Around Noon today Reuben Yoder and Jacob Hostetler picked out a single Little Gull among the few hundred Bonaparte's Gulls.
Tuesday, October 30, 2018
Saturday, October 27, 2018
Ash-Throated Flycatcher - Ludington 10/27/2018
On Thursday Matt McConnell found an Ash-throated Flycatcher on the Island Lake Trail at Ludington State Park. I made an unsuccessful attempt to see the bird around 6pm Friday.
Late this morning I made it back out there and found the bird to be quite cooperative once it was relocated.
As I was finishing my photo-shoot with the flycatcher I received a call from Dave Dister who had located a possible Black-legged Kittiwake at the Wastewater Treatment Plant in Ludington. Dave was still locked on the bird when I arrived with a small caravan of birders who followed from the State Park. Upon further review it has been determined that the bird in question has been downgraded to a Bonaparte's Gull.
Monday, October 15, 2018
First Half of October Update
Tennessee Warbler |
White-throated Sparrow |
White-crowned Sparrow |
Eastern Towhee |
Full cheeks give this chipmunk a bobble head look |
On October 7, a trip around the lower reservoir road at my work yielded an Eastern Phoebe...
… and a few bucks.10 points.....the hard way |
More typical rack
|
At the south pier of Ludington Harbor a Dunlin was seen on October 8.
On Saturday October 15th a pair of plovers were active on the pier.
American Golden Plover |
The highlight on Sunday at Lake Erie Metropark was the first Golden Eagle of the year at the hawk count site.
Turkey Vulture migration is peaking this time of year at the count. Over 7000 were tallied on Sunday.
The Goodyear Blimp took off from Grosse Ile Airport where it spent the night, after hovering over the Michigan-Wisconsin game in Ann Arbor on Saturday.
Thursday, October 4, 2018
Throwback Thursday - The Strangest Photo I've Ever Taken
Thirty years ago this past week on a trip to the Outer Banks of North Carolina, I set up to take a series of photos to capture a wildfire-enhanced sunset with the picturesque Corolla Lighthouse in the foreground. The wildfires were nowhere near the east coast but were actually the historic 1,000,000 acre blaze in and around Yellowstone National Park nearly 2,000 miles away. The fire blackened over half a million acres within the park boundary or 63% of the park.
The smoke and ash was carried eastward by the jetstream and created a milky haze that made its way to the Atlantic coast. The airborne particulate created colorful sunrises and sunsets across the US for weeks.
In that summer of 1988 I had recently purchased a set of Cokin Filters and experimented with them in conjunction with Kodachrome and Ektachrome slide film. The photo below shot on Kodachrome 200 was the startling result of stacked Cokin red, orange and yellow filters handheld in front of a $99 Kmart 500mm f/8 lens.
I had one of those 'I remember exactly where I was' moments in life when I first previewed the box of processed slides in my Chevy Nova parked outside of the old Positive Images photo shop in Riverview. The inexplicable way the rim of the sun is darker than the surrounding sky was and still is jaw-droppingly confusing. In the weeks following the North Carolina trip I tried to duplicate the effect using the same setup but never came close.
The photo above was copied in a cheap slide duplicator to convert it to a digital format. The digital version was not enhanced in any way and in fact pales slightly compared to the original slide.
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