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Late-season red dragon

Posted by Photonstopper on September 11, 2021
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: autumn, Autumn Meadowhawk, dragonfly, nature, photograph, summer. Leave a comment
An Autumn Meadowhawk dragonfly perches upon a dead leaf and watches its world.

One of many Autumn Meadowhawk dragonflies we spotted this afternoon at the Medina County Park District’s Alderfer-Chatfield Wildlife Sanctuary. These red beauties are usually the last dragonfly seen each year with a flight season that begins in July and which can extend to mid-November if there aren’t heavy frosts, according to the Wisconsin Wetlands Association.

Worth the sleep deprivation

Posted by Photonstopper on July 26, 2021
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: lightning, medina ohio, photograph, photography, storm, summer, thunderstorm, weather. Leave a comment
Shot of the night was of this magnificent anvil crawler that lit the clouds overhead as it sprawled across the sky. In the lower left-hand corner of this image is an interesting cloud feature — something invisible without the flash of the lightning discharge.

A line of thunderstorms was bearing down on our area the night of July 24 and it looked like it might be interesting — it has been a while since I’ve made any lightning pictures. The storm progressed slowly from Southeastern Michigan and Northwest Ohio and across Lake Erie finally beginning its arrival here around midnight. As the storm overran the area, I watched it for lightning potential. Ducking outside and looking up at one point, I was treated to a beautiful “anvil crawler” display nearly overhead!

I rushed to my office and quickly assembled my gear: Canon EOS 6D Mk. 2, wide-angle lens, and tripod. First to the northern side of the house. After some waiting and a couple of “teasers” the storm let loose a magnificent crawler — brilliant lightning crossing the cloud bottoms, branching off to the sides. Turns out, that was the shot of the night though I didn’t know it at the time since I was unable to preview my images. Light rain began to fall and with not enough shelter, I moved to the south side of the house.

Long streaks of lightning branch across the southern sky over Medina during a relatively quiet thunderstorm the night of July 24.

It took a while for the storm to progress southward enough for me to see the dwindling cloud-to-cloud lightning flashes but they eventually came. I spent maybe 90 minutes watching the storm, aiming the camera, waiting for the automatic trigger to capture the ephemeral brilliance. Thunder, this night, rolled across the dark countryside for many seconds after each flash before fading away — something I’ve not experienced in quite some time. It was lovely. My sheltered spot on the south side kept camera, lens, and photographer dry throughout, which isn’t always the case. Rain prevented me from aiming the camera as high as I’d have liked. Just a few drops on the camera lens, combined with a bright lightning flash, produces an unusable image.

Not a pretty picture, at 1:08 a.m. this powerful cloud-to-ground bolt hit only a mile or so away! Perhaps surprisingly, I head no sirens and have read no accounts of storm damage.

The storm petered out so, sometime around 1:45 a.m. I went back indoors, and reviewed the images via the camera’s display. Yes! Beautiful stuff! Editing the photos after sleeping for a few hours was the highlight of my Sunday morning.

In future I really need to find a sheltered place, or at least a place where I can park and shoot from my car at night, a spot that has an open view of the countryside and/or town. In the mean time, results from the Saturday night storm were worth the sleep deprivation.

The Shot of the Night was this magnificent anvil crawler that lit the clouds as it sprawled across the sky. The Medina County Gazette ran my photo on Page 2, crediting “resident photographer James Guilford”. I like my new title.

Abigail

Posted by Photonstopper on July 24, 2021
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: forgotten, graveyard, headstone, melancholy, photograph, photography, tombstone. Leave a comment
The time-worn headstone of “Abigail”, in the Old Town Graveyard, Medina, Ohio.

Still chasing… and even flying!

Posted by Photonstopper on July 24, 2021
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: 2021, chippewa lake, drone, photograph, photography, shelf cloud, storm, storm chasing. Leave a comment

It has been a fairly quiet (visually) storm season for me this year but there has been some drama. Here are several shots, from two storms, that took place in July.

Views of the July 7th’s approaching storm: the most active portion was behind me producing low rumbles of distant thunder. Except for light, cooling gusts of wind and these beautiful clouds, nothing remarkable happened where I stood. Not even a drop of rain.

I love the sweep, the grand curves of these cloud formations! Shelf clouds and the like thrill and fascinate me and I’m so lucky to be able to seek them out.
July 7 shelf cloud, seen from the ground, near Chippewa Lake, Ohio.
July 7 shelf cloud viewed from the air via DJI Air 2S quadcopter drone.
July 13 shelf cloud dropping rain, viewed from the air via DJI Air 2S quadcopter drone in Medina, Ohio.

Another dimension of photography

Posted by Photonstopper on July 24, 2021
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: djiair2s, drone, northeastern ohio, photograph, photography, sunset. Leave a comment
Sunset June 30. Clouds parted enough that evening to allow a colorful end to the day. I used my recently-purchased quadcopter drone to rise above the treetops in order to see, enjoy, and photograph the night’s fine sunset. This is a two-panel panorama, created post-flight. I continue to be impressed by the DJI Air 2s camera system; its dynamic range is excellent, lens is reasonably sharp, and the drone is a surprisingly stable platform. It’s also a hoot flying this little aircraft! Bringing the drone in for a manual landing before dark, I was tickled by how it automatically switched on its landing light. The flying camera adds another dimension to my photography and, as I said, it’s a hoot!

