Sunday, May 5, 2019

Night-blooming flowers

The yard across from where we were staying had fairly long grass for the first week or so and we walked past it a couple times a day as we walked to and from my sister's house and one evening i notices there were yellow flowers where there hadn't been any earlier in the day. This was about 6:45 in the evening:


Sadly, i didn't take any daytime flowers as there were none to be seen. Turns out they are Night-blooming Primroses and very pretty:


The purple wrinkly-looking surrounding flowery-stem is the bloom from the previous night as they only last one night. I had no idea ... the owner came and talk with us and didn't know anything about the plant and offered to let us dig some up and bring back with us but we decided not to. A day or two later she cut the grass but that didn't seem to brother the Primroses at all:

I don't know what time they fold away in the morning as i never got up and went out to look ... do you know when Night-blooming Primroses die in the morning?

Eggs

While in SA, my sister mentioned that the lamp on the front lawn didn't work and so i volunteer to work on it. I discovered there was no electricity at the post and couldn't do anything about that But, i discovered a colony of eggs.

really really small - that is wrought iron they are on

and up close they look like this

Two days later i returned to see what was happening and there were dozens and dozens of small warms all over the lamp post and the breeze was blowing them on cobwebs all over the place. I backed away as i didn't want them either on me nor my camera. They were very very small. A couple hours later i returned and they were all gone - nada, nothing. Well, almost ... i find three or four and they looked like this:


You can see three or four in the above photograph along with the remnants of the eggs - my sister said they were the warms that ate into the bark of trees causing great damage. 

Bridge across the Nantahala, Bryson City, NC

Just southwest of Bryson City, NC is one of many rivers in the area - this one is the Nantahala and there is a small footbridge that crosses it for, i believe, the railroad workers to get to the railroad as there is not other access for miles. I first saw the bridge last year but not until i passed it did it register as a functioning footbridge. This trip i made of point of watching for it and stopping. It looks like this:





Yes, it is as exciting as it looks. Its quite safe and strong but with only a little effort, you can get the bridge to swing and take your breath away. And when two or three are walking on it, it has a very lively bounce.  I recommend a visit. 

Putting out the bird feeder after a month away

Arriving back from a month is SA, we had a great time as we crossed the country. In particular the lake area at the TN-NC border - i have some photographs but they still need some work so i'll post them later.

The bird feeder hadn't been out for that time and i put it out the day after we returned knowing it'd take a while for the birds to find it again.

Lo, one of the first birds to show up was one i'd not seen before:

Rose-breasted Grosbeak, not a common bird in our area.

and
Indigo Bunting, also not so common in this area


A couple days ago we took a walk around Beaver Lake Dam, a lake on the outskirts of Asheville. A little more then a mile in circumstances, it is a wonderful walk and filled with birds, turtles and many other small animals. Here are a few:


Killdeer

i don't know what this is - do you?

nor do i know what this is - do you?
notice it is banded

As you can read i'm very much a beginner when it comes to IDing birds; all help will be greatly appreciated.





Friday, April 5, 2019

Animals, around San Antonio

Currently in San Antonio and a few days ago i was passing a mostly large empty field and saw two large birds. I knew immediatly what they were although i'd only seen their images in a bird book: Crested Caracara. I didn't have a birding lens and still stopped and got out my camera. The birds had been facing each other but began to walk away when i opened the truck to get my camera. Still, i got a couple of photos that clearly show their unusual coloring and size:



I drove home after these photos, retrieved my large birding lens and returned but they were no longer in the area. These are relatively rare in TX, mostly they live in Mexico and south of there. 

Around the house i photographed an Anole which is often called a Gecko but is not. I love these little lizards and this one was considerate enough to let me photograph him, or was it a her, somewhat closely.



and the scales are amazing

And one little very green frog:




Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Folders and files . . .


I recently decided to change my photographic filing system from a yearly catalog to a subject catalog. The initial results are that i have a thousand or so folders all in alphabetical order with many many different names on the folders. To get them organized into subject folders will take, god, i don't know ... maybe a year or two if i spend a couple hours a day working at organizing them. On one hand it is a never ending task and on the other i'm becoming familiar with photos i've forgotten i had. This is allowing me to throw out many files which are clearly not usable or (almost) duplicates of other photographs. Also, i've not been key wording photos which is essential if i want to locate them easily and this is a good opportunity add those words.

And the volume of photos has now grown to such a size that the 5TB hard drive will no longer hold all of them. So, i'm backing up to two 6TB drives with the master drive being 8TB. I'm sorta o.k. with only two backups but prefer three so at some point i'll purchase another 8TB ... the prices on them have dropped to such a low, there really isn't any excuse for a photographer not to have everything backed up to the degree she wants.

I'm still struggling with creating a NAS so i can access the photographs from anywhere outside the house. I just don't know enough about such to put it into action. If someone reading this knows about creating a NAS home system, i'd love to hear from you.

And that brings up the next item i'm struggling with ... this blog. I like this format as its easy to use, to put the photos in that i want to show, etc.. However, it seems next to impossible for others to comment and i don't know why. I just asked my wife to comment on this blog to learn how easy or not it is.

I need comments - its helps me know where i'm heading and how the road is holding up.

O.K., that's enough for now.

Really?

Monday, January 14, 2019

Ice

Yesterday, Sun, we work to icicles hanging off of everything. It had lightly rained during the night and then froze in the early morning hours. This is the first i've seen ice hanging from the bushes and trees and i got out my camera, etc and proceeded to create some photographs. I've not worked with icicles before now and didn't do a very good job considering how much potential there was. I only got one i liked:




And if you click on the upside down icicle, you'll see the neighbors house across the street at the top. I thought that might be happening when i was photographing but wasn't sure until i got it into my computer.

I did one other that was o.k.:


But like the ad says, "O.K. isn't enough" with which i certainly agree.

I'll continue practicing that kind of photography so i'm ready when the next rain freeze shows up.

  A week ago we drove to Bryson City where the Great Smoky Mountain Rail Road is located.  I heard about this mountain train ride some years...