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Buzzards and butterflies

Posted by Photonstopper on June 8, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: astronomy, butterfly, buzzard, cleveland zoo, photography, vulture. 2 Comments

Gad, what a hot day! We decided to take it a little easier than we might otherwise have on a sunny Sunday and went on another "photo safari." I thought we would wind up at Hinckley Lake –one of our favorite places– but She Who Must be Obeyed had suffered several nasty bug bites last night at a star party. Yes, She actually went with me to an astronomy club meeting; this one was the Aurora Astronomical Society and a Saturday night meeting. We did not expect a star party as it had been cloudy all day. The overcast parted enough, however, that after sunset we could look at Mars, Saturn, and the Moon through several telescopes members had set up. The meeting place, the Moebius Nature Center, was immediately adjacent to a wetland area which was perfect for rearing large clouds of insects. I escaped with nary a bite but, as noted, not She!

At any rate, the bug bites suppressed any wish on Her part to go into natural areas where blood-thirsty insects might swarm, so we went back to the zoo. Two visits in as many weeks! We continued our visit there, checking out areas we missed last weekend. I had in hand my Canon Digital Rebel XT with its brand-new, never-used, 70 – 200mm Canon "L" lens I was so eager to test.

Buzzard Grab Shot
Buzzard Grab Shot

We had a lovely, though sweaty, day photographing the animals and plants of the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo. My first photos with the lens were actually grab-shots of wild, domestic buzzards visiting an open-air environment where keepers had scattered carrion for captive birds to devour. Our native turkey vultures put on quite a show, soaring and speeding through the air. The captive African variety –rendered flightless– were tame by comparison. Because of their speed riding strong winds I was only able to catch three images of our local birds: the first and third were out of focus but the "middle" shot was good and gave me an idea of the potential the new glass holds.

Buzzard Cropped
Buzzard Cropped

Walking along we viewed giraffes, sea lions, reindeer, wolves, bears, and more, photographing them all. A very pleasant way to spend the time and learn about the habits and features of the creatures. We entered the greenhouse that serves as seasonal habitat to a tropical butterfly exhibit. Outdoors the temperature was around 90 (F) degrees with humidity around 40 percent; it was hot but tolerable. In there, among the tropical plants and butterflies, it was hotter and misting sprays sent the humidity through the roof. We could only tolerate a few minutes. During that time an exquisite iridescent blue butterfly –a blue morpho– settled on to a board of the wooden walkway, just ahead of me. It flattened its wings and posed! Picture time! Before I moved on I gently coaxed the beauty on to my index finger and it took flight … we didn't want it to become a patch of blue goo.

Butterfly Poses
Butterfly Poses

We were drained by the heat and so left a little before noon and headed back to Whole Foods Market where yesterday we had purchased some food and She picked up some makeup. The makeup color choice was a bit too dark for her so we were returning the pretty tube. Then we sought lunch and enjoyed custom stir-fries at the Heinen's in-store cafe. Customers pick out most of the ingredients salad bar style and the staff cooks them up adding one's choice of proteins, rice, noodles, sauce, etc. Yummy! Before leaving we picked up a nice bottle of Monkey Business Merlot. Dinner should also be scrumptious.

Following lunch it was back home to look at our digital photos and enjoy the cool, quiet environs here. In all a fine day of buzzards and butterflies.

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Summer weather at Mars’s north pole

Posted by Photonstopper on June 3, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: astronomy, mars, phoenix, weather. 2 Comments
Mars Weather on Sol 7
Mars Weather on Sol 7

I'm looking around and hoping to be able to add a Mars Phoenix Mission weather graphic to my astronomy Web sites — something that updates daily. So far, only a desktop widget for Windows Vista computers –not what I want– is available. The Phoenix lander sits at what would be the Martian arctic circle. The mission is limited to only about 92 days because, even as it sits there in Mars's summer season, the high temperature never exceeds something like 20 degrees (F) below zero and, at night, well, your ice cream would never melt. EVER! They tell us that, as winter sets in on Mars, the Phoenix lander will become entombed in snow and ice –mostly frozen carbon dioxide– effectively "killing" the immobile robot about three (Earth) months from now. When summer returns to the northern regions of Mars, the lander will be exposed again. The solar panels will generate electricity again. And NASA will listen. There is a small chance Phoenix will stir back to life and, if it does, her handlers don't want to miss it! In the mean time we sit and watch the show from warmer climes and marvel.

