Monthly Archives: July 2013

The Long View: Happy Sunday!

I took my scooter down to the beach in the early evening yesterday, mostly to feel the cooling wind of my passage at the end of yet another day of oppressive heat and humidity. We don’t get many of those in Southern Maine, not enough to justify the cost of an air-conditioner certainly, so when we do get them, all we can do is sort of suffer through with window fans, iced drinks…and occasional scooter rides when things just get too drippy.

Turns out the sky over the ocean and the marshes was spectacular. I puttered about from place to likely place, cooling myself in the rides, and took a lot of pictures. 🙂

This is the view last night out to sea from one of our semi-private beaches. I like the low angle. It was taken with my Samsung Smart Camera WB250F, which, unfortunately, does not have an articulated LCD. What it has is an excellent, no-tripod-needed, in-camera HDR, which was called for here. I am learning, for the the low shots, to shoot more or less blind, and straighten in software later 🙂 Rich Tone mode. 24mm equivalent field of view. Recorded exif for the three shot sequence was f3.2 @ 1/500th @ ISO 100. Processed in PicSay Pro on the Samsung Galaxy S4 smartphone.

And for the Sunday thought: I was also having, yesterday, a Facebook conversation with a young friend, the son of an old friend, about choosing a place to live. I gave him several suggestions from among the places I have lived and visited, but then he specified that he needs the ocean. “Being able to look out over the water from the beach and not to be able to see the other side, is something that I really need. I need that sense of curiosity and the sense of greatness that the power of the ocean displays.”

Today’s image is, in fact, the view he grew up with. The family moved inland while he was still young, but his grandparents still have a house on this beach, and I am sure he looked out on this sea often enough each summer so the view became part of the essence of his soul.

I, on the other hand, grew up in hills. My father and mother built a house on the shoulder of a high hill in rural New York State. The view that shaped me was pasture and woodland stretching away in folds to the horizon. We never got to the ocean at all. When we wanted, as people will, whether they can articulate the need as such, a wider horizon, the mystery and the wonder of the long view, we would drive up, or hike up one of our green mountains. For me, the view from a bare hill top, or even more, the view from a stony mountain top, especially under a spectacular sky, has the same power as the view out over the sea does for my friend. It might be more “homey” and even more “homely” but it is still full of power and glory.

I did not come to the sea, really, until I was a young man, and then we lived by the ocean just long enough for me to miss the view when we moved far inland to the desert mountains of the Southwest. I am, after all, back by the sea. And yet, I found that same mystery and wonder in the desert. Oh I have never seen a real desert, with sand dunes or stony flats running on to the eye-level horizon, but I found that sense of power and grandeur in the intensely living desert of the American Southwest, always with its mountain islands rising to the sky in every direction. And the view from the tops of those mountains! There was a wonder.

And then, too, while we lived in New Mexico, we spent time in the Rocky Mountains of Southwest Colorado each summer, camping and hiking. I defy anyone to climb even a 10,000 foot, wildflower infested, peak in High Peaks area of Colorado and not feel the awe of that long view!

More recently I discovered the far views of the Potholes and Prairies region of North Dakota. Such skies. Such an expanse of land. And I have, on a few trips there, learned to love the gentle vistas of England…from the hills and lakes of mid-lands to the mountains and lakes of the Lake District, to the rolling expanse of the Dales, to the grandeur that is Scotland, Skye, and the Hebrides.

And last year I was totally blown away by the awesome skies over the somehow miniature, certainly manicured, and always canal cut, landscapes of Holland.

And, come to think of it, I have felt exactly the same wonder and awe standing in a redwood grove where I could not see 1000 feet in any direction or the sky at all…where all the power and majesty was in the size and age of the life around me, where the long view was not spacial but temporal.

And waterfalls…falling water…rapids even…the eternal rush is always enough to take my breath away.

