Seasons

31 August, 2014    Seasons

Summer doesn’t “officially” end until day and night are of equal length (“equinox”). This year that day is September 23. But here in the United States, summer runs from roughly Memorial Day (it was May 26 this year) through Labor Day (tomorrow). That’s generally when schools are on summer vacation and it’s when outdoor pools are open.

 

This hasn’t been a dry summer and there is still a lot of green around. A few trees have started to change but most are still green. I’ll be cutting my grass again after I post this. Here in central Virginia I still cut my grass at least through October and I think early November is not unheard of. But in high summer the sun is over the horizon for nearly fifteen hours and the grass grows very enthusiastically. Today the sun will only be up for around thirteen hours and by mid-October it will be down to around eleven. Less sunlight = less photosynthesis = less grass growing = less lawn mowing = yay. The other very exciting season related change for me is I begin using my woodstove for heat. That will begin at night probably in a month. But I’m getting ahead of myself.

 

There’s still plenty of sunlight for flowers to grow. Which means still plenty of bugs. In this case, bees. Bumblebees, specifically. I haven’t seen as many honeybees this year. Which is faintly in-the-back-of-my-mind disturbing. I’m aware there have been declines. I’ll have to look into it further. And I don’t know if bumblebees make honey! Pardon my ignorance. I will fill that gap in my knowledge soon. I believe they do not make honey.

 

This picture doesn’t compare to the one I took in my neighbor’s yard while dog sitting in July. That was one of the top photos I’ve ever taken, and I’ve taken a lot. If you missed it, have a look at: Neighbors! This one is a decent picture too, it’s just lacking the neon color from the zinnia as background.

 

It’s a cool picture of a bumblebee – no doubt about it. And it has an interesting feature in common with the one from the “Neighbors!” blog post – in the picture there’s more detail than in real life! Which at least to me is a bizarre concept. Think about it – the reproduction looks more “real” than the actual object. The fake looks more real than the real. That troubles me, faintly.

 

What is most unusual (in my mind) about this picture is what else is in the picture in addition to the bumblebee. Which I didn’t even notice until I put it on my computer. Which I would never have known was there if I hadn’t taken this picture. Look it over yourself for just a moment:

I continue to be amazed at how much is happening in this picture

I continue to be amazed at how much is happening in this picture

Besides the bee and the flower, I believe there is a minimum of three other insects or the remains of insects in this picture. You can click on the picture to enlarge it. To the bee’s left you can see what in my opinion is a spittlebug or froghopper. It looks like a small foamy white mass with six black legs sticking out. It’s late in the season for spittlebugs but that is certainly what it appears to be.

 

Then if you look directly to the bee’s right you can see what appears to be a brown spider or maybe it’s a dead spider or exuvia. But you can’t miss it.

 

Then go to the very bottom of the bee’s right wingtip and look just to the right. There is a tiny green bug there. My friend Pat said it looks like an aphid which sounds reasonable.

 

It’s still incredible to me that I was looking at that scene and only saw the bee. So much other stuff going on. It makes me wonder how much other stuff I miss in my life.

 

I hope you enjoy that bee picture, because photographic pickings have been slim this week.

 

It was morning at Pony Pasture when I took that bumblebee picture. I went hiking at Bryan Park that afternoon with my friend Ethan. I turned the camera over to him and he took this nice picture of an algae covered turtle sunning on a log. I think this is a Red-eared Slider (Trachemys scripta elegans) but I wouldn’t bet my already-shaky reputation on it. The only turtle I can identify w/o fail is a box turtle and this isn’t that. Great picture though – thanks Ethan!:

Algae covered Red-eared Slider? Possibly?

Algae covered Red-eared Slider? Possibly?

I zoomed in (in my obsessive way) on the turtle’s head. Here is a closeup – you can see the red streaks just behind the eyes. That is not a solid ID but I think it’s a good clue.

Tight closeup of that turtle's head

Tight closeup of that turtle’s head

Great Blue Herons are not my favorite bird but sometimes I get a decent picture. This one is also from Bryan Park that day. I’m always hoping I’ll get a picture of a heron catching a fish or a snake or a turtle but it hasn’t happened yet. Still looking:

Elegant and clumsy in the same bird

Elegant and clumsy in the same bird

Enough creeping-crawling-stinging-swimming-flying things. I’ll close with a couple of flowers. This day-glo yellow flower was brightening up the field at Pony Pasture this morning:

If I were the sun I'd love to shine on flowers like these

If I were the sun I’d love to shine on flowers like these

And this almost artificially pink rose was climbing out of the 100% untamed garden next to my driveway:

So pink it looks like it has a power supply hidden somewhere

So pink it looks like it has a power supply hidden somewhere

Enjoy this little story (hopefully) and come back again next week! Even more hopefully! All best,

Jay

= = = = = = = = = =

Fun story from my pet therapy days with Ivory

Mackey and Turner and I ran into a couple at Pony Pasture this morning who were hiking with a lovely pair of Borzois. We’d met them before but this was the first time we chatted. As usual I now know the dog’s names but not the people’s. One of the dogs was a gorgeous dark female named Abigail (such a graceful name and such a graceful dog) and the male was lighter colored and his name was Wraith. We spoke some about this and that and the conversation turned to therapy dogs as it often does when I’m in on the conversation. They did some therapy work with one of their dogs too.

 

Ivory (my old therapy dog, RIP) was the first dog I ever taught to “spell” or at least to give the impression he knew how to spell. All of my dogs do it now. Yours can too; it takes about ten seconds to teach. It’s a parlor trick but it’s a good one. If I say “S-I-T”, Mackey and Turner will sit right away. More often than not, anyway. If they’re right in front of me. They’ll do the same thing if I say “P-I-G” or “B-I-D” but that would spoil the fun.

 

Ivory loved nothing better than to make people smile and in hindsight I suspect it was him who taught me the trick. It’s perfect for young kids because if they can spell at all, they know how to spell “sit.” Ivory and I were doing pet therapy one day many years (more like a decade) ago on the Pediatric ICU (PICU) at MCV. There was a girl there who was let’s say seven years old. She was sick enough to be in ICU but well enough to be bored. But sick enough that she couldn’t get out of bed. That population is the exact target for pet therapy. Bored kids who are otherwise unable to relieve their boredom. Other than by video games or television which yuck. So we were doing the usual chatter about Ivory and the girl was engaged because pet therapy is a big, big boredom reliever. I told her that Ivory knew how to spell and proceeded to demonstrate (S-I-T!). Her eyes popped wide open like she was part of a comedy act. She stared at Ivory and stared at me and stared at Ivory again. She said “OH. MY. GOSH!!!” She looked at me again and back at Ivory. And said “J-U-M-P!”

 

Pet therapy’s such a great environment. I’ll bet that was fifteen years ago. That girl’s probably in college now. Ivory’s been gone for over three years. But it still brings a smile to my face. I of course had to quickly explain how Ivory could spell one word but not the other – not yet, anyway.

I hope your week is great.

All best,

Jay

= = = = = = = = = =

Posted in Birds, Dogs, Flowers, Fun, People, Rivers, Smiles (including "dog smiles"!) | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

The party never ends

24 August, 2014            The party never ends

I turned fifty-three yesterday and the party began Friday evening at Boka Kantina just a mile from home:

Birthday boy with the Boss of Boka (Kiki)  The party that never ends was just beginning.