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Great day for a safari

Posted by Photonstopper on June 2, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: birds, canon, cleveland, cord camera, elephant, lorikeet, lumix, photography, zoo. 4 Comments
Lorikeet
Lorikeet

Today, Sunday, was a perfect day weatherwise for darned near anything we would have wanted to do. Surprising to me, She Who Must be Obeyed did not feel like cycling so we walked to breakfast and a quick trip to the grocery to pick up a couple of items. Then She suggested a visit to the Cleveland Zoo. We hadn't been there in a while and it was early enough to beat the crowds that were sure to come later. So off we went.

We had a splendid visit under nearly cloudless skies. It became a sort of photographic expedition. She had her most excellent Panasonic Lumix camera and I had my Canon Digital Rebel with Tamron lens. She and I shot lots of photos. She had spare batteries; I did not. So for about half the visit my camera was dead weight. No matter, really, we had a very pleasant visit. The animals were very active and the air was fresh and light.

Later, as we sought a spare battery, we discovered Cord Camera had moved its area "superstore" from a location near where we live to one near where I work. We zipped over for a quick look and were very impressed. I need to stay away from there as it awakens the desire to acquire more expensive gear!

It will be a clear night tonight but there will be no stargazing for this boy save, perhaps, a quick trip to the balcony with binoculars. I must get up and go to work and goodness knows Mondays are hard enough without adding fatigue to the mix.

So I leave you with my two best photos from today's zoo safari –Hers are better than mine, in general– and hope you had a good weekend and will have a fine week ahead.

Zoo Elephant
Zoo Elephant

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Pee-Pee Teepee

Posted by Photonstopper on May 31, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: baby, humor, pee-pee. 1 Comment
Pee-Pee Teepee
Pee-Pee Teepee

Okay, first understand… I didn't go looking for this! I was innocently checking my Gmail account when what to my wondering eyes should appear but a Google Ad link for the Pee-pee Teepee! It's on a real site and, apparently, a it's real product: "The pee-pee teepee for the sprinkling wee wee. This cone shaped cloth product makes diaper changes dry and easy." It's protection against, particularly, baby boys who may relieve themselves in any direction, as in towards a caregiver, during diaper changing operations! It actually looks like a fairly good idea… besides being hilarious!

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Easy, eventful Friday

Posted by Photonstopper on May 30, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: bicycling, canon, cat, cycling, dr. b., earthlink, photography, tamron, tasha, u-verse. Leave a comment

I had the day off because I get to work tomorrow. Whoopee! So took Tasha for routine innoculations. She hated the trip. After all, Tasha's visits to the vet have generally been when she needed immediate attention and lots of needles, etc. Can't really blame her for her aversion to seeing Dr. B. She got through the visit just fine though crying more than usual on the trip out and back.

I'd been considering purchase of a Canon "L" series lens –their best quality– for a while but they're just so darned expensive! I've noticed some shortcomings in the Tamron lens we bought for the Canon and, with some tax "rebate" money burning a hole in my pocket, decided to take the plunge and buy Canon's most reasonably priced "L" zoom telephoto, the f/4 70 – 200mm. To help offset the expense, I'm offering the Tamron lens for sale through Amazon.com. I hope that works out 'cause there are several other things I'd like to sell and somehow I trust Amazon more than eBay.

Finally, I canceled my EarthLink account today. I'd been with them since November 1999 from dial-up to DSL and back again (as we phased them out). AT&T's U-Verse service was just too reasonably priced to pass up and has been too good to quit! I actually feel a little sorry about leaving EarthLink but I guess that's competition for you. Bye-bye!