A smoke-stained Moon

Posted by Photonstopper on July 24, 2021
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: astronomy, astrophotography, moon, photograph, photography, smoke, wildfires. Leave a comment
Though high in July 19th’s sky, our waxing Gibbous Moon was decidedly orange. Smoke, high in the atmosphere from North American wildfires, tinted what should have been a bright white Moon in the colors of moonset. Ruddy or not, I love that we can see mountain peaks and crater edges peeking up from the darkness just left of the sunlight terminator line. A friend commented on the sunrise-illuminated mountain peaks, “Mons Pico at 8,000 feet and Mons Piton at 7,500 feet are two solitary mountain peaks sticking up out of the lava plain in the northeast corner of Mare Imbrium.“

Many Have Passed This Way

Posted by Photonstopper on July 24, 2021
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: age, antique, doors, Medina, ohio, photograph, photography, time, worn. Leave a comment
Many Have Passed This Way. Heavily-worn wooden doors and sandstone threshold of a building in downtown Medina, Ohio.

Deer me, how time {dragon}flies!

Posted by Photonstopper on July 24, 2021
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: dragonfly, nature, northeastern ohio, photograph, photography, summer, whitetail deer. Leave a comment
We had a Very Impressive Visitor in our backyard July 23! This buck White Tail Deer looked happy to be here. He stayed in the backyard for a while, sniffing the ground occasionally, watching us from a distance. He eventually strolled off, down a hill into a nearby gully.

Goodness! I didn’t realize I hadn’t posted here since February!! I’ve mostly been making short-form posts to Twitter and Instagram and neglecting this blog. So here we are in July and I’ll make a couple/few quick image posts with captions. These photos are from July 23 and 24 when local wildlife, here in the neighborhood of a small city, paid us extra-close visits.

Another backyard visitor! Mid-afternoon on July 24, a very cooperative Shadow Darner dragonfly alighted on our deck railing allowing me to get up close and personal with my macro lens-equipped DSLR. This is a fairly large insect, ours being 2 3/4 inches long with a wingspan of 4 inches. A guidebook says they’re fairly common in Ohio and fly from about July 4 to November 6.

Here’s to you, Mr. Robinsong

Posted by Photonstopper on February 20, 2021
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: American Robin, bird, bird feeding, Birds of North America, nature, nature photography, photography. Leave a comment
A single American Robin has been hanging around our feeders the past couple of cold, snowy days. He was having a hard time at the suet feeder and being chased off by aggressive starlings. Seeds aren’t all that appealing to robins. So I stuck an apple on the hook of the feeder’s stand and Mr. Robinsong has been enjoying some fruit. He’s also getting the hang of the suet feeder.

1970 Eclipse images rescued by/from me!

Posted by Photonstopper on December 30, 2020
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: 1970, 2024, astrophotography, grant, journalism school, total solar eclipse, Tri-X Pan. Leave a comment
Photo: March 7, 1970 Total Solar Eclipse. Photo by James Guilford.
The March 7, 1970 total solar eclipse, “diamond ring effect”, as viewed from Virginia Beach, Virginia. The original image was shot on Kodak Tri-X Pan black and white film. The negative was scanned in December 2020 to produce this picture.

I recently took some time to scan a couple of film negatives I shot of the March 7, 1970 total solar eclipse. I’d traveled to Virginia Beach, Va. on a student grant to witness the eclipse and write about it. I shot the images on Kodak Tri-X Pan film, using a cheap 400mm f/6.3 lens which I still own. I have no camera or exposure information; I think the camera was a Pentax SLR when they used screw-in lens mounts! Unfortunately, these negatives were poorly handled by a newspaper that published the item — etched fingerprints revealed in the scans — and poorly stored by me over the ensuing years leaving scratches and allowing those finger oils to do their dirty work. Given all that, I’m glad the negatives survived at all! The first shot here was made during either the beginning or end of totality. The second photo shows the “diamond ring” effect as the sun peeks past the dark lunar limb. The remaining crud in the corona is the result of the aforementioned etched fingerprints, and would require excessive, damaging digital editing to remove. Reviewing newspaper clippings and Sky & Telescope Magazine photos from the 1970 event, I’m actually impressed at how well my humble efforts compare!

I was happy to have discovered, in addition to the poorly-handled film, the full set of negatives I shot that day. It will be good to have them on hand as we prepare for the total solar eclipse which will sweep across the continental United States on April 8, 2024.

Photo: March 7, 1970 Total Solar Eclipse. Photo by James Guilford.
The March 7, 1970 total solar eclipse, totality phase, as viewed from Virginia Beach, Virginia. The original image was shot on Kodak Tri-X Pan black and white film and scanned in December 2020 to produce this picture.
Another exposure from the Total Solar Eclipse, totality phase, as viewed from Virginia Beach, Virginia March 7, 1970. The original image was shot on Kodak Tri-X Pan black and white film and scanned in December 2020 to produce this picture.
Page 1 of the Fulton County Expositor, March 14, 1970, carried my photos and account of the total solar eclipse. The newspaper had severely deteriorated due to the action of acid-based newsprint and was discarded December 2020 to protect other documents.

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