Birthday boy with the Boss of Boka (Kiki)
The party that never ends was just beginning. Thanks for the picture Evie! 

I woke up yesterday morning when the dogs woke up (they get up early on my birthday… and every other day). When I checked my email I found Evelyn had sent this superb book:

An interview with my favorite author, published posthumously. Thanks for the perfect gift Evie!

Transcript of an interview with my favorite author, published posthumously. Thanks for the perfect gift Evie!

 

I downloaded it to my ipad and read it once yesterday and began it again. I’ll probably finish it before dinner tonight and go around at least one more time. If you are a fan of the late David Foster Wallace or if you enjoy reading or writing, I cannot recommend it highly enough. You owe it to yourself. It’s the transcript of a one hour interview. He is among my favorite authors. When he committed suicide six years ago at forty-six years old I’d never been as sad about the death of a complete stranger. It was nice to “hear his voice” again as I read, and I hope learn a bit more about writing clearly and about thinking clearly.

 

Our neighbor’s daughter was in the Children’s Theater of Virginia’s production of the Shrek Style Showcase at Willow Lawn on my birthday and they invited Evelyn and me to the show – and it was fantastic! We saw it at 2:00 yesterday afternoon and it was the final show in that run – so you missed it! But look on their web site and catch another show – it’s a treat. Here are a few pictures from the show:

Mid-Shrek:

Mid-Shrek:

Late Shrek:

Late Shrek:

Shrek flesh tone colored program:

Shrek flesh tone colored program:

Please forgive the quality of those pictures. I almost never take pictures indoors and I almost never take pictures of people. So I have nearly zero practice with either one. My lack of experience shows. But the experience of watching the live production was a unique gift and perfect for my birthday. That’s a perfect gift – no one else can give it, environmentally friendly, the only one of its kind. How can you improve that? I’ll tell you how – you can’t! Thanks Nora and Lee and Kara!

 

Last year on my birthday my friends took me to brunch at Portico Restaurant in still faintly rural southeastern Goochland County. It was so great we did it again this year and we were well rewarded. It was the same crew as last year except our old friend a.k.a. Luigi was, to quote him, “…not lost but wandering the Brooklyn desert…”. Your guess here is as good as mine. Hopefully he’ll join us in 2015! Sara was our waitress last year and she helped us again this year. Last year’s late August weather was sweltering, and we sat indoors in the air conditioning. This year was nearly cool; it felt more like October than August. We sat outdoors and it was delightful. Sara graciously took our picture:

An excellent Brunch Bunch!

An excellent Brunch Bunch!

A few pictures from this week. I’m slowly learning to photograph these “old” moons, that is when they’re past full and shrinking every day. Photographing them is no different than photographing other phases of the moon. Except they’re up early in the morning rather than in the evening. I took this one at 5:40 AM on Wednesday (August 20):

Waning crescent moon, about 24.5 days old:

Waning crescent moon, about 24.5 days old:

This is out of order. But I took a bunch of pictures in the garden at Portico. It’s just beautiful, you should really visit. I was surprised to see a dragonfly! This picture turned out well:

What a beauty! And no river in sight!

What a beauty! And no river in sight!

 Evelyn and I often admire the attention to detail at Portico. It’s always trim and tidy, including and especially the groundskeeping. This is a sundial from the garden. I’ve seen dozens of sundials and close to 100% of them are ornamental. This one was ornamental too – but look at the time. That’s about as close to 4:00 as a sundial can get. The time stamped on the picture? 4:02 PM. Ornamental and functional!:

A sundial showing the precise time!

A sundial showing the precise time!

Their flowers are so well cared for. Look at this nasturtium:

Orange Nasturtium

Cheerful orange Nasturtium

And this day lily:

Cheerful yellow day lily

Cheerful yellow day lily

 There were more – I had to stop myself! What a treat in late August.

 

Since I’ve been reading Quack This Way I’ve been thinking a lot about the way I spend time in my life. What I choose to spend each of my particular twenty-four hours doing. The choices I make today and the way those choices have been informed by my upbringing. I’ve mentioned in earlier blog posts that the three most impactful environments in my upbringing were (in random order) Camp Waredaca, our cabin and Gonzaga. There was no electricity at Camp, so no television. The only  two things mom and dad didn’t allow at the cabin were 1. a television and 2. a telephone. Things were a lot different then; there was no cable television and no cell phones. Spending so much quality time during my youth with no television made me comfortable without one now. It forced me outdoors a lot and it continues to do that.

 

These are not well-formed thoughts and thus not ready for publication. I’ll read Quack This Way a time or two more and get this all together.

 

I’ll close with a picture from the river this morning. And I hope you have a great week! All best, 

Jay

PS This birthday was a multi-day/multi-event celebration. I kept thinking of a 1989  song by Robert Earl Keene called The Road Goes On Forever. It has eight verses and each verse ends “The road goes on forever and the party never ends.” “The party never ends” has been going through my mind all weekend – it was the automatic title for this blog post.

Wait! I had one other picture this week I really enjoyed. It’s a “nature” shot – it’s a water strider – but I took it from a bridge about six feet above looking straight down. And although it’s clearly a bug on water, it almost looks a bit surreal. The idea of standing on water held up by surface tension alone is fascinating:

Sometimes we walk in air, sometimes on sunshine, this insect is walking on water. Maybe just standing there.

Sometimes we walk in air, sometimes on sunshine, this insect is walking on water. Maybe just standing there.

NOW the picture from the river this morning:

That river could not possibly be any more gorgeous

That river could not possibly be any more gorgeous

 

Posted in Flowers, Fun, People, Rivers, Smiles (including "dog smiles"!) | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

I went flying yesterday!

17 August, 2014            I went flying yesterday!

My friend Pat’s son Daniel is a flight instructor at a nearby airport. He is joining the Marine Corps very soon and invited us to go flying. When I saw this picture on his fb page I thought it was a cool plane – but there was no way the three of us would fit:

For just a minute I thought we were going to fly in this

For just a minute I thought we were going to fly in this

Imagine my relief when he pulled this out of the hangar:

Cessna 172 - our chariot awaits

Cessna 172 – our chariot awaits

For the uninitiated, that is a Cessna 172, the best-selling airplane of all time. If you hear or see a single engine propeller plane, chances are it’s a 172. If it is, like this a “high wing” airplane with “tricycle” landing gear, you can almost be certain.

 

Daniel went to college in Williamsburg and learned to fly nearby. We took off from Williamsburg Jamestown Airport (JGG). We flew to Tangier Island Airport (TGI). Many airports have a three letter airport code; Richmond airport’s is RIC, Dulles is IAD, O’Hare is ORD, Los Angeles is LAX, and so on.

 

I’ve flown very little general aviation, just a few times with my brother Shane, who is also a pilot. And that was before I really began taking pictures so I didn’t get a great deal of practice. I brought my camera along on our flight yesterday and managed to get a few decent pictures. They don’t do the experience justice, though – being up there is so much fun you just want to do it all the time. And I hated to stop paying attention to the flying and start paying attention to the pictures but you can do both. Sort of.