The weather's looking stormy overnight and tomorrow, possibly clearing up a bit Sunday. Again, I work Saturday so the weather doesn't matter too much to me! We'll see if we wind up cycling Sunday.

Have a good weekend!

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Photos from Vermilion River Reservation

Posted by Photonstopper on May 26, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: flowers, metroparks, reservation, river, snake, vermilion. 3 Comments

I was a bit disappointed with my photos from the Vermilion River Reservation nature tail hike when I first looked at them last night. This morning, well, I like 'em better. Lighting conditions made proper exposure difficult and not very successful on the shots I had highest hopes for. A few others were saved with a little cooking in Photoshop. Here are my best results from the day. Not too bad considering they were in the woods using a handheld telephoto –no tripod– sometimes with mosquitoes buzzing around. I'm working on rationalizations to make the photos more acceptable to my own standards!

Forest Flower
Forest Flower

Sunning Snake
Sunning Snake

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Sunday explorations

Posted by Photonstopper on May 26, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: birds, hike, mars, phoenix, photography. 2 Comments
Birdsong
Birdsong

Though we were tired, Sweetie and I took a nice hike on some Lorain County Metroparks trails we'd never visited before. It was a marvelous experience! The trail –and we didn't walk the entire distance– covered environments ranging from hillside woods and flat forest,  through wetlands, along a river bank, and into a meadow dotted with blue bird nest boxes. Weather was partly cloudy and very pleasant for walking. We shot many photos (I'm generally not happy with mine for several technical reasons), saw a spider that had to be two inches (yikes!) across, watched a long black snake sunning himself, heard the amazing song of a Baltimore oriole, and enjoyed seeing a wide variety of plant life. While we saw a bluebird perched atop a bluebird box, we saw a wren exit that nesting place, later saw a swallow perched atop a different nest box and photographed it. Excellent afternoon! After dinner, She fell asleep on the couch while I sat beside her and watched live coverage of the Mars Phoenix spacecraft landing operation. So very pleased to see it was a text-book flight and shared in the joy the mission team expressed. I was even able to see first images, via the Web, before heading off to bed. Great way to end the day for this "space cadet."

Today, Monday, Memorial Day, looks to be rainy, mostly gray, and quiet. That's good. No plans. We'll see what develops but we could use a quiet day, I think. I'll do some prep for a meeting I have with college staffers tomorrow. The meeting concerns a proposal by an outside group to build an observatory on college property. As in everything, there will be costs and benefits.

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Friends and the night sky

Posted by Photonstopper on May 26, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: astronomy, mars, observatory, saturn, telescope. 2 Comments
Bob
Bob

Saturday was a kind of personal "astronomy day" for me.

First I met my predecessor in the position of Observatory curator. Bob was coming to town for a visit with family and wanted to meet me at the college Observatory. He's 77 now but active in his retirement as a tour guide at a professional observatory facility in Arizona — "for the perks!" The job gives him access to the facilities himself.  He filled me in on some of the recent history and background of the Ohio facility and the workings of our century-old telescope. Though he rarely visits the area, he has taken an interest in the progress we're making with the Observatory and cares about its future, especially, of the vintage instrument. I'm sure we'll be in communication with each other for some time to come.

Sky conditions for Saturday night were forecast to be excellent (for Northeastern Ohio). I learned that some friends from the astronomy club were going to the club's observing site. I decided to take advantage of the situation and use my own telescope for the first time in more than a year! Well, even our usually accurate sky forecast can be wrong and this one was! An unexpected thin layer of cloud moved in so that, by twilight, it covered the darkening sky with a thin "haze." Drat! Everyone was disappointed as it was our best chance for stargazing for the entire holiday weekend. As it turns out the experience served us well as a shakedown. Lynn was learning how to operate the Sphinx computerized telescope mount (much cursing), Steve was apparently having focus problems (maybe atmosphere related but he wasn't sure), but I had a pretty good night.

