Category Archives: Photography

On The Ground, Looking Up

The new iPhone 16 is out and I hear that the cameras on it (as well as the iPhone 15) are spectacular, even doing a very good job with simple astrophotography.

I have an iPhone 13 and it does not have those features, but I don’t have any other reason to spend $1,000+ on an upgrade right now. Maybe next year with the iPhone 17.

But what is my old phone capable of? Especially here in the LA suburbs with enough light polllution so that only the brightest stars are visible anyway?

Well, you can see stars! It’s not that different than what you see with the naked eye in all of this light pollution, at least in terms of how many and what the limiting magnitude is. Blow the image up full sized and there’s a ton of noise in the image, but we’re probably seeing stars at least a magnitude fainter than what the naked eye can see, which is better than I expected. This view is looking from the zenith all the way down to the west.

This is more looking straight up. The tree at the “top” is to the east, but straight overhead you can see Deneb and the “northern cross” constellation, Cygnus. The brightest star near the bottom is Vega in the constellation Lyra.

Like so. Somewhere up around the edge of the tree branches should be the Andromeda Galaxy, but while this old iPhone camera might grab it in a dark sky, with all of this coastal haze and light, I think that’s a no-go.

The key to getting good pictures with this uber simple setup is to keep the phone extremely steady, so I just put it on the ground. The good news while I was down on the patio taking the pictures I didn’t encounter Coco (the neighbor’s dog), any curious rabbits, raccoons, or The Long Suffering Wife wondering if I got down on the ground in an involuntary fashion. I got down and then back up all by myself with no damage, thank you very much!

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Filed under Astronomy, Photography

Running A Tiny Little Bit Warm

Which is unusual, normally I tend to be a half degree F or so on the cool side.

Whatever.

You may safely assume that I met my absolutely drop dead deadline even if I failed miserably to meet my desired deadlines, I’m upright and taking nourishment, and celebrating the Chiefs’ win bringing them to 3-0 for the season.

*makes that little pop noise with my little finger in my mouth and spins my index finger about in a celebratory manner*

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Filed under KC Chiefs, Paul, Photography

Proof Of Life – September 21st

Whoever designed the day did a lousy job of it – not enough hours in it.

We were originally supposed to kick off the next season at the Ahmanson/Taper (they’ve combined their series) last Saturday, but I was in KC. We moved it to tonight, but I’m underwater with deadlines and couldn’t reasonably justify the time.

Adulting sucks – but the red-shouldered hawk was back and screaming in the back yard today and the red-tailed hawks were back and circling overhead for the first time in many months, so it can’t all be bad.

It’s no Eye of Sauron, but it still more or less works. Reminds me more of a whale’s eye, like you would see if you were swimming in the ocean and got lucky enough to have one come up and give you a gander.

Happy Solstice! Fall’s here! Astronomically speaking.

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Filed under Paul, Photography

No Context For You – September 20th

Schedules are nice. Schedules are useful. Routines help you keep track of which day of the week it is.

Short holiday weeks and long holiday work weeks are great, but the disrupt the routine. So do quick trips to Kansas City. So do unexpected days off for emergencies.

It’s Friday today? Yes? Maybe?

Lacking context it’s difficult to troubleshoot everything looking fuzzy and “off.” Is it me, the camera, my eyes, my brain, the universe?

“Yes,” might be the answer.

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Controlled Flight Into Terrain

I heard the thump, all the way from the kitchen to where I was still in bed down the hall at the other end of the house. I expected to find another dead mourning dove. But there was no carcass, and at first I didn’t even see a mark on the window.

Until almost sunset, when the sunlight coming directly in the front door backlit the door.

The detail in the feathers on the body is remarkable.

From the right view, you can even see its head, even the eye socket detail. I’m amazed.

This has happened before, which is why I’ve taken steps to try to mitigate the problem.

The butterfly clings seem to have helped lower the incidence of collisions.

In the human flying world, this is referred to as “controlled flight into terrain.” My first NASA social at Edwards Air Force Base many years ago was about some of the amazing work being done to prevent F-16s from doing it. I’m not sure how we get that software downloaded into mourning doves.

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Filed under Birds, Photography

The Tiniest Lizard

I went out to get the mail and spooked the teeny tiniest little lizard that I’ve ever seen.

See him out there? Off on the corner?

Maybe an inch for the body and an inch for the tail. Maybe.