 

To set the stage for our flight I have to include a picture I took earlier that day here in Richmond. We weren’t flying until the afternoon and that gave me an opportunity to get Mackey and Turner to the river in the morning. Since I would be gone all afternoon (and Evie was out of town) I wanted Mackey and Turner nice and worn out before I left. Fortunately Lee and Kara and their family fed dinner to my boys. This is a picture I took at Pony Pasture yesterday morning; talk about a beautiful day for flying:

It doesn't get much more beautiful than this

It doesn’t get much more beautiful than this

 Interestingly (to me) – I just realized that was the James River in Richmond in the morning. In mid-afternoon, Pat and Daniel and I were in the plane climbing over the James River sixty (more or less) miles downstream:

My second view of the James River today:

My second look at the James River today:

 I’d like to tell you (I’d like to know myself) a lot more about that picture. Like how high we were, precisely where we were, how long we’d been in the air, etc. I just love knowing that sort of thing. But I was paying attention to a lot of stuff at once. It was so much fun. I do know I took that picture at 3:18 PM yesterday.

 

Pat and Daniel were very gracious about allowing me such a great seat. First they allowed me to sit in front, which was a blast. And Daniel allowed me to sit on the left side, which is normally the pilot’s seat. But since he’s an instructor he spends a lot of hours in the right seat and said that’s what he’s used to. In the left seat you get to see all the instruments:

You can look at those instruments and tell a lot. I took this picture at 3:20 PM yesterday.

You can look at those instruments and tell a lot. I took this picture at 3:20 PM yesterday.

 If you’ll look on the tail of the plane in the picture near the top you’ll see the “tail number” – similar to the license plate of a car. You can see the same number there on the plane’s dash in the upper right hand corner. Every plane has one and if you google it, google will recognize what it is and tell you about the plane. Enough of that!

 

The picture looking down at the river is looking out of the left window. This picture is facing straight forward from the seat I was in. Notice the little blur where the propeller was passing through. That shutter stayed open for 1/800th of a second. The prop has two blades and the engine was turning around 2,300 rpm. You may not be able to see that blade very well but you can sure see my inner nerd!

Looking ahead. Magnetic compass on the right.

Looking ahead. Magnetic compass on the right.

Here’s another picture I took looking down, five or ten minutes after we took off. See the sandbars on the bottom? And the landing gear? I just get fascinated by all this stuff. Every bit of it:

This is just WAY too much fun:

This is just WAY too much fun:

It was only a few minutes before the runway (and the rest of the island) at Tangier came into view:

Tangier Island in view; runway is on the left

Tangier Island in view; runway is on the left 

I feel bad – there was so much stuff to see and do and take in, I’m just unable to do it all justice. It’s a good thing I’m not a food critic. I am moderately articulate but there are simply no words to describe how excellent the crab cakes were at lunch. We ate at the Fisherman’s Corner Restaurant and I wish I’d gotten ten to go.

 

I just can’t work it all in. So, random shots while we were walking around. Boat:

I'll bet there are crabs on board. Or other shellfish.

I’ll bet there are crabs on board. Or other shellfish. 

I’ll bet this cat eats way more fresh seafood than most cats:

Notice the conspicuous lack of anxiety

Notice the conspicuous lack of anxiety

They were having the 50th Homecoming for the Tangier Volunteer Fire Department. Some of their equipment was parked on the side of the runway:

Nice looking Volunteer Fire Department, founded 1964

Nice looking Volunteer Fire Department, founded 1964 

I took a hundred and twenty pictures  yesterday. I had a high success rate considering it was a new experience for me – I probably got at least thirty good ones. But a blog post only holds so much. All good things have to come to an end. I don’t know if that expression is appropriate for this blog post – it definitely has an end; whether it’s a good thing or not is another matter. The trip, however, most emphatically was a good thing – it was amazing. Many thanks to Daniel and Pat and everybody else I crossed paths with yesterday! Until next week, here’s a picture as Daniel’s lining up on the runway at JGG:

Landing back at Williamsburg:

Landing back at Williamsburg:

Have a great week,

 

Jay

PS I suspect there may be a high rate of error in this post. Everything was new to me, that’s one reason. I didn’t check any of the facts with Daniel, that’s another. My favorite editor Evelyn is out of town, that’s the main reason. So it’s all on me! Never fear, Evelyn will make sure it’s all okay next week.

 

PPS I owe a few responses to comments – I apologize for dragging my feet – I’ll respond w/in ~24 hours. I respond to every comment. I LOVE it when people comment on my blog.

 

Posted in Fun, People, Rivers, Smiles (including "dog smiles"!) | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 11 Comments

Halloween Pennant

10 August, 2014        Halloween Pennant

I just couldn’t resist that great name. That’s the actual name of a dragonfly I photographed this week – it’s called a “Halloween Pennant (Celithemis eponina).” Have a look:

"Halloween Pennant" - great looking name for a great looking insect. Open freshwater mussel shell in the background.

“Halloween Pennant” – great name for a great looking insect. Open freshwater mussel shell in the background.

I was most interested in “Pennant” – I’d never heard that before. When I googled it, I read that  “…this dragonfly gets its name…when it is perched on the very tip of a stalk of grass and is blown about by even the slightest wind.” Just like a pennant! Just like in the picture I was fortunate enough to take. Very interesting. Other broad categories of dragonflies are called skimmers, hawkers, darters, darners, chasers and more, largely based on a frequent behavior of the dragonflies in each category. “Pennant” – it wasn’t intuitive. But when you see the picture I took – on my first try – it’s easy to see where the name comes from.

 

The “Halloween” part of the name I suppose comes from the coloring. Very autumnal even though it’s still mid-summer. All that bright orange and brown. The “Pennant” part also I suppose comes from the fact that they’re more still water insects than flowing water. I took this picture on the edge of one of the two ponds at West Creek Business Park. Not near the river where I do most of my photography.

 

I wasn’t at West Creek to photograph dragonflies that day – I wasn’t even there to take pictures. I was there riding my bicycle and I’d seen the first killdeers of the year running around the edge of the lake. The pictures I’m embarrassed to say were awful; here’s the best one:

Killdeer - Charadrius vociferus

Killdeer – Charadrius vociferus

Notice the second half of the scientific (“binomial”) name? “Vociferus“? There is no such thing as a quiet killdeer. Even their common name (“killdeer”) is because of the sound they make.

I promise there will be better killdeer pictures soon. They’re charming birds and quite attractive. It’s funny that I was trying to get the killdeers and although I missed them I ended up with a new dragonfly. Another thing that surprised me right there – right on the edge of that lake – were large mussel shells scattered all along the shoreline. They don’t photograph particularly well (in my opinion) but here’s one for an idea:

Freshwater mussel - some lucky raccoon has been dining on seafood

Freshwater mussel – some lucky raccoon has been dining on seafood

Flowers in August are getting few and far between but the ones left are showy. A few yards from the killdeers and the mussel and perhaps directly underneath the Halloween Pennant was this puffy white flower with a bee inside:

The FIRST flower with a bee inside I photographed today

The FIRST flower with a bee inside I photographed today

According to the time stamp on my camera I took that at 11:13 AM on Thursday at  West Creek. That afternoon I went hiking at Pony Pasture – 10 miles east of West Creek – with a buddy of mine. Flowers were blooming next to the water there. On the next picture it’s the same day and the time stamp says 3:51 PM. Look at this flower with a bee inside:

The SECOND flower picture I took with a bee inside - the same day.

