Photographs by Frank

5 January 2014

The Usual Suspects

Filed under: Birds,Monadnock Region,Winter — Tags: — Frank @ 10:00 PM

Today was the first day above freezing in about a week. I took advantage of the tropical conditions to head out the back door and, again, photograph the birds attracted to the feeder. It was so warm and sunny that, a one point, I headed into the house to doff a layer, as I was over-dressed.

In the past couple of days, we observed a flicker and a red-breasted woodpecker at the suet feeder. Thus I was hoping that they would make an appearance while I was out. Alas, only the usual suspects appeared… chickadees in abundance, smaller numbers of titmice and nuthatches and a couple of downys.

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31 December 2013

An ‘Adams Dozen’ for 2013

Back at the end of 2011, I added an entry titled  “Twelve Images” based on  Ansel Adams idea that twelve good photographs in a year is a decent crop. I had intended this to be an annual event but I seem to have missed last year.

I actually chose, printed and matted the twelve photos for 2012; they are stored carefully in their own print box. However, I do not seem to have written a blog entry about them… oh well! It doesn’t seem right to post them at this late date, so I’ll just forge ahead!

Thus, without further ado, here is my ‘Adams Dozen’ for 2013:

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14 December 2013

Backyard Birds, Again

Filed under: Birds,Monadnock Region,The "New" Yard & Environs,Winter — Tags: — Frank @ 8:00 PM

About 1:15 this afternoon, I headed outside to photograph birds attracted to the feeders again. My goal was to get some more practice with these difficult (i.e. small and fast moving)  subjects. I also wanted to try out some new cold weather gear (insulated boots and pants); it was 11 degrees when I headed out.

The new gear worked well. My toes and nose were only mildly cold at 3:30 when I finally called it quits because the light got too low for good photos of flitting birds; the rest of me was still nice and toasty! It was 10 degrees when I looked at the kitchen thermometer after doffing all of the outerwear!

Present, were the usual suspects: lots of chickadees, smaller numbers of tufted titmice and a few nuthatches and downy woodpeckers. On two occasions a flock of goldfinches, a couple of dozen strong, descended en mass on the feeders only to fly a way a short time later, again, en mass.

There were also three or four blue jays in the area. They were very skittish and hung out mainly high in the trees. Occasionally, one would make a very short, tentative foray down near the feeders.

Again, juncos were not present.

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5 December 2013

Salisbury Beach & Parker River NWR

Filed under: Birds,Winter — Tags: , — Frank @ 8:13 PM

Yesterday was predicted to be a warmish for December (highs in the mid-40’s) and calm-ish day on the coast.

Thus, with all of the recent reports of snowy owls along the New Hampshire and northern Massachusetts coast, I made plans to head east yesterday morning; I left the house at about 7:30. It is a two and a quarter hour drive each way. Even though I only saw one snowy owl, from a very long distance away, I had a good time anyway!

I did manage to photograph a few other birds.

I found the gull and the sparrow at Salisbury Beach.

There was a large group of gulls on the pavement in the parking lot and only one or two on the beach. I refuse to take photos of gull on black top, but I compromised and got this one sitting on a sign! I found a small group of sparrows along the campground road, near a juniper full of berries and the shelter of a small grove of conifers. I assume that the combination of shelter and food was responsible for their presence here. There was a group of common eiders in the water near the boat ramp but they were too far out for good photos.

It was almost noon by this time and I was getting hungry. I headed towards Plum Island and, along the way, I grabbed a sandwich to eat in the truck later.  The rest of the photos were made at Parker River NWR.

A short way past parking lot #1 as I entered the refuge, I came to a group of vehicles pulled over. As I rolled to a stop behind them, my thought was “Great! An snowy owl already!”. It turned out, the crowd had gathered for a red-tailed hawk in the tree tops just off the east side of road.

The snow owl I saw was way, way out in the salt marsh on the west side of the road. It was barely visible from the spot where the hawk had been.

