Category Archives: Photography

Social Media

Obviously, if you want to hear me rant and rave and share pictures and so on, there’s this site. It’s never going away if I’ve got anything to say about it, and I’ve got a ton of control over it. So – always – here.

But other than that? Well, I’ve been on Facebook for years and years and years – that’s more for a lot of exchanges with personal friends from high school, fandom, and these days, work. But you’re welcome there if that’s your thing.

Twitter? That’s been a primary social media outlet for news and political rants and all sorts of daily stuff, but it’s become so toxic that I’m pretty quickly shutting down my efforts there. I’ll still crosspost the daily links to these blog posts, but I don’t think there will be much more.

With Twitter’s destruction, I’ve now set up accounts on Mastodon, Post, Spoutible, and (God help me) Tribel. About 99% of what I’m posting on those sites is that daily crosspost to this site. It might stay that way for a while, I just don’t have the time for much more.

I’m also on Threads and Bluesky. Bluesky is where I’ve started to actually go looking for folks I know and follow from Twitter. The primary reason for that right now is that I’m getting the kind of timely information sharing regarding Hurricane Hilary that I used to get from Twitter regarding breaking news and current events. That might be critical in the next three days or so.

So if you’re on social media, look for me in just about any of those places. But if you have to pick just one, Bluesky’s probably the best bet right now.

If you’re in SoCal or Arizona or Nevada, particularly in the desert where the flash flooding is so likely and the really high rainfall amounts are expected, stay safe!

And now, because you’ve been nice enough to read (or at least scan through) this, here’s a picture of fireworks!

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Filed under Fireworks, Photography, Social Media

Random Old Photos – August 17th

I realize as I went looking for something somewhat specific that “random” isn’t technically correct, but whatever. It’s my site and I’ll break the rules if I want to!

As is more usual than it really should be at this point in life, I’m busier than god, tired, a bit cranky, and wanted to look at something to bring a smile that I could share. FaceBook has been reminding me all week that it was seven years ago that we were in New York City, me for the first (and so far, only) time. That was a pretty great trip for the most part, so I went looking for an image from then.

I found that I had taken a LOT of pictures in the Guggenheim Museum (big surprise!) and it wasn’t hard to find one that I hadn’t already shared here. So here you are! Enjoy!

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Filed under Photography, Travel

Humidity Plus Heat

Up in the mountains and high desert (not so much down here in the LA Basin and the valleys that are close to the ocean) humidity (monsoonal moisture) plus heat (over 100ºF today) gives rise to thunderstorms. So today to our north, toward Mt Pinos and the Coastal Range (on the left), the Grapevine (center) and the Antelope Valley (on the right), we saw this:

(It’s a good sized image – click on it to see it full sized!)

The big threat for the next few days however is from the south, off of Baja. Tropical Storm Hilary is building off of Cabo San Lucas and is expected to be a full-blown hurricane tomorrow. It’s expected to travel more or less due north off of Baja until it slams into Southern California and Arizona over the weekend.

It’s all still three or four days out so who knows what the weather gods will actually deliver – just based on our luck, we’ll get missed entirely and Las Vegas and Phoenix will get flooded. Still, the current model from NWS Los Angeles says we’ll get somewhere between 2-5 inches of rain, so I’m hopeful.

 

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Filed under Los Angeles, Panorama, Photography, Weather

Fine Feathered Friends – August 15th

For the first time this year we have a couple of nests on the front porch. There’s the mockingbird nest that seems to infuriate the red tail hawks, and the mourning dove nest up under the rafters. While the three mockingbird eggs hatched and the fledgelings were out of the nest and gone in a month, the mourning dove youngins seem perfectly happy to hang around.

Often there’s just the one.

But at the end of last week we started seeing a second one. One of these guys hit the front window late one night and then made quite the fuss sitting on the window sill. I warned him about the cats and raccoons that wander by the porch some nights, but it seemed unconcerned and was back up in the nest in the morning. Not my monkeys, not my circus!

The plan was to call these two Ben & Jerry. But then…

So… Manny, Mo, and Jack? Larry, Curly, and Shemp?

Close up there are enough differences in their markings to tell them apart. I do wonder if the one with the blue circle around their eye is the opposite sex from the two that don’t. I’m not enough of an expert on mourning doves to know, and I’m way too stinkin’ busy right now to take the time to research it.

What’s really funny is that when I go out the front door, the three of them all freeze. They’re moving enough to see that they’re alive, but it really does seem to be an instinctual response. HUMAN!  FREEZE! (Why is he talking to us? Are we supposed to understand or answer?) However, if I peek through the open drapes in the front window when they can’t see in, they’re shuffling about, grooming, fighting, and so on.

I’m going to try to not take it personally.

 

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Filed under Birds, Photography

No Perseids Captured

Over the last weekend you might have seen something on the news about the Perseid meteor shower peaking on Saturday night. If so, the first piece of advice to see them was to get away from the light pollution near any city.

I didn’t.

(These are the full-sized files with an incredible amount of detail – click on the images to blow them up to full sized!)

The good news is that the big, “light bucket” lens that I do dearly love does a great job of picking out a gazillion stars even under light polluted conditions.

(Ditto! Click on it! Please ignore all of the hot pixels I didn’t have the time to edit out!)

The bad news is that to avoid being totally oversexposed and washed out, these are 2.5 second exposures. I have nearly a thousand of them! Filled an entire 8GB memory card! I didn’t capture a single Persid meteor in any image. (Although if you check the top left on that first image, there’s a 737 going into Burbank…)

I did see two bright, long trails of Perseid meteors with my eyes, but they were where that second set of pictures of pointed, above the tree, while I was doing the first set of pictures, aimed more to the north to the left of the tree.