The SECOND flower with a bee inside – the same day.

Everybody’s stocking up.

 

On my way to the Y, I stopped in a neighborhood near me to photograph these yuccas. Always elegant:

Beautiful. And very, very tough.

Beautiful. And very, very tough.

Speaking of elegant, Evie bought this plant in a much more bedraggled condition several years ago for ninety-nine cents. She nursed it back to health and it looks graceful on our mantle with the morning sun lighting it up:

Delicate and lovely

Delicate and lovely

 When the sun is shining in our living room window, Mackey (the black dog) and Turner tend to lie around. They also do that when the sun is not shining in our living room window. I think they’re just saving their energy for Pony Pasture:

Slackers. I'm sorry, there's just no other word to describe them.

Slackers. I’m sorry, there’s just no other word to describe them.

Mackey and Turner get far too much attention. But they’re dogs; that’s just the way they are. I have a cat as well, “Dash.” He lies around too, but he’s not a slacker. Look at this guy – he lies around with personality:

See what I mean? Dash lies around actively.

See what I mean? Dash lies around actively.

Not a huge post this week. I hope your week is a great one and I look forward to seeing you here again (hopefully!) next Sunday. Until then, 

Jay

PS A picture I took at Pony Pasture one morning this week:

Always peaceful

Always peaceful

 

Posted in Birds, Dogs, Flowers, Fun, Rivers | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Neighbors!

3 August, 2014              Neighbors!

My neighbors were out of town recently and I had the great good fortune of spending time with their excellent dog Lucy and their fabulous cat Gerald and their beautiful, beautiful garden. It’s full of flowers, several bunches of which are gracing my living room and dining room and back porch. It’s also full of herbs, which went into the gazpacho Evie made earlier. Yum!

 

An unanticipated gift was a picture I took in their garden while Lucy and I were hanging out in the backyard. A large patch of zinnias is just over the fence and I brought my camera along and snapped away while Lucy played outdoors for a while. I take a lot of pictures that make me happy but once in a while one comes along that goes straight to the top of the list. Look at this picture:

One of my favorite pictures ever.

One of my favorite pictures ever.

I should add this caveat. It will come as no surprise to anyone that I take a lot of pictures. And if you take, for instance, 1,000 pictures and delete 990 of them, you’re going to have ten beautiful pictures. Sometimes when you take a lot of pictures you get a great one. Look at the pollen. And the wings. I’m thrilled with this one.

 

I was thinking about (not to say obsessing about) that picture for some time after I took it. After I looked at it on my monitor. It’s a beautiful picture, and the picture – the bee in the photograph – seems more real than it seemed in real life. Which is odd. Maybe I need new glasses or something. Probably it’s because even on a small monitor such as e.g. my iphone, the bee is ~4x as big as a real bee. And on my computer monitor it’s about as big as a robin. And I look at those fine yellow and black hairs and see the little grains of pollen in them and think “if I had a tiny comb or brush I could brush those right out.” Whereas in the first half century of my life I didn’t even know they had those little hairs. Peculiar.

 

It’s rude of me to introduce an insect before I introduce the guest of honor, the breathtaking Miss Lucy:

Turner on the left, Mackey on the right, Lovely Lucy in the center

Turner on the left, Mackey on the right, Lovely Lucy in the center

She’s a great addition when Mackey and Turner and I go to Pony Pasture. Very ladylike and very enthusiastic, the perfect complement to the boys. And she loves to swim!

 

It’s easy to take pictures when I just have Mackey and Turner with me since I know what they’re going to do and they know what I’m going to do. Lucy stirs things up a little which is great – it keeps us from getting set in our ways. I had to stand on three twitching  leashes and stand still to get this pretty damselfly:

I don't get tired of these damselflies. There are so many.

I don’t get tired of these damselflies. There are so many. And they’re all so different

Just when I thought I’d stopped being rude, I’m talking about bugs again. Just FYI, I’ve been chatting online with a few entomologists – I’m not even making this up – and they prefer the word “insects.” Rather than “bugs.” Anyway, I’m talking about bugs before I talk about the great extra animals I’ve spent time with this week. Gerald (the cat I’m helping out with) and Lucy are close, close buddies. And when the family’s away that house gets mighty quiet. Gerald stays usually within sight of Lucy’s crate. It must have been really quiet when we took Lucy out. When we got home, Gerald made clear he wanted to go with us next time, and even gave us this wordless but unmistakable suggestion:

Gerald thinks this car seat might be re-purposed.

Gerald thinks this car seat might be re-purposed.

That is not a staged shot – he just likes to sit there. Speaking of other unstaged alternate uses for car seat situations, another one came up – still not making this up – the same day. Old friends were in from Oregon and we only had a brief visit while they passed through town. We were outside and it began sprinkling and one of their kids used a car seat – a car seat that looked remarkably similar to Gerald’s – as a rain hat. Same day. Totally didn’t see that coming. I regret that I was unable to photograph it.

 

If you look through the first three or so years of this blog, you’ll see a bug picture or two, mostly butterflies, but not that many. For some reason in 2014 I just began looking at bugs and the more I look at them, the more I see. I was meeting Pat to go for a ride this afternoon and as I walked out the door I saw this beauty on my front door:

On the front door of our house this afternoon. Amazing. It looks like it's made of colored ceramic tile with black grout.

On the front door of our house this afternoon. Amazing. It looks like it’s made of colored ceramic tile with black grout.

I got a nice look at this Great Blue Skimmer (Libellula vibrans) at Pony Pasture one morning:

Great Blue Skimmer (Libellula vibrans)

Great Blue Skimmer (Libellula vibrans)

It hasn’t been all bugs this summer; just a lot. I managed to juggle three leashes long enough in the back field at Pony Pasture to catch this goldfinch glancing our way:

Gazing goldfinch

Gazing goldfinch

Of course if you’re photographing bugs (insects) you’re often photographing flowers. Part of the treasure of spending time in my neighbors’ yard was looking at their flowers. With the profusion of zinnias in their yard, if you’re looking at bees you’re looking at flowers you’re looking at bees. Another zinnia:

No wonder the bees can't leave them alone. I can hardly look away myself!

No wonder the bees can’t leave them alone. I can hardly look away myself!

I need another obsession like a need a hole in my head. So I’m going to post this one moth picture I took with their zinnias. And not stay up for hours learning what it is. And about the cool loopy thing that may be its tongue. So much fun though:

Everybody loves these zinnias!

Everybody loves these zinnias!

And to describe their morning glories as merely glorious is a blatant understatement – feast your eyes:

These are unretouched - I just point and shoot and post. Astonishing.

These are unretouched – I just point and shoot and post. Astonishing.

