When I was little I thought that the appearance of robins was a sign of spring. They do migrate and that even contributes to their Latin binomial. Turdus migratorius translates as migratory thrush. In our area, however, they are pretty much a year round feature. Those we have now probably travel to the north in summer, to be replaced by their sun-bird relatives coming up from Florida. The American Robin is not to be confused with the smaller, daintier, and in my mind prettier European robin, Erithacus rubecula.
American Robin (Turdus migratorius)
Chesapeake Bay Environmental Center
Cathy and I took a little outing today, driving across the bay bridge and onto the eastern shore. Just east of Kent Narrows and south of US 50 is the Chesapeake Bay Environmental Center (CBEC). It’s a small, private, wildlife preserve and education organization. Back in 2004 I went there with Brady and Albert for a day-long course on raptors. Two hawk and one owl picture from that day are among my favorites at HartleyPhoto. The CBEC owns approximately 510 acres of land and it’s a good place to see bay wildlife. Of course, the middle of January isn’t necessarily the best time of year for that but it was quiet and pretty and we only saw a few other people. Of course, it was about 26°F (-3°C) and the wind was 15 to 20 mph, so it was a bit chilly. For those of you thinking the question, the answer is yes, I did wear a jacket. On the Marshy Creek Trail as we neared the lake, there were some wet areas that provided great reflections and that’s what I posted for today’s picture. After that, and a brief stop on Kent Island, we went into Annapolis for a hot meal at Chick and Ruth’s Delly.
Another Eye Exam
I had another eye check-up today. After the assistant did an initial test of my vision, I waited for the doctor to come in. While I was waiting I decided to take a picture of myself behind the phoropter. I don’t often take pictures of myself and of course, since the pictures posted here are taken by me, I don’t show up very often. The last time I was at the eye doctor’s, though, I posted a picture of the phoropter so I wanted today’s picture to be a little different. Autofocus is a wonderful thing.
Beetling Off To Boston
Dorothy left for Boston this evening. Well, technically she left for Wenham, northeast of Boston, but her flight was to Boston’s Logan Airport. She has an interview at Gordon College scheduled for tomorrow, as well as plans to sit in on one or two classes. Of course, I’m posting this on Sunday and she left on Thursday, so tomorrow was the day before yesterday, as I write this. The interview went well and she enjoyed the classes. We don’t know if this is where she’ll end up, but she could do worse. Here’s a picture of Dorothy at BWI before her first airline flight with no one else that she knows. She’s flown without us a few times and once with her friend’s brother on the same plane, but this time, she’s really solo. All went well, I’m happy to report.
Cloud Reflections
It was a cool but beautiful day today and around lunch time I walked from my building over to the one with our main cafeteria to pick up a salad from the salad bar. I carried my camera with me, which still feels a little awkward after three years of having it with me most of the time. I don’t carry it around at work, although I have it there every day. But walking between the buildings often gives me something to photograph. This is the end of my building as I came back with my lunch.
The Red, White, and Blue
It was quite windy this evening, as I drove home. While waiting at a traffic light, I pulled out my camera (like you do), opened my window and took about a dozen pictures of the flag flying at the Chevy dealership on the corner. I’m glad I did because I got busy when I got home and totally forgot about taking pictures. As it turned out, the flag pictures were the only pictures I took today. So, that’s what I have to share with you. It’s not bad, considering that it was night time and taken with just natural lighting (ISO 6400, 1/25 sec., f/5.7).
Tail Lights and Rain
Time for another somewhat abstract image. This is rain on my windscreen with tail lights shining through them. As usual, I was not actually moving when I took this picture. I’m not sure what I get out of this picture but I like it, certainly better than the others I took of the same thing. Maybe it’s an alien planet with a red atmosphere and a huge, bright, white sun. Maybe I just like water and red. I don’t know. Do you?
Dorothy’s Guitar
It was a busy day today. I didn’t get out of my office and then came home and made dinner. In the evening I realized I hadn’t taken a picture today so I thought I’d take a few of Dorothy’s new guitar, her big Christmas present for the year. This is the back, which I think is beautiful. The guitar is a Fender and it sounds great. The back is made of bubinga, an African hardwood from the Guibourtia demeusei tree. It is used because of the mellow sound it produces, as well as the fact that is has an exceptional strength-to-weight ratio.
Sweetgum Fruits
If you are looking for a mid-size tree with fabulous fall color, you should seriously consider Sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua). It turns a most satisfying orange-red or crimson and it’s a nice tree the rest of the year. If you run around in the yard barefoot, however, you might consider the cultivar ‘Rotundiloba’ because it is sterile and does not produce these little balls that will otherwise litter your yard (it also has rounded lobes on the leaves, which explains the name). Personally, I like the fruits, but then, I don’t have them all over my patio, either.
Burning The Christmas Tree
One of my favorite annual rituals is the burning of the Christmas tree. As I mentioned a few days ago, we kept it up a bit later this year than last but it came down today. It was a small tree so I was able to cut all but the lowest part of the trunk without a saw. I carried it to the family room, where our fireplace is, and burned it, bit by bit over a small fire I had already started. Naturally I put the camera on a tripod and took a few pictures. Getting the exposure right for flames is a bit tricky. You want the background to be black and you don’t want the flames to be too bright. On the other hand, you have to play with the shutter speed to get the right amount of blur (or lack of blur). This is by far my favorite from the evening.