C’est le guerre…

I would love to get this lens out to a really dark sky where I can do 30, 60, even 300 second exposures and still have the background sky be dark. That would be fun.

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Filed under Astronomy, Photography

Fine Feathered Friends – August 13th

I had forgotten about these pictures!

Last month when I was in Winnipeg, I spent a couple of hours wandering around the parks along the Assiniboine River near the Manitoba Legislative Building. In addition to all of the geese that were there, I spotted a pair of large birds on the wing.

They were up high, and there were some tall buildings around so I kept losing sight of them.

It was a grey and gloomy day, just after some rain, but I managed to grab a couple of recognizable pictures.

The ever so wonderful Merlin Bird ID app IDs them as American White Pelicans.

Along the shore down here in Southern California it’s not uncommon to see pelicans, but they’re usually Brown Pelicans. These must be their cousins.

The main thing that made me doubt at first that they were pelicans is that the Brown Pelicans are almost never seen away from the ocean shore. They don’t do rivers and lakes. Not so the American White Pelican. They’ll go anywhere there’s water and fish.

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Filed under Birds, Photography

Red Tail Hawk Pair & Prey

I heard the red-tailed hawks calling on Thursday and went out, expecting to find a pair circling out over Valley Circle. Instead I found two pairs. They were off a ways so I just watched until one pair again landed in this tall Italian cypress tree. It’s the same tree where a hawk (quite possibly one of these two) was sitting before swooping down right next to me to attack the mockingbird nest by our front door. I’m wondering now if the other two hawks that were originally with this pair weren’t their offspring from this nest this spring – but I digress.

I couldn’t help but noticing that in front of me on the wires bringing power, internet, and phone to the neighborhood there were a half dozen or more big, fat mourning doves, as well as a few mockingbirds and that Cassin’s Kingbird that I finally ID’d. Since the hawk pair had apparently been hunting and I hadn’t seen them bring anything back to the (presumed) nest, I was thinking that if I were one of those big, fat mourning doves, I might be more worried about the presence of those two big, fast, hungry hawks.

The mourning doves however either knew something I didn’t (possible!) or are just really stupid (probable!) and didn’t pay any attention at all. I’ve seen one get taken out by a hawk several times from a perch on these wires, it’s spectacular. The hawk tucks and goes into a high-speed dive like a fighter jet, extends its talons at the last second, and *poof!*, they’re half a block away in a heartbeat and all that’s left is a cloud of feathers drifting toward the ground. A real world “sneak pass,” just with more fatal results for the mourning dove than the crowd at an airshow gets from that Navy Blue Angel F-18 that you lost track of.

One of the hawks (the male?) finally launched off down into the canyon, presumably to bring back an unsuspecting squirrel or dove.

I hope if we end up finding our “forever home” soon up in the high desert or Antelope Valley we have a nice assortment of birds there as well, particularly the raptors.

 

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Filed under Birds, Photography

Fine Feathered Friends – August 11th

Taking pictures of hawks and other birds near sunset yesterday, I originally thought this was a mockingbird. We’re lousy with mockingbirds this summer (including this nest which gave us three more) and there were a couple others sitting on the wires nearby.

But something wasn’t right for a mockingbird. The beak’s wrong, for one.

And when he turned I could see some yellow color on his belly, which definitely rules out a mockingbird. So maybe it’s related to one of the hooded orioles that comes around sometimes?

But while they’re yellow on the belly, they’re also yellow on the back, tail, and head . So what was it?

Yeah, not a mockingbird, not an oriole. The August mystery bird! Maybe the Merlin app from Cornell University can help?

(Image: Merlin Bird ID app)

And that makes sense, because I recognize that name! The Merlin Bird ID app also has an excellent function for IDing birdsong, and late last year it had ID’d one of these!

(Image: Merlin Bird ID app)

There are a handful of species that the app has heard but I haven’t seen or photographed yet. Check one off of that list!

The fact that I last got a hit on this song almost ten months ago makes me think that it’s migratory and this is just the time of year for it to be passing through. Lucky me to catch it as it was in the area!

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Filed under Birds, Critters, Photography

Doing Its Best

When I was out watching and filming the Falcon 9 launch the other night, I also had my DSLR with the big lens, just in case the opportunity came up to use it. I tried to take one picture but it was immediately obvious that it wasn’t going to work. Because it was so dark the camera automatically tried to take about a 60-second exposure, I didn’t have a tripod, the handheld shot was going to be blurred and useless, so I just let the camera go and hang by the neck strap for the final fifty or so seconds.

It turned out remarkably interesting and even borderline beautiful!

The brave little robot camera, having been given an order by me, its mentor, boldly went forward to do its very best to comply and produce what it had been asked to.

In the upper left corner, I believe that’s the Falcon 9 rocket. And all of the arcs and lines? I have no clue. Probably street lights, maybe a plane overhead, maybe lights on nearby houses as the camera swung. Who knows?

But all together? Sublime.

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Filed under Art, Paul, Photography, Space

A Pretty Pathetic Monsoon

Yesterday I pointed out that we had a chance of getting some monsoonal rain, but I wasn’t optimistic that it would come to pass.

In fact we got about three minutes of rain, enough to stir up all of the dust and turn it to mud, and give us a whiff of petrichor.

But that was it!

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Filed under Photography, Weather