He was already out there doing push ups, a territorial show of dominance. I admire that sort of attitude from someone who’s two days old and two inches long!

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Filed under Critters, Photography

New KC Airport

Home now, just a quick out-on-Saturday, go to the game on Sunday, back-on-Monday trip.

It was also my first trip through Kansas City’s new airport. It’s wonderful and gorgeous!

The previous airport was built pre-9/11 and was very artsy and avante garde architecturally, but the need to put in security & TSA stations made it nearly impossible to actually function.

Many, many years and many billions of dollars later, the new airport opened up a year or so ago.

Tall ceilings, a ton of glass and natural light, plus artwork and sculptures everywhere, it’s highly functional, easy to get around, has a ton of space for now and for expansion.

Fancy, techno art.

Hanging, colorful, bubble-like art.

Lots and lots of gates – today I was at B66, which is waaaaay down there at the far end in the distance.

Lots of restaurants and shops, many of them selling Chiefs souveniers and gear, one or two selling Diet Coke instead of Pepsi. That’s the way to stick it to The Man!

There are so many excellent reasons to visit KC – pick one and go see the airport as well!

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Filed under Photography, Travel

With 76,415 Of My Closest Friends

Game Day!

I flew in, my son drove, bringing along his fabulous tailgaiting gear and flags.

 

Several hours of pre-game at Arrowhead Stadium is referred to as “The World’s Greatest Tailgate Party” and it’s a reputation that’s well earned.

There’s a picture posted on here from December, 2018 taken at almost this exact same spot, on a MUCH chillier day. Mid to high 80’s today, well below freezing that day.

Our flyover came from the US Army who sent a selection of helicopters.

The view was great, but there were a LOT of steps to climb to get here.

I was having a really great time. Many of the 76,000+ friends are seen.

We won, 26-25, and are now 2-0 to start the season. Our stupid mistakes made it a much closer game than it should have been.

Uhhh…duh? It’s Arrowhead Stadium, one of the loudest crowds in the world. Of course it was loud!

 

 

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Filed under KC Chiefs, Photography, Travel

Next Adventure

When we set this up three or four months ago, I knew there was a tight window at work to fit it in. If I had known then what I know now, specifically the unexpected things that have happened and made that window soooooooo much tighter, I never would have made plans. But that was then, this is now, and here I was on a plane.

I’ll admit, I spent a good deal of time in the last week thinking about cancelling the trip. And much as with the April trip to Texas to see the eclipse, I’m travelling with my work laptop and a stack of paperwork and files on memory sticks and I’ll be spending way, way more time coding and doing data entry from my hotel room than I might otherwise spend at the WWI Museum, or the Atkins art museum, or at the Negro Leagues Baseball museum, or trolling BBQ places. C’est le vie!

Over Palmdale Airport and the Antelope Valley, looking south toward the mountains and the LA Basin, there’s an unbelievable amount of smoke from multiple huge brush fires that have been burning for days.

Can you see the cargo 747 at the bottom, flying a few thousand feet below us?

Lake Havasu and the Colorado River are an easy landmark to spot.

My office in the sky. I lucked out and our flight was only about 1/3 full, so there was plenty of room to stretch out, get the laptop fired up, and get two hours of work in.

Somewhere over the Oklahoma panhandle or so, some small town was getting pounded. We saw several big thunderhead cells, but this was by far the biggest.

Today was International Observe the Moon Day – DONE! There it is!

I think of windmills for power generation as being more of a Western states thing, more of a mountain pass thing, but there sure were a lot of them out in eastern Colorado and western Kansas! I don’t know if they still call the wind “Mariah,” but they sure call it “Kilowatt!”

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Filed under KC Chiefs, Photography, Travel

Baby Mourning Doves

After the small flock of mourning doves was seen at last year’s nest under the eaves of our front porch in early August, there’s been a single bird there almost 24/7 ever since.

I assumed that meant that there were egs in the nest, but I never bothered to get a ladder and get nosy or invasive to see.

Now I see that the one, larger mourning dove has been joined by two smaller ones, seen here. Just an assumption on my part, but I’m thinking two eggs hatched.

A couple of times I’ve gone out (they’re right outside the front door) and looked up and if Mom’s not there, these two will open their mouths wide. Um, yeah… Good luck with that. I have my limitations. (Don’t worry, Mom hasn’t abandoned them, she’s there most of the time, I just caught these pictures when she was out hunting down lunch for everyone.)

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Filed under Birds, Photography