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#121 |
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here's a photo of my friend Birdy-tap link upper right
Birdy (s) sing a welcome as I cycle up then fly loops over me for a piece of hotdog Birdy is the only "official" talking NA bird species. native on the Gulf Coast http://images.google.com/imgres?img...I7GGLJ%26sa%3DN beastly hyperlink |
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#122 |
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On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 21:48:12 -0600, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
>[snip] The first obstruction today was a muskrat, paddling around a tiny pond. As soon as I got my camera out, it crash-dived, so no picture of a muskrat ramble. Drat! The next two obstructions are on a log and show that spring has arrived: http://i26.tinypic.com/xmqwdh.jpg I wasn't sure that they were obstructions. In fact, I saw only the one in the sun and wondered if it was just a bump on the log. When I raised the camera, some ducks next to the log took off, but the sunny bump just sat there. What the hell, electronic pictures are free, so I took a picture, took a step forward, and two frightened bumps hit the water with loud splashes. (I hadn't seen the one in the shade.) In case you can't quite see the two painted obstructions, here they are, one in the shade, one in the sun: http://i32.tinypic.com/29m9iyw.jpg A little further on, a great blue heron flew up out of what I thought was a dry flood plain toward the river. Then another great blue heron did the same thing. And then a third. By the time a fourth gbh flapped up out of the hidden pond, I had my camera out, but the huge bird flew off behind so many trees that I never got a shot. Drat again! The next obstructions weren't great blue herons, but they were almost as frustrating. Here they are, the last three of a flock of twelve vanishing into the brush before I ran after them: http://i31.tinypic.com/2ns8f2o.jpg http://i27.tinypic.com/wvbbyw.jpg Sometimes I can't help thinking how much quicker and easier a shotgun is than a camera. The whole flock was full grown and hurried off into the brush as soon as I saw them. I chased them, never getting a chance to take a picture because they kept running as if it was Thanksgiving and I had a hatchet in my hand. Finally, they decided to prove that they can fly, taking off into the sun. Only three were visible by the time I got a picture: http://i28.tinypic.com/29w20t4.jpg http://i31.tinypic.com/b3u5q0.jpg That's just a puzzled hawk up in the left-hand corner: http://i25.tinypic.com/70xrpg.jpg http://i30.tinypic.com/23wl0n5.jpg This obstruction was not a porcupine, though the sting of its inhabitants can hurt more than a porcupine's quills. It's about the same size as a porcupine, so it can fool you at a distance into thinking that you've spotted a porcupine: http://i25.tinypic.com/2a0l16d.jpg It's lighter colored and not as fuzzy as a porcupine: http://i31.tinypic.com/2eg7621.jpg It lacks the tail of a porcupine: http://i30.tinypic.com/23h4xsg.jpg It hasn't got the barely visible front claws of a porcupine, which were on display today: http://i25.tinypic.com/2dm9mpe.jpg Another view, with both front paws and their claws visible on the same side of the branch, but with the dark face behind them utterly invisible at fifteen feet: http://i30.tinypic.com/ohi6nd.jpg Gratuitous marsh hawk, which was hovering on the breeze on a cliff above me, the sun glinting off its beak and the leading edges of its wing-joints: http://i28.tinypic.com/2v1m0du.jpg http://i29.tinypic.com/2n03jac.jpg Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#123 |
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Gene Daniels wrote:
> here's a photo of my friend Birdy-tap link upper right Birdy (s) > sing a welcome as I cycle up then fly loops over me for a piece of > hotdog Birdy is the only "official" talking NA bird species. native > on the Gulf Coast http://images.google.com/imgres?img...I7GGLJ%26sa%3DN > beastly hyperlink You could have done better with the equivalent URL: http://tinyurl.com/2pewrr Try it, you'll like it. Jobst Brandt |
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#124 |
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datakoll wrote:
> here's a photo of my friend Birdy-tap link upper right > Birdy (s) sing a welcome as I cycle up then fly loops over me > for a piece of hotdog > Birdy is the only "official" talking NA bird species. > native on the Gulf Coast > > > > http://images.google.com/imgres?img...I7GGLJ%26sa%3DN > > beastly hyperlink love the tufted titmouse |
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#125 |
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> love the tufted titmouse ? Well, can we interest you in a female cardinal or blue gray gnatcatcher? http://www.rbnc.org/images/birdband/bgna.jpg http://www.palemale.com/femalecardinal.html |
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#126 |
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Gho: Reuenge his foule and moft vnnaturall Murther.
