought. I can not help but feel that the Broad-billed Hummingbird got shorted in the name department. I mean it is certainly as spectacular, or more spectacular than, many of the other Hummers it competes with, and most of them have names with much more character. Costa’s, Calliope, Lucifer, and Magnificent, even Anna’s conger more beauty than Broad-billed. The rare Brown-capped Starthroat which was also frequenting the Santa Rita Lodge feeders, is, in fact a drab bird compared to the Broad-billed, but you would not suspect it from a comparison of the names. I mean, look at this bird. Such green. Such blue. Such a red bill. So vivid. Okay, so the bill is a bit wider than the norm at the base, but is that any reason to ignore all its other beautiful attributes and saddle the bird with that single feature as a name? Why not the Red-billed Hummingbird? Or the Red-billed Emerald? On the Blue Flame-throat? Or even the Crimson-billed Blue Flame-throated Emerald! Though it would not make the bird any less common at Southern Arizona feeders, it would certainly give this Hummer a boost in the Hummer popularity ratings. I mean who is going to say “my favorite Hummer for beauty is the Broad-billed”  (a certainly reasonable statement for anyone who has looked closely at the bird)? But “my favorite Hummer for beauty is the Crimson-billed Blue Flame-throated Emerald”, now, that has the proper ring to it!

God only gave Adam a very few jobs, but one of them, the first of them, was naming the animals. Which is totally enough. We only give names to the things we care for, and by extension we care for the things we name. It is the way we were created,  and, I have always believed, God’s intent for us. We are to care for creation. Creatively care for all our fellow creatures. We are the namers. We are the care givers. We have the capacity to love what God has created and work for the good of all. It is a job that we are always an inch from failing at, as we forget and concentrate on what seems to us to be our own good…but it was our first job and is likely our most important.

Which is why I feel we really ought to find a better, more fitting, name for the Broad-billed Humming bird…something we can really care about. It is a place to start anyway. 🙂

Curved-billed Thrasher

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Thrashers are close relatives of the Mockingbird and the Curved-billed Thrasher is the most common of the family in the Sonoran Desert of Southern Arizona. This specimen was flying free on the grounds of the Desert Museum in Tucson. It was singing and calling loudly from it’s ocatillo perch, so it was hard to miss 🙂

Sony HX400V at 1200mm equivalent field of view. ISO 100 @ 1 /250th @ f6.3. Processed in Snapseed on my tablet.

Close Encounter of the Cardinal Kind

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Hiking down Sabino Canyon in Tucson AZ yesterday, we stopped to wait for the shuttle half way. This Cardinal took an interest in us and came over for a talk. 🙂 It does not get any better than this.

Sony HX400V at 1100mm equivalent field of view. ISO 80 @ 1/400th @ f6.3. Processed in Snapseed on my tablet.

Squirrel City

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My first shots from the Desert Museum yesterday were of this family (presumably) of young Ground Squirrels. There were, as it turned out, Ground Squirrels everywhere on the grounds of the museum, but this was the only group we saw. Too cute.

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Sony HX400V. Program with – 1/3 EV exposure compensation. Processed in Snapseed on my tablet. Whole I was concerned I was keeping the HX400V, the trip to the Desert Museum really showed what it is capable of. I like it! 🙂

8/11/2011: Phoenix Airport Sunset

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As an experiment I did not bring my laptop on this short business trip to Portland Oregon and back. Just my Xoom tablet, and a EyeFi SD card for the camera. With the EyeFi card I can transfer images wirelessly from the camera to the Xoom. I can do light processing on the tablet with apps like PicSay Pro and PhotoEnhanse…neither of which are Lightroom by a long stretch but which are surprisingly capable editors on the Android platform. PicSay’s only major limitation, in fact, is that it can not yet save full resolution files. PhotoEnhanse does save full res but it is a one trick pony…doing a tone mapping and blackpoint adjustment to stretch dynamic range.

I am also writing and posting this from the Xoom using the Android WordPress app, Quickpic, and Google+ and Hootsuite for Android.

Okay so the image already. I had an unexpected 3 hour layover in Phoenix on my way to Portland and I could not resist playing with the sunset out the window of the terminal. The Phoenix skyline makes an interesting backdrop and there are interesting ray patterns in the dark clouds. I placed the setting sun right behind the tail of an airplane, which also produced an interesting effect.

Nikon Coolpix P 500 at 40mm equivalent field of view. f4 @ 1/800th @ ISO 160. Program with Active D-Lighting.

Processed in Camera with Quick Retouch. Processed on the tablet in PicSay Pro.

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12/29/2009

Spines and Light: what I see in the desert

One of the things that fascinates me most about the desert and cacti is the things the light does to the spines and convolutions of the plants. I was at the Desert Botanical Gardens early on my last visit (I am there early on every visit…a necessity any season but winter, due to Phoenix heat…and preferable even in winter), and the light was still oblique enough to provide interesting effects. This cluster of Organ Pipe cacti is a case in point.

I moved in close at about 75mm equivalent to crop just this section of the tall plants, because it is the light effects, not the cacti themselves, or the desert landscape that contains them, that I am interested in.

Sony DSC H50 at about 75mm equivalent. F4.0 @ 1/200th @ ISO 100. Programmed auto.

Punch and Sharpen Landscape presets in Lightroom. >> Clarity and > Vibrance.

From Desert Botanical Gardens 09.

12/28/2009

Cacti Filling Frames

Okay, so this is maybe cheating a little bit because this is not a pic of the day, it is three pics of the day rolled into one. Sort of. I took these images seconds apart, without moving more than a step and a half turn. There is is a display of native cacti just below the Terrace Restaurant at the Desert Botanical Garden in Phoenix. The sun had gone behind a momentary cloud…just enough, and just long enough, to provide some filtration for these shots…a softening of the light that brought out the patterns. The first two were shot at about 180mm equivalent for framing. The third was taken from the same spot, but I zoomed up to almost 300mm equivalent to frame a slightly more distant clump. They form a kind of triptych study of the way light interacts with these spiny shapes.

Sony DSC H50 at 180mm and 300mm equivalents. F4, F3.5, F4 @ 1/125th, 1/60th, 1/40th @ ISO 100. Programmed auto.

Punch and Sharpen Landscape presets in Lightroom. >> Clarity and > Vibrance.

And here they are, actually arranged as a classical triptych panel.

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9/21/2009

Coronodo National Monument, AZ

Coronodo National Monument, AZ

Travel day today and no time to upload pics from yesterday’s short visit to Otawa NWR in Ohio, so we will visit Arizona: Coronodo National Monument to be precise. This amazing piece of landscape sits right on the border with Mexico and contains some of the wildest accessible landscape I have encounted. A road runs up and over the mountain pass and good trails shadow it on the south side. Wonderful views. This is looking north across the valley to a storm capping the southern ramparts of the Hauchuas.

Sony DSC H9 at 31mm equivalent. Added Clarity and Vibrance in the Presence panel. Sharpened.

From Cochise Co. Arizona.