I remembered how to put everything together –which was a bit surprising– and, even more surprising, my own computerized telescope system performed flawlessly. It had been very tempermental most times in the past. My telescope's alignment was a bit off (my fault) so the system wasn't perfect in finding things, but I did manage to find and enjoy views of Saturn (beautiful), Mars (tiny and disappointing), galaxies M81 & M82 (unimpressive this night due to atmosphere), and a surprising view of M104 –the Sombrero– which I had never seen before. The Sombrero, to my eye, looked like a long string of stars, like a stretched star cluster, instead of a fuzzy cloud — the way most galaxies look when viewed through a small telescope. Optically my big refractor did at least as well as neighboring Schmidt-Cassegrain Telescopes (SCT) delivering excellent quality images of, especially, Saturn under the less than ideal conditions. I was very happy with the beast! I also spied my first Iridium flare which is an extended "flash" of light reflected off one of the many Iritium communications satellites that circle Earth. I had forgotten the custom dew shield for the telescope and, by about midnight, the objective was getting fogged up — the telescope tube was already just about dripping!

I came home happy but late after a rewarding day with friends and the night sky.

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Polaroid photo-a-day

Posted by Photonstopper on May 22, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: magazine, mental floss, ohio, photography. 2 Comments

Thanks to popurls, I learned of the Mental Floss photo-article about a man who made a Polaroid photograph every day for 18 years. Looking at the online article feels like looking through someone's private album, complete with narration. Be sure and take a look.

He Took a Polaroid Every Day, Until the Day He Died by Chris Higgins

May 21, 2008 – 3:30 PM: Yesterday I came across a slightly mysterious website — a collection of Polaroids, one per day, from March 31, 1979 through October 25, 1997. There’s no author listed, no contact info, and no other indication as to where these came from. So, naturally, I started looking through the photos. I was stunned by what I found.

Mental Floss is published right here in Northeastern Ohio!

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The digits fizzle away

Posted by Photonstopper on May 22, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: digital, history, photography. 2 Comments

Someone brought a little bundle to our local history department today and asked them if they were interested. Inside a small box was a stack of glass plate photographic negatives carefully packed with pieces of century-old newspapers! The negatives, I was told, were in very good condition. They will be digitally scanned and added to our online local history collection for the world to see.

Which reminded me of an old concern I share with an all-too-small group of people… what will become of our visual history? I've worked with old glass plates having made contact prints from them. I've worked with old black and white film; it's perfectly usable for decades (at least) after being properly processed. The old black and white prints hold up well, too. Check any good antique shop and it's pretty likely you'll see at least a few photographs that  crossed the century line a while back. Color negatives and prints? Well, not as stable, but good for a while.

Canon Digital Rebel XT
Canon Digital Rebel XT

My big worry concerns digital imaging. I've fully embraced it myself. Now that I have a respectable single-lens reflex (and a couple of all-in-ones) I can make photos to my heart's content and not worry about the cost of film, processing, printing, or even the water pollution caused by those activities. I shoot the way I did when I was a pro: lots of shots, only selected prints though these days almost nothing of mine actually sees physical media… it's "printed" by being published online. Thinking about the future, the way I and we use and save our images isn't good.

What will happen when your family "album" or those photos of your house, car, city, so carefully stored on your C: drive, or diskettes, or in your blog get left behind as you experience your mortality? Will they turn up a century from now at your historical society or in an antique shop, wrapped in an old newspaper? Will historians dig them out of your basement unearthed, in the year 2200 following demolition of an unneeded parking lot? My fear is that, no, there will be few visual traces left of the sort that will tell future Earthlings about how we looked, lived, loved, worked, and played. All those lovely zeros and ones will have fizzled off into the cosmic background and the blogs deleted. CD-ROMs, DVDs, hard drives will be broken, digital formats forgotten and unreadable. Do you still have an 8mm projector that you can use to watch grandpa's or great grandpa's home movies?

Best to continue to make the best and most archival prints of your photographic memories that you can and keep them in a nice photo album. Do it for yourself, for your descendants, and for history. Those crazy scrap bookers may be on to something!

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