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Bird feeder has been busy

Posted by Photonstopper on April 18, 2020
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: bird feeding, birds, Birds of North America, Goldfinch, House Finch, Mourning Dove, Northern Cardinal. Leave a comment

We’re near, rather beyond the time when I withdraw my bird feeder from use leaving the birds to fend for themselves over the warmer months.

The bird feeder has been busy. I have not been busy. So I shot a good number of photos of birds at or near the bird feeder, only a few feet from my office window.

Several larger birds have escaped me because they cannot fit inside the wire fence cylinder that protects the feeder from squirrels and deer. The bigger birds show up and quickly leave, seeking treats elsewhere; they include Bluejays and a Red Bellied Woodpecker. The woodpecker has landed on the cage occasionally and used its pointed beak and long tongue to retrieve a morsel or two but he’s usually here and gone before I can grab my camera.

Waiting His Turn. Male American Goldfinch waits for a feeding station to open so that he can have a meal.

 

Oops! Male House Finch drops a morsel of food and yes, he did watch it drop and went down after it!

 

Feed Me? Mourning Dove is perched looking for spilled seed to scavenge. The green coloration is light reflected from lawn grass below.

 

Mr. Cardinal — Northern Cardinal looks for snacks.

 

Tailfeathers. I don’t like to admit how often happens.

Too close a passage

Posted by Photonstopper on April 13, 2020
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: lightning, severe storm, storm, thunderstorm, tornado, weather. Leave a comment
Photo: lightning streaks in night sky.

The approaching squall line promised opportunities for lightning photography. This was my only half-way decent shot of the night.

The night of April 7, 2020 looked interesting to me. An approaching squall line bearing very active thunderstorms was moving rapidly toward us, approaching from the west-northwest. I hoped the storms would provide me with excellent chances at lightning photography. I was mistaken.

Cloud shapes at night

Strange sky with cloud shapes that would have been at the outside edge of a tornado-producing thunderstorm to the left. Final shot before taking cover.

Shortly after I recorded what would be my only decent lightning photo of the night, my phone went crazy with emergency alerts: TORNADO WARNING! The city’s tornado warning sirens sprang to life.

I grabbed the camera and fled indoors.

Once inside we opened and occupied the only space we deem safe against storms — an office closet occupied by file cabinets and shelved storage.

Timidly I peered through an office window ready at any second to duck back to the closet to avoid flying debris, a falling tree, watching for a tell-tale funnel cloud. The wind bent neighboring trees farther than I though they could stand. Rain pummeled the side of the house, the anemometer registered 49 MPH at peak. A distinctly-blue flash lit the horizon from the direction of downtown — a power flash!

I continued hearing the roaring sound as it changed focus from northwest, to west, to the south. I never saw a funnel cloud but I heard the storm’s passage: it was a localized source, likely the tornado.

Radar image of severe thunderstorm with tornadic hook.

The blue circle represents my location; below it, a strong “hook” signature in the storm’s radar image.

Looking at the radar depiction of the severe-warned thunderstorms a distinctive and ominous shape emerged from the colorful pixels — a hook — the signature of tornado activity. I realized the thing had passed quite close by!

But how close?

We stayed awake for an hour or so, too excited to sleep. Winds, rain, and thunder continued for a while, and slowly abated.

Finally to bed.

Photo: Downed tree across driveway.

A large deciduous tree felled by the storm was rotted near its base.

The next day I took a walk to survey the damage. I made a number of photographs, relaying them to the National Weather Service along with street locations hoping to help in their damage survey.

Broken branches and fallen trees were common along a path about two blocks south of our house. Fortunately deciduous trees were not in leaf, helping them survive the winds. Evergreens, with their limbs full of greenery and shallow roots, took the brunt of the damage and inflicted most of the damage I saw.

Fallen tree atop house.

A large, healthy pine tree is toppled on to a small house, smashing through part of its roof.

A small yellow house with a green metal roof and brand-new siding was damaged when a large pine tree was uprooted and blown over. The tree lay broken across the little house, whose owners suffered loss of the improvements but also mourned the loss of their grand tree.

IMG_0320

A large pine tree lies toppled and broken atop a small house. The owners had only recently had the ca. 1910 house re-sided and they were fond of the tree. Two losses here.

There was much more damage around town: the root balls of toppled trees pulled up sidewalks and gas lines, smashed into houses, blocked streets.

To no one’s surprise, the National Weather Service determined the cause of all the mayhem was a tornado: Category EF-1, 100 MPH winds, 100 yards maximum width. Along the nearly 12-mile path the storm damaged other homes, left a scoured path across a field, and tore the sheet metal roof from a large pole barn. Much damage reported. No lives lost.