So what does it come down to? I need to live in a place where I can feel the awe of the long view, the energy of what is wild and wide and beyond my control, certainly, but I have come to realize that the awe is not in the place, but in me. If I never again saw the view out over the ocean on a day with a great sky, I would miss it, but it would not stop me from finding the awe of the place I was in. And I realize in writing this that I am about due for high mountain experience. I miss the mountains! But that will not stop me from scootering down to the beach on a hot day to find the awe that lives out over the ocean and the marshes. Today, since the mountains are too far, I will go find a waterfall, and maybe some dragonflies, and a deep dark forest.

Those are well within the reach of my scooter…and they will do for the awe of the day!

 

 

Wood Lily in the Sun (bonus!)

Can you stand another Wood Lily? Yesterday, after posting my Wood Lilies in the morning, I began to regret not having seen them in full sun. For one thing, more light would give me greater depth of field, and, with the length of the petals and the tall anthers, that would be a good thing :). For another it would bring out the vibrant color of the blooms. Of course I would have to deal with harsher shadows…but…all in all more light light on the Wood Lilies seemed a thing to be desired. So I got on my scooter at lunch time and took a run out to where I had seen them on Sunday.

Of course, they were all gone. Ah well…next year.

But then, as I found some dragonflies to keep me busy, I was still there when two birders drove up, looking for the specialties of the area. In the course of the conversation, I mentioned photographing the the Wood Lilies and my disappointment that they were gone. “Oh there’s lots of them over on the other side of the road.” They described where to look, and I did, and they were, indeed, lots of them…several stands of 30 or more plants…and those were just the ones I found.

I like this shot for the two lilies, for the depth, and for the tiny Green Metallic Bee down at the base of the petal on the far right. 🙂 Of course I did not see the bee until this morning when selecting an image to post. But any Green Metallic Bee is a bonus not to be passed by. Or that’s what I think. (If you want a good look at the bee…click here for the Google+ lightbox. When it opens, place your pointer over the bee, and rotate the mouse wheel forward. The image will zoom in. You can get an even larger view by clicking on the upper right corner of the image to open it in full screen mode and doing the same zoom trick. It requires a delicate touch to do with a two finger drag on a trackpad, but it can be done.)

Samsung Smart Camera WB250F. Macro Mode. 34mm equivalent field of view.  f3.4 @ 1/1000th @ ISO 100. Processed in PicSay Pro on the Samsung Galaxy S4 smartphone.

Wood Lilies

I can clearly remember my excitement when I found my first Wood Lilies growing along the Kennebunk Bridle Path a few years ago. (See my post from 7/10/2010.) Such a wild beauty! And such an unlikely flower for me to have missed for 60 years of my life! I have been back each year since, looking for them where I first found them, but they are not there. I am tempted to blame the Town and their bushhoged attempts to widen the Bridle path, but the lilies have not returned even where the bushhog never trod. It is possible someone dug them out to replant in a shady corner of a yard. The Wood Lily is evidently well distributed in Maine, but it is threatened or endangered in parts of its range…and it not so well distributed in Southern Maine that I have been able to find another since 2010 in all my roaming about the woodlands and fields in search of birds and bugs, wildflowers and wild views.

Until last Sunday that is. I discovered a good sized patch of them in a place I go on a fairly regular basis (I will not say just where this time, just in case 🙂 They were growing within sight of a road that gets a fair amount of recreational travel…and looking more like a Prairie Lily (an alternative common name in many parts of the US) than a Wood. The Wood Lily is not very tall, but it has a bloom the size of a Day Lily…at least 4 inches across and sometimes larger. The open center makes it look very different than a Day though. Just about knocked me off my scooter when I saw them!

There were maybe 15 Lilies in various stages of full bloom, and a fair number more that were past. A good sized patch! The light was not ideal for great depth of field, but I was able to photograph a number of plants, and catch the range of oranges. I don’t know if the color variation is something to do with the plants themselves, the soil under them, or just the age of the bloom.

A stunning flower altogether! Now I will just have to wait until next year to see if they come back again!

Samsung Smart Camera WB250F. Macro mode. 24 and 34mm equivalent fields of view (except for the group shot which was at 460mm). ISO 100. f3.4-f3.6, 1400-1/500th.

Processed in PicSay Pro on the Samsung Galaxy S4 smartphone.