Hopefully I’ll be posting again a week from today. Until then, all best,

 

Jay and friends

 

Posted in Birds, Dogs, Flowers, Fun, People, Rivers, Smiles (including "dog smiles"!) | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Some days

20 July, 2014              Some days

 

Some days when you’re committed to a post a week, you come up to Sunday afternoon and you don’t have anything to post. Some days you have a lot to write, some days a lot of pictures, this or that. I’ve been uninspired this week when it comes to blogging. My brothers both had birthdays this week so that was fun, and Evie’s was yesterday, and that was even more fun. If you’ve noticed over the three years of this blog I don’t photograph people well and I don’t photograph indoors well so I stay away from that. I met Kevin and his family at the Carter Park Municipal Pool in Ashland for a swim meet and had a ton of fun – but didn’t take pictures. At the North Richmond YMCA this week with Ethan I saw a bluebird; I can never resist a picture:

Bluebird on a blue rail

Bluebird on a blue rail

And hiking at the river earlier this week I came face to face with this handsome young buck:

Shy little guy - see his little antlers?

Shy little guy – see his little antlers?

For comparison, I took this picture last year at Pony Pasture. Make no mistake, this is a freak of nature. To think that this animal lives inside Richmond city limits is mind-boggling. If you see a whitetail deer in Pony Pasture you can be pretty certain it shares some of this dude’s DNA:

I still can't get over the way this guy looks. That's w/in ~5 minutes walk from the big parking lot. Incredible.

I still can’t get over the way this guy looks. That’s w/in ~5 minutes walk from the big parking lot. Incredible.

 

I don’t recall July being such a prolific month outdoors in past years. This week the woods and fields have been full. This zebra swallowtail (Eurytides marcellus) was modeling at Pony Pasture a few minutes before I saw that buck (the small one, not the monster):

Zebra swallowtail. What an amazing beauty.

Zebra swallowtail. What an amazing beauty.

Some people click on the links I provide; others move on. If you chose not to click on that link, here is a piece of info I found interesting: “Caterpillar Hosts: Shrubs of the genus Asimina (pawpaw) in the Annonaceae family. Young plants are preferred.” Pawpaws are the most prolific tree in Pony Pasture. While reading the information about the zebra swallowtail I also learned this: “Adult Food: Moisture from sand…”. That was especially interesting  since this morning when Ev and the dogs and I were hiking, we saw one standing in the wet sand on the river’s edge. I took a nice picture of that one as well but take my word for it – leaves make a much prettier background.

 

Pony Pasture wasn’t the only place with a lot to see this week. Wednesday morning around 9:30 I was driving south on Parham from Interstate 64 and I turned onto a residential street. A hawk swooped over and landed on a soccer goal post. I pulled over and rolled down my window and got this picture:

The Brazilian soccer team could have used this guy when they played Germany.

The Brazilian soccer team could have used this guy when they played Germany.

I believe that is a red-tailed hawk. But I confuse them with red-shouldered hawks regularly. Handsome whatever it is.

 

When there’s that kind of action in a busy place like the edge of Parham Road, Pony Pasture is just wild. I see toads at Pony Pasture nearly every visit in this weather but often find them difficult to photograph. They stay away from bright light. Two this morning were more cooperative than usual:

Holding down a blade of grass

Holding down a blade of grass

 

Holding down a log

Holding down a log

This cicada is from earlier in the week, in the middle of the field at Pony Pasture:

Noisemaker

Noisemaker

This is the first year I’ve delved this deeply into insect identification. The link above is to a site called “Cicada Mania.” Perhaps you’ve noticed in earlier blog posts how much information I’ve turned up regarding dragonflies. If I assumed that exhaustive focus was confined to dragonflies and damselflies (odonates) I was incorrect. The name “Cicada Mania” is sufficient to express the level of enthusiasm for that branch of the insect world. There are a lot of people deeply engrossed in a lot of arcane matters. Perhaps some day I will cease to be amazed. But not any time soon.

 

The showy and sweet smelling flowers of spring are long gone but early summer still has a few to offer. Only showy ones, I believe that sweet smelling flowers are done for 2014. This bee couldn’t resist this beckoning morning glory:

Flying toward a flower

Flying toward a flower

There are mosquitoes at Pony Pasture although they’re not out in force yet. That comes in a month or two. The spiders are putting out their welcome mats:

Some animals LOVE mosquitoes! For breakfast.

Some animals LOVE mosquitoes! For breakfast.

This food chain is remarkable. Another thing that perhaps in the future will cease to amaze me – but not soon. Every time I look up – speaking figuratively, but almost literally – I am reminded yet again how life lives on life. How much everything eats everything. How much birds eat frogs eat bugs which eat other bugs, and fish eat bugs, and dragonflies eat baby fish and baby frogs and each other, eagles eat fish, something must eat turtles, there is just so much life. Not to mention bats and snakes and rabbits and chipmunks and voles and squirrels – there are so many calories out there.

 

These Eastern Pondhawks gobble up a lot of bugs – they even eat other dragonflies!:

Eastern Pondhawk. Isn't that a great looking insect?

Eastern Pondhawk. Isn’t that a great looking insect?

I saw a pretty female ebony jewelwing just as I was leaving the park Thursday:

Female Ebony Jewelwing. So pretty.

Female Ebony Jewelwing. So pretty.

I’ve mentioned I have a niece in Guinea (west Africa) with the Peace Corps. I mentioned her in a couple of sentences in my March 25, 2014 blog post Easy to be happy. If you have a few minutes – or more – take a look at her blog here: Piglet in Guinea. There’s a particular recent post I’ve thought about a lot. When we need something to work in the yard with or on our house, we go up to Home Depot or Lowe’s or Pleasant’s and pick up what we need. She’s doing primarily agricultural work (people need to eat) and needed a hoe. So the blacksmith forged one for her! I sometimes forget just how easy I have it here. What an experience. When I googled “dobba hoe” the search said “including results for donna home” and the first hit was for Donna Karan Home and said “Enjoy the comfort of Donna Karan Home luxury bedding and bath collections.” So there’s still a little bit of a cultural disconnect but we’re all making progress all the time.

 

I could digress a lot. But I’ll save that for a more appropriate time. Here’s a link that shows her excellent dobba hoe. And what she’s using it for. Her blog posts are in English but the title of this one is in French (I encourage you to take a look). It’s called PEPINIERE DE REBOISEMENT. I used google translate – that means “REFORESTATION NURSERY.” So cool.

 

Have a great week, all best,

 

Jay

 

PS I’ll close with a picture of the birthday girl and me and the boys at the river this morning:

Happy Birthday my love!

Happy Birthday my love!

 

Posted in Dogs, Endurance, Flowers, Fun, People, Rivers, Smiles (including "dog smiles"!) | Tagged , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Wooden shoes, windmills and the World Cup

13 July, 2014              Wooden shoes, windmills and the World Cup

 

A friend recently lamented the Netherlands World Cup loss. Netherlands was his favorite because they are known for their wooden shoes and windmills. I’ve had some experience tilting at windmills during my idealistic youth, but I hope that (the tilting, not my idealism or youth) is mostly behind me. As for wooden shoes, we had one on display in our basement when I was growing up in Maryland. This is a true story – our dad brought it back with him from Holland when he was in the Navy. Late 1950’s or early 1960’s I’m guessing. In Maryland in our knotty-pine paneled basement we had a bar. It had glass shelves around the top. There were old Meerschaum pipes although there was never a smoker in our family. They smelled funny. Musty but tangy at the same time, very peculiar. I can still smell that. Peculiarly. There was also a collection of beer steins on the glass shelves with the Meerschaums. And this one wooden shoe. I doubt it’s anywhere around but my mom will read this and so will my siblings (I hope!) and if it’s anywhere still in our family I’ll post a picture next week.