How close was the tornado to us? Too close.

National Weather Service Survey

National Weather Service Preliminary Damage Survey Results – an EF-1 tornado that covered nearly 12 miles and lasted about 10 minutes.

Venus visits the Seven Sisters

Posted by Photonstopper on April 13, 2020
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: astronomy, moon, photograph, pleiades, venus. Leave a comment

Venus and a few of the stars of the Pleiades cluster the night of April 3, 2020. Canon EOS Mark 2 and Cassegrain telescope.

Early in April the planet Venus made an approach and passage through the Pleiades star cluster, also known as the Seven Sisters. Many, even most nights were cloudy but we had a couple of clear evening skies that allowed a bit of astronomy and picture-taking. It’s notable that Venus makes the Pleiades transit only once every eight years so this was a limited opportunity to view and record.

Venus and Pleiades stars with labels.

Our Moon was also quite lovely the nights of the transit though it did provide quite a lot of bothersome intrusive light. Nonetheless, Moon remains a favorite target of mine….

Moon in its waxing Gibbous phase. Canon EOS 6D Mark 2 and Cassegrain telescope.

The uncommon beauty of the commonplace

Posted by Photonstopper on March 8, 2020
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: beauty, birds, Grackle, great blue heron, nature, northeastern ohio, photograph, photography, spring. Leave a comment

The day was beautiful for a Sunday in early March — sunny and mild with a high temperature of 60ºF — so we headed out to a couple of favorite, easy-to-access spots for a little walking and bird spotting.

Sunlit iridescent plumage of a Common Grackle (Quiscalus quiscula) makes the bird an uncommon beauty.

The F.A. Seiberling Nature Realm, a part of Summit (County) Metro Parks, features a beautiful visitors center with an observation room viewing a large bird feeding area. Today Common Grackles were the dominant presence. Bright sunlight and our angle of view brought out incredible iridescence in the birds’ plumage changing them from common to uncommon beauties.

A Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias), on a nest-building mission, glides overhead in the afternoon sun.

Following a short walk on paved and dry pathways at Nature Realm, we made a little visit to the Bath Road Heron Rookery, at the northern city limits of Akron. There seemed to be fewer nests this year, one formerly-inhabited tree was entirely vacant. Seen in other trees were the stick nests and mated pairs of birds standing upon them. Occasionally a heron would glide down from a tree to search for nest-building materials, then loft them back to their waiting mate in the tree. I shot a good number of photos but this overhead view is my favorite of the day.

These are common, everyday birds going about the business of living; if we look at them closely and well we will discover the uncommon beauty of the commonplace.

Bluebirds of Happiness?

Posted by Photonstopper on February 13, 2020
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: birds, Birds of North America, Bluebird, Eastern Bluebird, happiness, nature, photography, whitetail deer, winter. Leave a comment
Eastern Bluebird on an icy feeder. Photo by James Guilford.

Among the first Bluebirds to show up at my feeder, this one arrived after freezing rain enshrouded the feeder’s rain shield in icicles.

I’ve never seen them. I’ve never, ever seen Bluebirds in my yard or at my feeders. Until this month.

Eastern Bluebirds spat on an icy bird feeder. Photo by James Guilford.

Wherever two or more are gathered, there’s an argument. Eastern Bluebirds on an icy birdfeeder.

First I saw a couple of Eastern Bluebirds (Sialia sialis) show up just after I restocked my feeders for the morning. They returned the next day and then there were three. Skip forward a few days and yesterday, February 12, I counted eight — eight! — of the beauties around the feeders, in neighboring trees, and on the ground!

Eastern Bluebird poses for its picture. Photo by James Guilford.

One of the eight Eastern Bluebirds that appeared in my Northern Ohio front yard February 12.

I don’t know why this year is different but at a time when I could use some cheering up, the Bluebirds flock to the view from my window. And they do, indeed, bring happiness.

Deer raid a bird feeder. Photo by James Guilford.

NOT Bluebirds but they can certainly eat a lot of bird seed!

The ones that got away

Posted by Photonstopper on November 29, 2019
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: bird feeding, birds, cooper's hawk, hawk, photography, raptor, sparrows. Leave a comment

Cooper’s Hawk frustrated by low hedge!

There was some excitement this dreary afternoon as this Cooper’s Hawk (Accipiter cooperii) first perched on a small tree in our front yard to stake out our bird feeder; then chased a couple of sparrows into a nearby row of barberries (seen here). This time the little birds escaped, rocketing out in separate directions at ground level from beneath the thicket and the predator. A pile of gray feathers beneath the bird feeder a couple of weeks ago were evidence that a Mourning Dove wasn’t so lucky as today’s sparrows. (Image shot though window glass and screen.)