After a quick lunch at parking lot #2, I drove the length of the refuge road stopping at every parking lot for a short walk except for one. At lot #5, there were a half dozen or more cars parked and I decided to pass up the crowd there… this was a big mistake!

Driving back towards the entrance, I again stopped at each parking lot. This time I decided to “brave the crowd” at lot #5. I was about three quarters of the way down the 0.2 mile trail when I met a woman who said that there was a snowy owl present. Another couple of hundred feet down the trail I encountered a group of ten or twelve folks all carrying tripods with scopes or cameras with long lens. They were all headed towards me… i.e. back towards the parking lot. The bird had flown off five minutes before! Lesson learned; when looking for rare birds go where the crowds are! Hopefully, I won’t have to re-learn this lesson too often!

A bit later, I was at the end of one trail “glassing” the salt marsh for snowy owls with my binoculars, when I caught a glimpse of something coming in low over my left shoulder. It was the northern harrier flying low and lazily as is their habit. I was able to get three frames exposed before it was out of good photo range.

Many of the ponds on the marsh side had groups of ducks, mainly mallards with a few diving ducks in the mix, in them. These birds were too far off for good photos.

I also encountered a number of rafts of diving ducks on the ocean side. In addition to the eiders I was able to photograph, I observed buffleheads and mergansers as well.

I stopped at parking lot #1 on the way out to “de layer” for the drive home just after 3:30, the light was fading fast.

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3 December 2013

Bald Eagles in Peterborough

Filed under: Birds,Monadnock Region,Winter — Tags: , — Frank @ 4:42 PM

At 12:45 this afternoon, the phone rang. It was my CWS* calling with news that she was pulled of to the side of US 202 in Peterborough (just north of the EMS store) and that she was watching a pair of bald eagles (an adult and a juvenile).

Of course, I decided that the fire wood I was in the process of hauling inside could wait and immediately headed off in the truck, with “Big Bertha”  on the passenger seat, to meet the CWS. I arrived on the scene about 20 or 25 minutes after answering the phone. I was half expecting a call during my drive saying that the birds had flown but they were still there when I arrived.

I was able to make eleven exposures (in just over three minutes) before the birds took off. I had the camera packed up and was back in the truck at 1:30.

Joan also observed a second juvenile fly low across the road between her phone call and my arrival.

If you look very closely at the second photo you can discern why the bird had assumed this pose.

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*CWS… chief wildlife spotter; AKA,  my wife, Joan.


14 March 2013

Powdermill Pond

Filed under: Landscapes,Monadnock Region,Winter — Frank @ 6:00 PM

Yesterday, I made the short (five or six miles?) drive from our house to the west shore of Powdermill Pond in Hancock.  This “pond” is actually a dammed section of the Contoocook River.  The dams (there are three) hold water for use by the Monadnock Paper Mill in Bennington. The upper two dams may also be (or have been) used for power.

I was hoping to catch the light of the setting sun on the eastern (i.e. the west-facing) side of the pond with Crotched Mountain in the background.

The third photo was taken on the drive back home. It is a view facing west across a hay field that was, until recently, owned by one of Joan’s cousins.

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Four frame panorama of Powder Mill Pond; it would print almost four feet wide (by ten inches high):

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11 March 2013

What a Difference a Day Makes!

Filed under: Landscapes,Monadnock Region,Winter — Tags: — Frank @ 6:00 PM

Last weekend brought two days of beautiful late winter/early spring weather. The temperature was in the high forties. Joan and I headed out on snow shoes in the late afternoon both days.

Saturday was bright and clear, not a cloud in the sky. The light was harsh and the sky was completely uninteresting… I made few photos and none are worth showing.

Sunday afternoon brought a front moving through in the late afternoon. The light was “nice” and the sky was interesting… the photos below are the result.

What a difference a day makes!