 

I don’t have a Meerschaum to photograph or a beer stein or a wooden shoe so these are all from the web. If my mom or one of my siblings has one I’ll get them to send me a picture. Meanwhile, this looks a lot like the wooden shoe we had on the glass shelf in our wood-paneled basement. We only had one, as I recall, probably around a size 10, and it escapes me if it was for the right foot or the left. But it looked like half of this pair:

A pair of wooden shoes. We only had one.

A pair of wooden shoes. We only had one.

 

We had lots of Meerschaum pipes, and each was very different and very distinct. None looked identical to this, but all were similar:

A meerschaum pipe.

A meerschaum pipe.

The steins resembled the pipes in this regard – we had lots of them, each different, each distinct. And none looked identical to this, but all were similar:

A stein.

A stein.

This is similar to the windmill that both Don Quixote and myself have long since given up tilting:

My tilting days are behind me at last.

My tilting days are behind me at last.

I don’t follow team sports but I follow international news. It was hard to miss Brazil’s unfortunate World Cup loss to Germany. I know the final today is between Germany and Argentina (I just looked it up) and I hope if one of those is “your” team, that you are happy with the outcome. Or anyway that it’s a good game. I’m a Redskins fan. In my experience, even if people say “I just hope it’s a good game,” they don’t mean that – they want their team to win. Or at least that’s the way I am.

 

I didn’t take great pictures this week. I got a couple of potentially great pictures, e.g. they are a sign of things – I hope – to come. Meanwhile, here are a couple of less than stellar shots and a couple of adequate shots. When we were at Pony Pasture Tuesday there were lots of flying things. A Virginia State Police helicopter flew over the field:

Bird overhead

Bird overhead

A person with great binoculars could have looked down and seen this new damselfly that I have not yet identified. Nice looking insect though:

A striking new damselfly

A striking new damselfly

Here are the two pictures I referred to as “potentially” great. As in, this is a new bird in a new spot so I may get a better shot soon. And why I say “potentially” great is it’s two pictures of the same male prothonotary warbler. One is in perfect light – but it’s a terrible picture. One is a well composed and focused shot – but it’s in terrible light. When I realize my photographic potential it will be one handsome bird in flawless light. Until then, there’s this:

Almost looks like he's made of plastic - isn't that incredible? Sorry about the crummy quality.

Almost looks like he’s made of plastic – isn’t that incredible? Sorry about the crummy quality.

Better composition but poor light:

It's the same bird. Won't it be great when I can compose a shot like this in light like the one above? Stay tuned!

It’s the same bird. Won’t it be great when I can compose a shot like this in light like the one above? Stay tuned!

I did manage one decent picture of a dragonfly, except from behind, but it’s a nice picture. This is a female “Common Whitetail Skimmer” or Plathemis lydia:

Female Common Whitetail Skimmer, pausing

Female Common Whitetail Skimmer, pausing

They’re called “common” for a reason – if you were a bird photographer, this is the equivalent of photographing a crow. But I’m learning to photograph dragonflies and this is part of the process.

 

I’ve mentioned “bugguide.net”; they help me identify insects. It is a super resource. People far, far more talented than I submit photos every day. They keep them up for a while and if they’re so perfect you could swear the bug’s about to get up and fly (or crawl) off the screen, they leave them on the site. But if they’re less than flawless they remain for thirty days in an area of the site called “Frass.” This is what it says about it on bugguide: “Frass is insect debris. Poor quality images, images from outside the U.S. and Canada, and those that otherwise do not add value to the guide are moved here.” The dictionary on my mac doesn’t mince words with its definition of frass: “• the excrement of insect larvae.”

 

I have had really a lot of pictures end up in the “frass” folder. But that’s how you learn what you need to improve on. It’s a process.

 

One more cloud picture from 2014’s lovely summer sky:

What a lovely sky we've had this summer.

What a wonderful summer sky we’ve had in 2014.

Until next week, all best,

Jay

Posted in Endurance, Flowers, Fun, Rivers, Smiles (including "dog smiles"!) | Tagged | 2 Comments

Four dogs and the Fourth

6 July, 2014                 Four dogs and the Fourth

Mackey and Turner and I had the good fortune to spend time this week with Lola and Luna. If you click on this link for last week’s post: Pillow fight!, you’ll see the four of them relaxing calmly on the trail at the end of a long hike. Flash forward to this morning’s hike, and playtime at the edge of the river. Turner is in the shadow in the lower left. He likes fun as much as – really more than – the next dog. But he’s kind of a daddy’s boy and when things get noisy he stays close to me. Luna has her back to us and is watching the excitement. She’s a smart girl and she knows Mackey and Lola are well matched in age and temperament and demeanor. It’s easy for them to have fun together:

Mackey and Lola having fun, Luna supervising (she's a Border Collie, of course), Turner looking to me for guidance. I had none to offer.

Mackey and Lola having fun, Luna supervising (she’s a Border Collie, of course), Turner looking to me for guidance. I had none to offer.

Two seconds later Mackey and Lola were running in circles:

It takes an instant to go from sizing each other up to this:

It takes an instant to go from sizing each other up to this:

It was 56º when I got up this morning which in Richmond in July is unheard of. The dogs have lots and lots of energy. That will slow down a great deal when more typical Richmond summer weather arrives.

I took this picture Tuesday morning but the river’s looked like this all week. We’re enjoying a run of amazing weather that as I recall began around Memorial Day. We’ve had a few less-than-pleasant days but this has been as temperate a late spring and early summer as I can ever recall. Another beautiful view:

It looks like this so often you'd think it would get boring. But you'd be wrong.

It looks like this so often you’d think it would get boring. But you’d be wrong.

I often take the dogs’ pictures on a wide spot in the trail when we’re almost back at the car. They’ve burned off some energy by then and are easier to photograph. But four dogs together is always a challenge. Fun, but a challenge. Here are two pictures taken three seconds apart – I’m not even kidding – it says it on the pictures. The first is with Mackey facing me and the others looking away. The second is three seconds later with Mackey facing away and the others looking back. Three seconds later:

Mackey looking away, the other three not looking away.

Mackey looking away, the other three not looking away.

Mackey not looking away, the other three looking away.

Mackey not looking away, the other three looking away.

Three seconds apart – I’m not even kidding.

Not everyone appreciates insects, a possible exception being of course butterflies. And I’m obviously having a lot of fun with dragonflies and damselflies, many of which are beautiful in a science-fiction sort of way. I took a neat picture of a housefly (Musca domestica) sunning itself on a leaf at PP last week:

Common housefly - Musca domestica

Common housefly – Musca domestica

Here’s another dragonfly, not brightly colored. This one is I’m guessing getting a little bit old, at least in dragonfly terms. If you look at the trailing edge of his lower left wing, there’s a piece missing. I took that picture on Tuesday. I suspect that by this time he’s made the transition from being a diner to being dined on. So goes the cycle:

Handsome old guy - getting on in years. Getting on in hours, in his case. Or days.