A Little Snow Left
After a significant but fairly short cold spell, it’s been warmer (but still cool). Last night and today we had a good bit of rain and most of the snow has melted and is gone. Mostly there is only snow left where it was piled up when parking lots were cleared (and there are three snowmen left in a yard in our neighborhood). This picture is by the parking lot at work, where snow was piled, decorated with leaves that were scraped up with the snow.
Frasier Fir (Abies fraseri)
This is the end of a branch on our Christmas tree. Last year it came down fairly early but this year we decided we’d leave it up at least until Epiphany (January 6). As you can see by the date this photo was taken, we’ve gone over a little. I expect the tree to come down in the next few days, however. It was a small tree and We went fairly light on the decorations. There were a few strings of lights and we put up about a half dozen ornaments but that was it. The tree has stood up to being in a dry house fairly well. Of course, it was only cut on December 14, so it was pretty fresh.
Cathy
It’s been a while since I posted a picture of Cathy, so, here’s one. She’s a good sport to let me take pictures all the time. Once in a while, she even appreciates it. One really nice thing to do is to go back about ten years and look at pictures. We can go back much farther, of course, but 2003 is when I got my first digital camera and most pictures from before that are not on-line so they are a little harder to get at. Once it a while we’ll look through prints, of course, but a lot are also slides, which are harder still. I really need to start at the beginning and scan pictures. Even if they are not good enough scans to let me really get rid of the originals, it would make looking through them easier. It’s a bit of a task, though. There are more than a few dozen pictures to scan, as you might imagine. Still, if I got started, even if I only did a little at a time, I’d get through them eventually. Who knows, maybe I’ll do that in 2014. The Great Digitization Project needs to begin.
Cold
How do you photograph cold? I guess it’s easy enough if you live in the mountains with lots of snow and ice. But what if it’s dry out? That makes it considerably harder, I think. The ground doesn’t look all that different. The trees and bushes are as bare and lifeless looking as they were when it was considerably warmer. But this morning my outdoor thermometer read 1.3°F (-17°C). That’s cold. Even if the reading is slightly off because the sensor is too close to the house (which would mean it was actually colder than that), it’s close enough to know that you want to do more than just roll your sleeves down. Yes, I admit it, I put on a jacket before going out. This photo was taken in my car while waiting at a traffic light. I like the network of little lines that have formed on the glass.
Shadows
We were having dinner and I noticed the light shining through my glass, after I had finished drinking. The light source is a chandelier with a bunch of small lights, so it throws multiple shadows at slightly different angels. Because the glass isn’t perfectly smooth or pure, and because it is blue, there are bright lines in the light coming through the glass, crisscrossing each other to form these patterns on a sheet of white paper I put under the glass. Naturally, as the glass gets thicker toward the bottom, the light shining through it becomes bluer.
After taking a bunch of pictures of the shadows of the glass, I tried using a blue glass vase that was in the room. The glass is thicker and the blue is darker so no light made it through to turn the shadows blue. I suppose I could have made them blue after the fact, but this is the color they looked to me at the time.
In his picture, the multiple lights produced shadows that feel to me like mountains fading into the haze of distance.
Silhouetted Against The Snow
I only took a few pictures today, mostly out the back door. These are what’s left of the black-eyed Susan flowers around our patio, silhouetted against the snow. Not all that exciting, I guess. They looked nicer in real life.
Maybe tomorrow will bring something better.
Into The Sunset
It was a wonderfully clear, bright day today. Cool, but clear and bright. I didn’t go out during the day today, except to take a few pictures shortly before sunset. There were more than half a dozen contrails crisscrossing the sky this afternoon and as the sun sank into the west, they all lit up with a beautiful orange color. This one didn’t stick around, but faded from view shortly after the plane was past, but it was the brightest of them all, while it lasted. The plain is heading southwest, possibly towards a landing at Reagan National or Dulles International. When you see planes overhead, does it make you want to travel? It does that for me. I’m ready to go, let me grab my passport.
Snow
I had the picture of the snow coming down from last night. For today, here is picture of what the back yard looked like this morning. As I said, it wasn’t a huge snow storm but it was enough to cover everything. Although the county can’t clear all their streets in anything like 24 hours, many still had a good bit of snow on them. Not enough to keep us at home, but a few more inches and it gets a bit iffy on the hillier places in the neighborhood, especially when the temperature is right at the freezing (or melting) point. No trouble getting to work, though.
Yummy Breakfast
I bought these tiny octopuses and last night I cooked them because I wanted to try stuffing them with sausage and sautéing them but they turned out to be too small to stuff properly. I’ve also got some frozen squid that I think are going to work better. Since these didn’t work out last night, I figured I should eat them for breakfast. They were quite good, sautéd in olive oil with chives sprinkled over them. Not everyone’s idea of a lovely breakfast bit I enjoyed them.
Falling Snow
We had our first snow fall of 2014 today. It wasn’t a blizzard, by any stretch, but it was more than was foretold by the weather prognosticators. I opened my garage doorway and set up my tripod and took some pictures of it this evening. The light was interesting. Sometimes, when it is snowing, it seems much brighter out than on a normal night. It wasn’t so noticeable, tonight, but the light was quite yellow, a consequence of being from fairly yellow street lights in our neighborhood. This photo was a 15 second exposure but with several (actually, about a dozen) one-eighth power flashes that lite up the snow as it fell. Without the flash, the falling snow would have blurred into nothing.