The Mystic Lake Waters

Posted by Photonstopper on November 2, 2019
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: color, lake erie, light, mood, northeastern ohio, ohio, photograph, weather. Leave a comment
Photo: A man, bench, and bicycle silhoutted against glowing waters. Photo by James Guilford.

Somewhere Across the Waters

Our wanderings today took us close to my beloved Lake Erie shoreline. The sky near the horizon was dark but the lake reflected a mystical light of green-blue. A few minutes well-spent gazing upon the mystic lake waters.

Photo: Dark horizon, glowing Lake Erie Waters. Photo by James Guilford.

Into the Mystic Waters

Final bloom

Posted by Photonstopper on September 29, 2019
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: autumn, beauty, flower, lily, Medina County Parks, nature, photograph, photography, seasons, water lily, wolf creek. Leave a comment
Photo: Late-Season water lily. Photo by James Guilford.

Final Bloom

A stroll in the Alderfer-Oenslager Wildlife Sanctuary at Wolf Creek Environmental Center led us out over the wetland area via boardwalk. Along the walkway was a late-season water lily bloom, floating on dark waters in the afternoon sun. Nearby, tiny green dots of plant life float. It was warm that day but cold days lie ahead. Nature knows.

Al Fresco

Posted by Photonstopper on September 29, 2019
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: grungy, iphone, iPhone 6SE, mood, photograph, photography, strange, street photography, street scene. 1 Comment
Photo: Grungy alleyway with patio seating. Photo by James Guilford.

Al Fresco

On a walk today, I glanced down an alleyway and spied this scene: patio seating in a very grungy setting. The dreary skies softened lighting in an already-shaded area and amplified the mood of the al fresco table. I’ve ordered a replacement smart phone for my trusty iPhone SE that has served me so well so this may well be one of the last photos I shoot with its remarkable built-in camera.

Return to astronomy

Posted by Photonstopper on September 21, 2019
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: astronomy, astrophotography, Perseus Double, photograph, photography, Ring Nebula, Vixen. Leave a comment
Photo: NGC869 - Photo by James Guilford

NGC869 — Half of the Perseus Double Cluster.

I suppose one cannot return to something one hasn’t left. Still, with weather settling down and sunset coming earlier I’ve been looking to further explore the night sky.

We live in a small city with big light pollution. The light dome over our area has grown steadily over the past decade and from our backyard most northern stars lower than Polaris are completely obliterated by artificial light. To the south, the view is probably similar to “suburban” light pollution levels. Which is to say, bad but not impossible.

Lately I’ve been using my new telescope in imaging experiments. This week, unlike earlier recent efforts, I was able to get the telescope mount aligned well which allowed its computer to find dim objects in our bright sky. I was able to visually observe Jupiter (with Great Red Spot front and center), Saturn, the M15 star cluster, the Perseus Double Cluster, the Ring Nebula in Lyra, and the Andromeda Galaxy.

Photo: Vixen VC200L by James Guilford.

Waiting for Dark: Vixen VC200L on a Meade LXD75 Computerized Mount.

Attaching one of my DSLRs to the new Cassegrain reflector, I shot images of several of the larger deep sky objects. Vibration and tracking were issues, as was achieving camera focus. Working around those challenges as best I could, I made multiple images of the Ring Nebula (M57) and one of the clusters in the Perseus Double (NGC869).

Looking at the camera’s built-in LCD panel that night, I was astonished… I could see color in the Ring Nebula! Visual observers, using smallish telescopes, usually see no color in the Ring; film and electronic sensors readily collect enough photons to register color. Still, a very happy surprise to me! So I shot a series of prime focus images of the nebula. The Perseus Double was also visually attractive so I shot that as well. About 10 seconds for each of those. Efforts at shooting M15 failed: the telescope didn’t track well enough to produce round stars in the exposure time set — possibly too long an exposure.

Photo: The Ring Nebula (M57) in Lyra. Photo by James Guilford.

The Ring Nebula (M57) in Lyra glows. Observed visually through small telescopes, the nebula usually looks gray.

Astrophotography of deep space objects can be extremely technical. The learning curve on an excellent product like PixInsight is more like a cliff than a curve. I searched and found a software that is excellent for me at my relative beginner level — Starry Sky Stacker (SSS). The SSS has the important basics for good astrophotography, and has an easy-to-learn image processing process with little frustration. So, to get started producing and learning, I used SSS to align, stack, and integrate the images for both NGC869 and M57 with results pleasing to me.

Over the coming weeks and longer, I’ll be assembling more equipment and skills and with luck, by spring, will be producing decent space pictures beyond the Sun and Moon.

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