So much depends on a few reeds in dappled water…

I am not sure why, but this little snippet from Roger’s Pond in Kennebunk Maine has a very oriental feeling to it. At the same time it reminds me of William Carlos Williams Red Wheelbarrow poem.

so much depends
upon

the red wheelbarrow
glazed with rain water

beside the white
chickens

There is that sense of much depending on the close observation of a fragment of reality: here the reeds standing in the dappled water among the distorted shadows of the trees around the pond. It is a very simple composition…but there is a lot more to it, somehow.

Samsung Smart Camera WB250F in Rich Tone (HDR) mode. 41mm equivalent field of view. Nominally f3.6 @ 1/1225 @ ISO 100. Processed in PicSay Pro on the Samsung Galaxy S4 smartphone.

Spring Peeper??

This is, as you can maybe tell from the mown grass it is in, a very small frog. At first I thought it might be a very young Pickerel Frog, but I am thinking it is actually a Spring Peeper. Anyone with more definite knowledge could easily talk me out of the identification. I would even believe a convincing argument that it is a toad.  If I had put a quarter down it would have completely covered the frog, and a nickle would have covered the body. If you are viewing this on a monitor or laptop, the frog in the image is probably 3 to 4 times life size (depending on your viewing screen). It was making hard work of moving through the grass. It basically had to climb over the stalks.

Canon SX50HS. Program with my usual modifications. 1800mm equivalent field of view. f6.5 @ 1/640th @ ISO 800. Processed in Lightroom.

Evening Light

If you enjoy the beach, here in Southern Maine, and you are a local, you go early or you go late. During the day, there are no parking spaces…they are all filled with folks from away who are trying determinedly to pack a full Maine experience into 6 days, and living out of a motel. It is great for the economy, of course. It just means we locals only see the beach and the dunes and the ocean at their best light 🙂

This was late: 6:47 PM according to the clock on my camera. The light is low and lovely. The Timothy Hay is ripe and ready for cutting (they had already started at the other end of the field). The avenue of maples along the road is standing, as they have for generations, sentry over the whole. And just enough clouds, out over the ocean, to give the sky a bit of interest. Lovely all together!

Samsung Smart Camera WB250F in Rich Tone (HDR) mode. 24mm equivalent field of view. Nominally f3.2 @ 1/250th @ ISO 100 (nominal because it is actually three exposures combined…I assume the recorded exif is for the “middle” exposure). Processed in PicSay Pro on the Samsung Galaxy S4.

On the shore of the Mousam

I went out on my scooter on several photoprowls yesterday, covering the compass points so to speak. It was one of those days when the sky was irresistible. This is a sweep panorama from the shore of the Mousam River, below the new bridge they are building on Route 9, in Kennebunk.

Samsung Smart Camera WB250F. Panorama mode. f4.6 @ 1/500th (nominal since it was a sweep), ISO 100. 24mm equivalent field of view, swept around with the camera vertical 270 degrees. Processed in PicSay Pro on the Samsung Galaxy S4. The image is linked to a larger version for your viewing pleasure.

 

Powder Moth on Meadowsweet. Happy Sunday!

The helpful folks at Project Noah’s Maine Moths Mission identified my moth as the Power Moth (Eufidonia notataria). Project Noah is an internet based network of nature observers who submit “spottings” of wildlife of all kinds, including photos and location information, from bugs to bears. When you post a spotting, it is simple to check the “help with this identification” button. Under Project Noah there are hundreds (maybe thousands) of “missions”…targeted requests for spottings of a particular kind for a particular region.  The Maine Moths Mission is one of them, and it seemed an obvious place to look for an id of a moth I had never seen before. I had the id within an hour of posting. (Project Noah has mobile apps for both iPhone and Android as well as the website… search for “Project Noah” in your app store.)

I could find little information on the moth itself, beyond its name and place in the scientific order. I still have no idea how it lives or why it lives. But it is, to my eye, a beautiful creature, from the lacy pattern on the wings to the fringe at the wing edges. The fact that it is on Meadowsweet, one of my favorite trail-side flowers of this season, is a distinct bonus, and, in the case of this image, adds to the beauty of the composition.