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Three frames stitched together:

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3 March 2013

Beaver Swamp in Late Winter

Filed under: Landscapes,Monadnock Region,Winter — Frank @ 12:00 PM

Yesterday afternoon, Joan and I strapped on the snowshoes and headed “down back” to the beaver swamp. We had not trekked that way for a few weeks.

There is enough snow on the ground to cover most of the grasses and other low vegetation in the swamp, leaving only the shrubs and snags standing tall. The snow was well aged and crunchy, but easy to walk on… not icy.

It is always interesting to walk on the frozen swamp. One gets views from angles that are more-or-less inaccessible at other times of the year.

The sun was as low as it can be and still illuminate the bottom lands. The light was very variable as the sun kept peaking out of the clouds and then disappearing again.  Thus, the light was good for photos, at least at the onset of our walk.

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15 February 2013

A Day Off from Work

Filed under: Landscapes,Winter — Tags: , , , — Frank @ 5:00 PM

I had not planned on making photographs this past Tuesday. However, circumstances gave us some free time so Joan and I headed down to Sachuest NWR in Middletown, Rhode Island. We did not get quite that far. The nor’easter at the end of the previous week had washed out the road and knocked down the power lines along Sachuest Point Road. Thus the road was closed  about a mile or so before the refuge gate.

Instead, we parked at the small lot at the west end of Second Beach (along with all of the surfers) and had a nice walk down the beach. The wind was blowing steadily and the temperature was in the low 40s. The walk down the beach, with the wind at our backs, was slow and pleasant; we moved somewhat more rapidly on the return trip.

I had the  little camera* with me. There were some nice clouds and so I got some nice photographs. Actually, it was very hard to keep my focus on the dunes and the sky since there are always so many interesting “distractions” at one’s feet while walking a beach.

After our walk on the beach we had a late lunch and headed down to Sakonnet Point in Little Compton. Sachuest Point and Sakonnet Point are separated by roughly three miles (of water) as the crow flies. According to Google maps it is roughly 25 miles by road between the two spots… the RI coast is definitely convoluted!

The “orange door” photograph was made at Sakonnet Point; all of the others were made along Second Beach. The reflection in the window of the orange door is as I saw it; it was not “Photoshopped in”.

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*I am getting pretty good at remembering to take the Nikon 1 whenever I leave the house. I was certainly glad to have it with me last Tuesday! On the way back to Bridgewater from Little Compton we stopped at a Best Buy because our cordless phone in the house has been acting up. We found an adequate replacement and had already purchased it when, as we were headed towards the exit, Joan pointed out their display of the various Nikon 1 models… I ended up with the 30-110 mm lens for the Nikon 1 that I had been thinking about. I bet it will be a long time before Joan mentions a camera display to me again!!!!


3 February 2013

“Sky Farm” and Gregg Lake Ice

Filed under: Monadnock Region,Winter — Tags: — Frank @ 6:00 PM

Friday was a sunny and  mild-for-January day; the temperature was in the mid-20’s. There were enough clouds to make good landscape photographs possible*.

Thus, after lunch, Joan and I made the twenty minute drive to the Forest Society‘s High Five Reservation** in Deering. Making the short climb from the road to the top of the hill , we were rewarded with the usual spectacular views of the Contoocook valley. We headed back to the car by meandering through the essentially snow-less woods instead of taking the road directly back.

Saturday afternoon found us out for another hike on Gregg Lake. The thaw and rain early last week melted most of the snow on the lake which, upon refreezing resulted in a relatively smooth and hard ice surface.  There were many spots where the ice contained countless small bubbles. The patterns in and on the ices were fascinating. We were left wondering and postulating how the various defects in the ice came to be.

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Looking Northwest from Sky Farm #2 (a three frame panorama)

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*Skies make or break many landscapes. If you are going to include the sky in the frame it ought to be “interesting”.

**Located on Sky Farm Road, we seem to eschew the official name and call this wonderful spot “Sky Farm”.



	
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