Handsome old guy – getting on in years. Getting on in hours, in his case. Or days.

If you notice the light dusty/powdery covering on his back, that’s referred to as “pruinescence.” You can chase all over the internet (or you can take my word for it) but a precise definition of that word that a lexicographer would appreciate is difficult to find. Pruinescence you may have also noticed – if you think for a moment – on grape skins and on plums. Blueberries too I think. It reflects ultraviolet light which dragonflies and damselflies can see with their compound eyes. But pruinescence is the dragonfly equivalent of gray hair on humans – you don’t see it on youngsters.

Evelyn and I went to my brother Kevin and his wife Jenny’s annual Fourth of July celebration out in Doswell. Our mom made it this year but our other siblings and nieces were scattered about so we just had a small family group. A huge group of friends though, and Kevin and Jenny have great ones. Unfortunately I wasn’t able to stay late this year. I missed the fireworks!

Kevin and Shane (our other brother) are both superb craftsmen. Kevin builds everything from scratch, including this boat. It’s not from a kit. He bought the lumber, sanded it and painted it and screwed it together. He even made the oars. Perfect Independence Day colors, although it’s painted that way year round:

Kevin is a master craftsman:

Kevin is a master craftsman:

This is a boat he made a really, really long time ago – fifteen years if memory serves. He also made this one from scratch – cut each piece of wood by hand. Not long after he built it we took it for a day long canoe trip on the South Anna River.

Another of Kevin's useful works of art

Another of Kevin’s useful works of art

He even caned the seats himself:

That is a lot, lot, lot of hard work and attention to detail

That is a lot, lot, lot of hard work and attention to detail

It didn’t occur to me to take these photographs until it was late in the day and the light was faded so I apologize for the poor quality. Those boats are a sight to behold.

He and Jenny are also excellent gardeners:

Boats AND flowers! Plus we ate grilled squash from their vegetable garden!

Boats AND flowers! Plus we ate grilled squash from their vegetable garden!

I hope your Fourth of July was wonderful and you have a great week. All best,

 

Jay

Posted in Dogs, Flowers, Fun, People, Rivers, Smiles (including "dog smiles"!) | 3 Comments

Pillow fight!

29 June, 2014               Pillow fight!

Turner and Mackey and I were on the path at Pony Pasture last week when a couple rode past us on their bicycles. One said “it looks like someone had a pillow fight in here!” Couldn’t have said it better myself:

Mackey lying down, Turner sitting, Lola in foreground, Luna leading us onward. Post pillow fight.

Mackey lying down, Turner sitting, Lola in foreground, Luna leading us onward. Post pillow fight.

 I took that picture this morning, when Mackey and Turner and I had the pleasure of Lola and Luna joining us for our jaunt.

 

As you may have noticed last week (if you saw this blog last week) I’m having lots of fun photographing insects. Here’s one I didn’t put on last week’s post. I learned from bugguide.net that this is a Blue-fronted dancer (Argia apicalis). As you may (or may not) recall from previous posts, this is a damselfly rather than a dragonfly. You can tell because the wings are folded when it’s resting. Dragonflies rest with horizontal wings. I haven’t yet determined the gender of this insect but I’m closing in on that ability. Maybe next week:

Blue-fronted Dancer, Argia apicalis

Blue-fronted Dancer, Argia apicalis

I normally avoid using the same picture twice, but I’m reposting a couple here to show something I’m learning. I’ve mentioned bugguide.net before. I registered for the site so I could upload pictures for help with identification. Here is a picture I put on this blog recently, and only later uploaded to bugguide for ID assistance:

"Waterstriders is the furthest we can go." - BugGuide.net on precision of ID from this image

“Waterstriders is the furthest we can go.” – BugGuide.net regarding precision of ID based this image

To give an idea of the assistance I get, look at this response:

“With this image it is unlikely anyone will be able to identify genus or species. There is a decent Wikipedia article on the family but The first introductory paragraph is inaccurate, it is possible to tell Gerridae apart from Veliidae via external characteristics although it isn’t always possible. They also talk about the hydrofuge hairs that allow them to skate on water, but don’t discuss their pre-apical tarsal claws. The claws are positioned in a way that they do not break the surface tension and it is a distinguishing characteristic of the family.”

 

That is what I want to learn. This is clearly a person who knows way more than I do about this subject, and I find it very gratifying that they share their knowledge so generously. I later referred to the insects in the picture as “bugs” and asked the same person if I was using that word properly. She wrote: “True Bugs are in the order hemiptera, the family Gerridae is in the order hemiptera, but usually these are referred to as Waterstriders. An individual is an insect or specimen, anything in the class Insecta is an insect, most entomologists hate it when someone says “bug” in reference to anything other than a true bug.”

 

If you read the response about the water strider picture, you’ll notice the editor wrote that “There is a decent Wikipedia article on the family…”. I read that article; it reminds me yet again of what I continue to learn about life living on life. An excerpt: “water striders: “Gerrids are aquatic predators and feed on invertebrates, mainly spiders and insects, that fall onto the water surface.[9] The water striders are attracted to this food source by the ripples produced by the struggling prey. The water strider uses its front legs as sensors for the vibrations produced by the ripples in the water. The water strider will grab onto the insect, puncture its body with its claws, and then suck out sustenance in a method called suction feeding. Gerrids prefer living prey, though they are indiscriminate feeders when it comes to terrestrial insect type.[12]Halobates, which are found on open sea, feed off floating insects, zooplankton, and occasionally resort to cannibalism of their own nymphs.[9]Cannibalism often occurs, but helps to control population sizes and restrict conflicting territories. During the non-mating season when gerrids live in cooperative groups, and cannibalism rates are lower, water striders will openly share large kills with others around them. Some gerrids are collectors, feeding off sediment or deposit surface.””

I’m aware that the human race has a lot of problems left to iron out. But we certainly have moved a long way past cannibalism to help control population sizes and restrict conflicting territories.

Puncturing and suction feeding and cannibalism – all to pass on their DNA. That’s how evolution and survival of the fittest works. Wow.

I love to communicate with people who know what they’re talking about. Each contributing editor on that site has a bio, and part of this person’s said “…Taxonomy was my favorite subject. I have taken classes in general entomology, taxonomy of immatures and matures, and advanced taxonomy of coleoptera. I’ve actually taken almost every class taught by the department including insect pest management, biocontrol, behavior, ecology, physiology, and medical/veterinary.”

A person who helped me with damselflies has this on  his biography: “I’m a retired biologist now spending time working on the distribution of Odonata in Manitoba. I volunteer at the Manitoba Museum identifying their Odonata.“

If I’ve neglected this before (sorry if this is dull), all dragonflies and damselflies belong to the order “odonata.” “Dragonflies” are in the suborder “Anisoptera” (unequal wings) and damselflies are in the suborder “Zygoptera” (equal wings). Sorry to go more than a little overboard there.