Samsung Smart Camera WB250F in Smart Auto…macro mode. 24mm equivalent field of view. f3.2 @ 1/500th @ ISO 100. Cropped for composition and scale and processed on the Samsung Galaxy S4 smartphone in PicSay Pro. Auto Enhanced by Google+.

And for the Sunday Thought. The Samsung WB250F was a pure indulgence. I love my Canon SX50HS and I could just as well have taken this image with the Canon. I did not need another camera. But I am certainly having fun with it! As a piece of photographic technology it is amazing…from its Smart Auto modes, to its excellent “no tripod required” in-camera HDR and dedicated Macro and Panorama modes. Fun. As a piece of connected technology it is even more amazing. With the touch of a few controls I can wirelessly transfer the images to my Galaxy S4 for processing and sharing (or I can do limited processing right in-camera, and upload them directly to Facebook or Google+ Photos, or email them to myself). I can share a fully processed image in a matter of moments after it is taken. From wherever I have phone service. Amazing. And so much fun!

Project Noah I just discovered yesterday while researching my Powder Moth. What an idea! A national network of dedicated nature observers and photographers feeding sighting data on all kinds of life into a central data-base where they…and the whole scientific community…can have easy and instant access. And the concept of Missions, to focus the collections, is brilliant. We are on a mission to record all the Moths of Maine. Yes. I can identify with that! And think of the possibilities. With the mobile app, you can upload an image of whatever you see and enjoy quick (if not instant) help from hundreds of enthusiasts and many experts. The day of “I don’t know” is fading fast. What I don’t know is now out there in cloud, just waiting for me to access it. My mind no longer ends at my own senses and my own experience and memory. I can almost instantly tap into the knowledge of thousands of other keen observers, stretching back a generation or more.

Of course, at times, I will only find the limits of what we, as a species of observers, know, or have shared. What does the Powder Moth eat…well, whoever knows that…if anyone does…has not made that available in the cloud just yet. 🙂 (Or not that I can find.)

And what does this all have to do with the spirit? It is the Sunday thought after all. The technology of the connected cloud is giving us a taste, right in the world of time and space, of what we experience in the spirit, behind the world of time and space. It is the core experience of the mystical in all religions…and the root of faith. We are all one. All one mind. All one experience. All one love of life and eagerness to learn and to share. And yet we are totally individual. One eye (I) in the eye (I) of all.

We are the namers of creation. We are the numberers. We are the mind that sees and shares. And we are each one and one in all. And even a technology assisted taste of that is a good thing! Happy Sunday!

 

 

Louisiania Waterthrush

I am dropping way back to May for this shot of a Louisiana Waterthrush from Magee Marsh in northern Ohio. I still have a wealth of unshared images from my 10 days at The Biggest Week in American Birding. This was taken the last day I was there. After working a full day at our respective booths (that is the ZEISS booth for me), and then packing the booths, my friend Roy Halpin and I dragged our weary bodies out to the boardwalk for one last pass. We were rewarded with some of the best photo ops of the week. 🙂 That included this very cooperative Louisiana Waterthrush. We watched and photographed it for a good 10 minutes as it worked this partially submerged log: perfect habitat for a Waterthrush, and a perfect setting for our images.

Not only is it a bird I seldom see, but it certainly closer and more cooperative than any waterthrush I have ever encountered. And it was not the only good bird of that last pass on the Magee Marsh boardwalk!

Canon SX50HS. 1200mm equivalent field of view. Program with my usual modifications. f6.5 @ 1/400th and 1/500th @ ISO 800. Processed in Lightroom.

Meadowsweet and the Lady (bug)

The Meadowsweet is in bloom along the Kennebunk Bridle Path (and along the edge of meadows everywhere in Southern Maine). It’s tall cones of flowers make it unmissable…but up close the flowers themselves are wonderfully delicate, frilly, and and almost, dare I say, demure. Add a Ladybug to complete the Victorian scene. 🙂

Samsung Smart Camera WB250F in Macro Mode. 31mm equivalent field of view. f3.4 @ 1/500th @ ISO 100. Cropped slightly for image scale and composition. Processed on the Samsung Galaxy S4 smartphone in PicSay Pro.