Ham: Murther? On Mon, 24 Mar 2008 01:58:34 -0700, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: >Alas, the porpentine is not merely fretful, but inherently >"fuzzy"-- The local weather forecast for rainy afternoons this past weekend turned out to be spectacularly wrong so I took my two-wheeled tripod toter out for a couple of rides. I came upon a couple of obstructions completely void of fur, warmth or fuzziness (more minor impediments than obstructions really, but I didn't name this thread). Some lounging lizards encountered along the way: http://64.70.205.200/graphics/nikpix/CCC_1402b.jpg - alligator http://64.70.205.200/graphics/nikpix/CCC_1526.jpg - american crocodile http://64.70.205.200/graphics/nikpix/CCC_1573.jpg - another alligator http://64.70.205.200/graphics/nikpix/INF_9806.jpg - bike with tripod (gratuitous nod to this being a bicycle newsgroup). Over rocky sections, the whole apparatus rattles such that I approach photographic subjects with all the stealth of a junkanoo band in full song. ------------------------------- John Dacey Business Cycles, Miami, Florida Since 1983 (25th Year!) Comprehensive catalogue of track equipment: online since 1996 http://www.businesscycles.com ------------------------------- |
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#127 |
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John Dacey wrote:
> The local weather forecast for rainy afternoons this past weekend > turned out to be spectacularly wrong so I took my two-wheeled tripod > toter out for a couple of rides. I came upon a couple of obstructions > completely void of fur, warmth or fuzziness (more minor impediments > than obstructions really, but I didn't name this thread). Some > lounging lizards encountered along the way: > > http://64.70.205.200/graphics/nikpix/CCC_1402b.jpg - alligator > > http://64.70.205.200/graphics/nikpix/CCC_1526.jpg - american crocodile > > http://64.70.205.200/graphics/nikpix/CCC_1573.jpg - another alligator Note to self: full body armor if ever invited on ride w/John. |
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#128 |
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On 2008-04-07, Bill Sornson <askme@ask.me> wrote:
> John Dacey wrote: > >> The local weather forecast for rainy afternoons this past weekend >> turned out to be spectacularly wrong so I took my two-wheeled tripod >> toter out for a couple of rides. I came upon a couple of obstructions >> completely void of fur, warmth or fuzziness (more minor impediments >> than obstructions really, but I didn't name this thread). Some >> lounging lizards encountered along the way: >> >> http://64.70.205.200/graphics/nikpix/CCC_1402b.jpg - alligator >> >> http://64.70.205.200/graphics/nikpix/CCC_1526.jpg - american crocodile >> >> http://64.70.205.200/graphics/nikpix/CCC_1573.jpg - another alligator > > Note to self: full body armor if ever invited on ride w/John. Also: make sure you can ride faster than John. Much faster. -- Kristian Zoerhoff kristian.zoerhoff@gmail.com |
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#129 |
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On Mon, 07 Apr 2008 12:26:08 -0400, John Dacey
<jdacey@businesscycles.com> wrote: >Gho: Reuenge his foule and moft vnnaturall Murther. >Ham: Murther? > On Mon, 24 Mar 2008 01:58:34 -0700, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: > >>Alas, the porpentine is not merely fretful, but inherently >>"fuzzy"-- > >The local weather forecast for rainy afternoons this past weekend >turned out to be spectacularly wrong so I took my two-wheeled tripod >toter out for a couple of rides. I came upon a couple of obstructions >completely void of fur, warmth or fuzziness (more minor impediments >than obstructions really, but I didn't name this thread). Some >lounging lizards encountered along the way: > >http://64.70.205.200/graphics/nikpix/CCC_1402b.jpg - alligator > >http://64.70.205.200/graphics/nikpix/CCC_1526.jpg - american crocodile > >http://64.70.205.200/graphics/nikpix/CCC_1573.jpg - another alligator > >http://64.70.205.200/graphics/nikpix/INF_9806.jpg - bike with tripod >(gratuitous nod to this being a bicycle newsgroup). Over rocky >sections, the whole apparatus rattles such that I approach >photographic subjects with all the stealth of a junkanoo band in full >song. > >------------------------------- >John Dacey >Business Cycles, Miami, Florida >Since 1983 (25th Year!) >Comprehensive catalogue of track equipment: online since 1996 >http://www.businesscycles.com >------------------------------- Dear John, Nice impediments, nicely photographed! To solve the noise problem, you need a modern spring-fork, like Frank Lenz's Victor roadster, to silently carry your "novel compact telescopic tripod": http://books.google.com/books?id=oe...RA2-PR18-IA4,M1 Lenz used his self-timer and tripod to take his own picture in India: http://i28.tinypic.com/2n8y2gw.jpg That photo is from the Calcutta leg of Lenz's tour: http://www.la84foundation.org/Sport.../outXXVI04l.pdf Details of Lenz's self-timer and new-fangled aluminum tripod: "Time Attachment for Cameras: Mr. F. G. Lenz, who recently started around the world on bicycle for Outing, showed us his ingenious attachment to his 4Jx6J camera, which he made himself, for regulating the time of exposure and also for regulating the time when the shutter shall operate. Near the finder, attached to one side of the front of the camera, he has a miniature music-box mechanism so geared that in fifteen seconds from the time it is started it will throw the release lever of the shutter and allow the latter to be operated. This is to give him time to walk off from the camera after the mechanism has started, that be may appear himself in the picture. He has an Asbury Barker time-shutter mechanism for regulating the speed of the shutter, and carries, to support his camera, a novel compact aluminium telescopic tripod, which can be quickly extended for use." http://books.google.com/books?id=oe...e#PRA1-PA210,M1 Be sure to label your tripod "aluminum" so that no one mistakes the modern miracle metal for silver: "By and by I neared a good-sized lake not on my map. The Chinese told me to go back to get around it. Back I went through the mud and slush, the matter freezing solid in my forks every half mile, compelling me to chisel it out with my screw driver. I reached the road inn again, and to my chagrin my aluminum tripod was missing. Some thief had stolen it while I was eating lunch during the day, no doubt mistaking it for silver." http://www.la84foundation.org/Sport.../outXXIV02k.pdf Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#130 |
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On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 21:48:12 -0600, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
>[snip] The first obstruction of spring was lying across the bike path as the clouds rolled in. It was trying to bask and keep warm, much like me with my blue glove liners. Coiled up to look small: http://i27.tinypic.com/23u60p4.jpg Stretched out to look longer: http://i25.tinypic.com/mbspx1.jpg Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#131 |
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On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 21:48:12 -0600, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
>[snip] Purely as an experiment, I drove off yesterday with my camera resting on the roof of my car. (This kind of experiment is much rarer on my bicycle.) Apparently, digital cameras are not magnetic, but they're highly visible, even on a lonely dirt road. Someone picked it up in the forty minutes it took me to drive back. (Broken, I hope. Luckily, I'd taken no pictures.) A local retailer craftily offered my lost camera's big brother on sale this morning, with image stabilization and twice as much zoom, so I was able to proceed to the next step in the experiment on my daily ride. This obstruction often glares at me from her cottonwood nest, but she'd always flown off before I could get a picture with the old 4x camera. Today, however, she sat still today, possibly flattered by the new camera. Here she is, glaring over her shoulder, at 4x with the new camera: http://i31.tinypic.com/16k51dt.jpg http://i30.tinypic.com/2psng5l.jpg And with the added zoom: http://i29.tinypic.com/2h4epet.jpg http://i26.tinypic.com/vxkdxc.jpg I like the new camera well enough that I may even look through the manual. Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#132 |
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On Sat, 19 Apr 2008 00:14:05 -0600, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
>Dear John, > >Those are much better pictures than the related obstructions on my >ride today: > Thank you, but I think anyone would expect results from all the camera junk with which I've saddled myself on these little trips. Why the tripod alone is a marvel of sufficient telescoping and articulating complexity to stymie Pythagoras. >Coy look over one shoulder: > http://i31.tinypic.com/oqd4k2.jpg > >Coy pause for a sunny pose: > http://i31.tinypic.com/312cmzs.jpg > >A dim-witted friend scrambles back down the bluff to join the >photo-shoot: > http://i31.tinypic.com/eitmi1.jpg > >Look, Ethel, is that a man with a camera? > http://i32.tinypic.com/2drgv2h.jpg > >Yes, Myrtle, he's taking your picture! > http://i26.tinypic.com/1537as5.jpg > >Ethel, I'm leaving before he sees my disfigured ankle! > http://i32.tinypic.com/idumh5.jpg > >Cheers, > >Carl Fogel Those are pretty good pix from the distance I reckon your subjects stayed - enjoy the extra reach your new camera offers! I had another crocodile sit for his portrait last weekend, but I don't think I was able to capture the look of pensive meaning and passive beauty that the subject had requested: http://64.70.205.200/graphics/nikpix/CCC_2840.jpg ------------------------------- John Dacey Business Cycles, Miami, Florida Since 1983 (25th Year!) Comprehensive catalogue of track equipment: online since 1996 http://www.businesscycles.com ------------------------------- |
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#133 |
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On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 21:48:12 -0600, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
>[snip] A roughly 16-inch long obstruction, posing to show how digital cameras automatically overcome even the most incompetent handling: http://i30.tinypic.com/igkcxc.jpg Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#134 |
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In article <6j5i141f4i10n7d5sk5jqvnh00hmg4lq5h@4ax.com>,
carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: > On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 21:48:12 -0600, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: > > >[snip] > > A roughly 16-inch long obstruction, posing to show how digital cameras > automatically overcome even the most incompetent handling: > http://i30.tinypic.com/igkcxc.jpg Below the size limit. You'll have to throw that one back. One unsung virtue (frequently considered a vice) of compact digitals is that the nature of their very small sensors means they have a broad depth of field in most conditions. The upshot is that it's fairly easy to get your subject in focus and get it all in focus, even in a close-up like this. Of course, you are also in broad daylight, so the camera was probably stopped down for all its worth, thus helping things along even more. -- Ryan Cousineau rcousine@gmail.com http://www.wiredcola.com/ "In other newsgroups, they killfile trolls." "In rec.bicycles.racing, we coach them." |
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#135 |
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On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 21:48:12 -0600, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
>[snip] Scofflaw obstructions, wrong side of fence: http://i31.tinypic.com/ddgynn.jpg Law-abiding obstruction, legal side of fence: http://i30.tinypic.com/qq32fk.jpg Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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