Also (still on bugs, what can I say), here’s another repost. Bugguide.com identified this as a whirligig beetle. The person who identified that on bugguide was called a “contributor” whereas the people who helped with the water striders and the Odonates were referred to as “Editors.” It’s an interesting field. And to ID some bugs you have to capture them, which is not something I’m inclined to do. I enjoy bugs but I’m not an entomologist. Whirligig beetles:

Whirligigs

Whirligig beetles

All of this goes back to my attraction to flowing clear water in general and to the James River specifically. No matter how much or how little beauty I see on a given day, the river itself always affords lovely images. Always different, always perfect:

It's so amazing. You just point your camera at it and press the button.

It’s so amazing. You just point your camera at it and press the button.

Lest anyone think (I’m sure no one thinks this) that the only place I see graceful images is in nature, look at the curve of this industrial strength steel:

Industrial scale gracefulness

Industrial scale gracefulness

Enough for this week. The year’s half over! I hope the first half of 2014 has been great for you and I hope the second half is even better. See you in July,

 

Jay

 

Posted in Dogs, Fun, Rivers, Trains | Tagged , , , , , | 8 Comments

Above ground swimming pools

22 June, 2014       Above ground swimming pools

I watched a finish line interview with a Race Across America (RAAM) finisher from 2010. Among the first things he mentioned after riding his bicycle across America for eleven days was seeing “kids playing in above ground swimming pools.” I was really moved that that was something that stuck out after all that time – something so inarguably middle America, I found it very touching. That passage comes in at around 1:30 on this 2.5 minute video if you’re interested.

The 2014 Race Across America “officially” ended at 3:00 PM EDT today. As I write this (at around 4:00), about half of the solo entrants have “DNF’d” or “Did Not Finish” for a variety of reasons. The man in that interview is Dex Tooke and he DNF’d in 2010 but came back in 2011 and made it. He wrote an engaging book about his experience called Unfinished Business.

Summer “officially” began yesterday here on the northern half of this planet. Today was the first full day and it’s been cool and pleasant. Turner and Mackey and I had a nice walk at the river this morning to greet the new season. Ev got back late yesterday from a long trip so she stayed home. I didn’t get many great pictures today and the results from this week have been slender. But a few came in well. After over ten years without seeing a single Red-winged Blackbird at Pony Pasture, I’ve now seen them twice this month. The first time I was so surprised I never even got my lens cap off. The second time was Tuesday and I did manage to get the lens cap off, but my picture was rushed. I promise better in the future, but here’s a start:

A little blurry but you can see his whole head

A little blurry but you can see his whole head

Clearer but he's looking away

Clearer but he’s looking away

Growing up in Maryland we saw Red-winged Blackbirds every summer. It turns out they’re very, very common. And my whole life – until I began researching this blog post earlier this week – I thought male and female Red-winged Blackbirds looked the same. But I always want to learn about the birds I’m photographing so I looked them up on Birds of North America (BNA.com). And this is an adult female!:

Adult female Red-winged Blackbird - BNA.com

Adult female Red-winged Blackbird – BNA.com

How many have I seen in my life and had no idea? Amazing. I’ll have to start looking now.

Not to run damselflies into the ground (in a manner of speaking) but I got a better image of a female this week. Here she is:

White spots on her wing tips - so feminine

White spots on her wing tips – so unmistakably  feminine

I’m seeing more and more dragonflies and having more success photographing them. This week I photographed a big green dragonfly called an Eastern Pondhawk (Erythemis simplicicollis). Take a look:

Eastern Pondhawk - magnificent

Eastern Pondhawk – magnificent

I’ve mentioned this in previous posts, but I’ve now found an accurate way to identify bugs. I’ve mentioned BugGuide.net before. I ended up becoming a registered user of the site – the process is simple. Once registered, you can upload pictures and ask for identification. And within just a couple of hours, someone more knowledgeable – often from somewhere far away – supplies the correct answer. Which is how I learned about Pondhawks. The learning is as fun as taking the picture which is as fun as taking the walk. A very enjoyable experience.

I haven’t yet identified any waterbugs (maybe next week, but don’t count on it). But they’re fun to photograph:

Waterbugs are so much fun to photograph

Waterbugs are so much fun to photograph

Actual living bugs on the surface of the water. This is just too much fun.

Actual living bugs on the surface of the water. This is just too much fun.

In answer to a “how hot was it?” question last week, I could have said “it was so hot the cliff swallows were panting.” That’s precisely what they were doing. Nobody could make this stuff up:

Or perhaps it's a baby waiting for food. But my goodness that was a hot day.

Or perhaps it’s a baby waiting for food. But my goodness that was a hot day.

I’ve also continued to learn a great deal about the weather, often from the books of the late Eric Sloane. He’s written Look at the Sky and tell the Weather, Eric Sloane’s Weather Book, Folklore of American Weather and several more. I look at the sky a lot and the clouds are spectacular this time of year. Here are a couple of pictures of cumulus I’ve taken this week:

Always different, always perfect

Always different, always perfect

As I said on the last one - always different, always perfect

As I said about the last one – always different, always perfect

Ethan and I have been watching a few catalpa trees around town. When I was younger we called them “Indian Cigar trees.” They get long green seed pods on them. There were several at Camp, including a huge one we all referred to as “The Sliding Board Tree.” There’s a big one in front of Epiphany Lutheran Church at 1400 Horsepen Road – you can see it any time. There’s another near the Northside Family YMCA where we ride our bikes. We’ve been watching them carefully but no “Indian Cigars” (those are the seed pods) yet. Then coming home from work Friday I turned left off Parham Road onto Gwinnett and there’s one right there on the southwest corner. With Indian Cigars on it! You can even see the tree on Google Earth but the picture was taken in the fall and  you can’t see the Indian Cigars. Right now they’re new and tiny but here they are:

Catalpa tree with brand new seed pods

Catalpa tree with brand new seed pods

Until next week,

 

Jay

= = = = = = = = = =

I’ve mentioned in an earlier post (So startling, 1 June, 2014) John Irving’s assertion that “…before you could write anything, you had to notice something.” I’ve noticed (forgive the confusion here) that: the more I notice something, the more I notice it. I was pretty certain I’d never seen an Ebony Jewelwing in my life and now I see them every trip. It’s just a matter of becoming aware of what’s around. Red-winged Blackbirds too.  

 

So – does that go for other things? As in, if I notice a nice day or a pretty tree or a pleasant smell, will I begin to notice it more often? And maybe if I pay more attention, that stuff takes up more space in my mind? And maybe if my back hurts but then it goes away, and instead of taking a pain-free back for granted, I begin to say “wow, my back feels good today.” Then if I begin to do that more often, I feel more grateful on a regular basis.

 

The inverse of that is, of course, if I focus on the things that I don’t enjoy. It’s safe to say that no one enjoys 97º humid days. If cliff swallows are panting, that is just plain uncomfortable. Focusing on it just feels worse. I can’t ignore it. But I could be a roofer. Or spreading asphalt. Oy. I’ll take Ebony Jewelwings and Eastern Pondhawks and Red-wing blackbirds any day.

 

I’m starting to pay more attention to the fact that my back feels great today and my Red Maple looks spectacular and less attention to the fact that it’s so hot that cliff swallows are panting. I’m feeling better already!  

= = = = = = = = = =

Posted in Birds, Endurance, Flowers, Fun, Rivers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments