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Scenes from Newfoundland

Scenes from Newfoundland

Newfoundland is one of my favorite places to visit  because it is great for photography of wildlife, scenic coastlines, and quaint harbors. Years ago I visited Newfoundland with a friend and the next year conducted a small tour there that included Labrador. In 2023 another friend and I visited the Canadian island again.  What I experienced on that trip convinced me to offer tours there again. In June & July 2024, I created and conducted two tours concentrating on the Avalon and. Bonavist Penninsulas.  Below you can find the locations visited including St John’s, Quidi Vidi, Witless Bay, Cape St. Mary’s Ecological Reserve, St. Brides, Bonavista, and the town of  Trinity. Images in this blog include photos from these locations.
During the week between the two 2024 tours, I visited areas I had not seen before–Change Island and Fogo Island, both north of the Bonavista Peninsula.  In this blog, I included a few images from these islands.  Also included are 3 icebergs photos taken in 2023 near Main Brook. Typically each year icebergs originate in Greenland and drift south in May & early June reaching Trinity Bay.  But in 2023, the bergs never reached locations farther south than St. Anthony’s.
 
St. John's Harbor

St. John’s Harbor

Ft Amherst

Fort Amherst guarding St. John’s Harbor & the Narrows

St. Johns Harbor

View from Signal Hill

Battery Hill, St. John’s

Quidi Vidi Harbor

Quidi Vidi Harbor

Cape Spear lighthouse from cliff

Cape Spear fog rising.

Cape Spear Fence & Older Lighthouse

Petty Harbor

Petty Harbor

Jelly Bean House in St. John’s

Photographer & Jelly Bean Houses in St. John’s

Gannet Rock at St Mary's Ecological Reserve in Newfoundland by Osprey Photo Workshop

Gannet Rock at St. Mary’s Ecological Reserve

St Mary's Cliffs

St Mary’s Cliffs

Trinity – Lupine along road

St. Brides Sunset

St. Brides Sunset

St. John the Baptist Church in Trinity

Dungeon Provincial Park, Collapsed Arches

Dungeon Provincial Park

Bonavista Lighthouse

Bonavista Lighthouse

Bonavista Lighthouse

Bonavista Lighthouse photographed from the water.

Change & Fogo Island Ferry in the pouring rain

Main Tickle on Change Island

Shacks on Change Island with reflections

Change Island Harbor

Boat & Shed, Change Island

Iceberg near Main Brook (from 2023 trip)

Iceberg near Main Brook (2023 trip)

Iceberg Near Main Brook, (2023 trip)

 

 

 

Tips for Garden & Flower Photography

Tips for Garden & Flower Photography

Light & Flowers

The first image captures the center of the pink lotus flower beautifully lit by soft diffused light.  As opposed to bright sunlight, soft light preserves the individual pastel colors of the flower.  

Side light when it creates light shadows and tonal gradient on the petals defines the shape of the flower making it appear three dimensional as with the second lotus blossom.

Back light coming from behind the subject and passing through petals and other flower parts can be dramatic and reveal details not easily apparent otherwise like the fuzz on the sepals of the lady slipper.  The shadowed background made this detail more apparent.  However, the pink part of the lady slipper was shaded. To improve the image, I used a white card to reflect light into the shadows.

Like all photography patience is required. I searched for a perfect Bird of Paradise flower to photograph but had difficulties finding one that did not fade into the background.  Finally I found what I was looking for, an individual flower that was backlit with the orange color portion of the flower glowing against a dark background. 

The last flower in this series, was lit by the setting sun from behind.  It seemed to glow with a beautiful transition of colors from red to yellow.

Problem Background & Solutions

When the background is extremely distracting, consider selecting an angle of view where it is in shadow like the image above.

With some problem backgrounds I have resorted to using an artificial one behind the subject as with this Himalayan Blue Poppy.  

One way to create such a background is to I select a scene outside, set the camera to a low F-stop for a shallow depth of field and defocus the lens before taking the photo.  Then I print the image, mount it on a stiff background and hold it behind the subject.  Another option is to select an image that you already have in your photo files and use Adobe’s Photoshops blur filter and possibly other adjustments to create a suitable  backdrop.

Composition

Before taking a photo decide what attracted you to the subject.  Ask why did it catch your attention? What made it special?. Simplicity is the key to success.  In the case of this orchid, it was the center of the flower that fascinated me so I filled my frame with the most interesting part, the lip and pollinia where the pollen is located.

The commonly discussed rules of composition are guidelines that can be broken if the situation warrants it.  The next flower was centered in the frame, breaking one of the primary rules for good composition, don’t center the subject since it is likely to create a static image..  With the next flower, the center was the key feature  that attracted my attention so I put it in the center of the frame.  The image  almost feels like it is pulsing..  

To emphasize patterns like the petals of this Blue Hyacinth, I selected an area of the flower that was flat.  I took the photo with the face of the lens parallel to that surface so all the petals were equal distant from the lens (surface of the internal sensor).

Artistic Expression

Blue Hyacinth abstract

Blue Hyacinth abstract

For wall displays & interior design, images do not have to represent reality.  The two photos below were created by altering images using an Adobe Photoshop mask plus filters (blur and liquify).  For the second image, I used double exposure with one photo image liquified and placed over the original photo. 

Macro Lenses

Macro lenses are designed for close-up photography and can focus closer than normal lenses of the same focal length.  They are often able to reach 1:1 magnification. These lenses are sharp edge to edge and have low perspective distortion. They come in several focal lengths usually varying from 50 to 200 mm.  The longer the lens, the more working distance you have from the subject helping you to avoid your shadow falling on your flowert. Also due to its narrower angle of view, you are more able to control what background is behind the flower.

Framing – required moderately soft light

Middle Creek Wildlife Management Area, PA

Middle Creek Wildlife Management Area, PA

Snow geese lift off at Middle Creek Wildlife Management Area.

Middle Creek Wildlife Management Area, PA

At the beginning of March I spent a day and a half at Middle Creek Wildlife Management Area in Pennsylvania, approximately a 2.5 hour drive from my home near Baltimore. This was my first visit to the area. I could not resist packing up my camera gear and heading north when a friend from one of my photo workshops sent me a great image she had just taken at Middle Creek of a huge flock of snow geese taking off from a farm field.  

Many years ago, 40,000 snow geese visited Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge in November.  I recall one afternoon during one of my photo workshops, while driving the Wildlife Loop we encountered thousands of snow geese in the impoundment and near the road. Periodically they would rise in unison from the ground sounding like a plane taking off.  They would fly overhead, circle, and return to the same spot that they had left. Not only did they do this once, but repeated the behavior several times more.  I have never forgotten that day.  But in recent years the number of geese at Chincoteague has dropped dramatically.  Many are now spending the winter at Bombay Hook and Prime Hook National Wildlife Refuges in Delaware with the geese feeding in the fields of the Delmarva Peninsula.  It is reported, seasonal counts have exceeded 200,000. 

At Middle Creek,  I was a reminded of the past scenes at Chincoteague but with even more birds.  During my visit on March 4th, there were 78,000 snow geese present with nearly 3,000 tundra swans.  Periodically, the number of birds present in the winter were as high as 200,000.

 

Middle Creek Wildlife Management Area, PA

Middle Creek Wildlife Management Area is located on the boarder of Lebanon and Lancaster Counties in Pennsylvania, north of the town of Lancaster in the middle of Amish Country.  Middle Creek is operated by the Pennsylvania Game Commission which is in charge of managing the wild bird and mammal populations at Middle Creek. This roughly 6000-acre wildlife management area is home to hundreds of species of birds and mammals. It is crucial for the hundreds of thousands of ducks, geese, and swans that visit during their spring and fall migration. 

A number of accommodations are available approximately 20-25 minutes from Middle Creek at the towns of Ephrata and Lititz, PA.

Middle Creek Wildlife Management Area, PA

At Middle Creek there is a Visitors Center with interpretive displays, an auditorium, and an observation area with feeders and views of Middle Creek Lake. Also there are a number of walking trails, several picnic areas, a vehicle tour loop, and areas set aside for fishing and hunting.  During the peak of the fall migration of waterfowl, to reduce disturbance of the birds, portions of the tour loop are closed to vehicles.  However, from 1 March until 30 September, vehicles are permitted on the interior, northern part of the tour route.

The Lake

The impoundment (lake) where the snow geese, tundra swans, and other waterfowl congregate was created by the construction of a dam in the early 1970s. It is quite shallow, with an average depth of only three feet.  Waterfowl attracted to the lake are those that prefer shallow water, compared to the diving ducks of the Chesapeake Bay. The deepest part of the lake is just above the dam where you might see herons, egrets and kingfishers. 

Visitors Center Pond

The Visitors Center pond during the spring and fall migrations is an excellent spot to observe at a distance mallards, black ducks, northern shovelers, ring-necked ducks, wood ducks, hooded mergansers and others. The “tree-house” type structure located behind the pond is a bat condominium intended to serve as a maternal colony for up to 6,000 bats.

Kleinfeltersville Rd

Just past the road to the Visitor Center along Kleinfeltersville Rd on the right is an open area with a relatively clear view of the lake.  When I was there, the cove was filled with snow geese in the morning and evening, with some at close range.  They shared the area with Tundra Swans.At times more geese joined the group filling the sky with birds before landing.  Eventually the main group of geese flushed and in mass, joined the other geese farther back in lake. To my surprise, the swans did not join them..  It may be a good spot to photograph flying geese at sunrise.  However, most visitors gather at Willow Point for sunrise.  

Willow Point Trail

The Willow Point Trail is very popular when the geese are present.  It is an easy 10-minute paved walk that leads visitors to an observation point overlooking a large portion of the 360-acre lake. During spring migration, there are days when the waterfowl put on incredible flight displays, moving from one section of the lake to another.  Occasionally, they would fly over the head of visitors before circling back to the lake.   It was suggested that they took off in response to a bald eagle that left its perch on a dead tree across the lake and headed towards the flock.

 

Waterfowl Propagation Areas

From the Observation Point Parking Lot past Willow Point, it is possible to see activity within the waterfowl propagation area which is off limits to people.  It is set aside to allow birds a place to nest, rest and feed unmolested year-round. In the spring and early summer you may see a variety of songbirds. Bird boxes attract tree swallows and bluebirds.  In the fields you may see bobolinks. 

On the southwestern portion of the lake there are three different types of nesting structures provided for waterfowl. Tire and tub structures provide a nesting areas for Canada geese.  The straw tubes are provided for mallards and black ducks, while the box style structures are for wood ducks. 

View from the interior loop road.

After observing the movement of geese from Willow Point and talking to other photographers, on my last afternoon in the area, I drove to the northern end of the interior tour loop where I thought the geese might be landing in a field close to the road.  There were a number of cars parked at the side of the road which suggested I was right.  I left may car at the end of the line and walked to where I had a clear view of the field and a number of geese on the ground. As I stood there photographing, other geese left the lake and joined the group.  More and more geese arrived with some on the ground taking off and flying overhead to a field behind me.  As sunset approached, the parade of geese leaving the lake continued with one  “V” formation after another heading in my direction. I had hoped they would pass in front of where the sun was setting but most did not.   However, I did capture a few images of lines of geese in front of the warm colors in the sky.

I plan to return in future years.  Great wildlife photography opportunities.

May/June 2021 Heron Rookery Photo Project

May/June 2021 Heron Rookery Photo Project

May/June 2021- Heron Rookery Photo Project 

From 24 April until 18 June 2021 I was on the road.  One of my projects involved documenting the activity in a heron colony populated by a variety of wading birds–Great and Snowy Egrets, Black-Crowned Night Herons, Tri-color & Little Blue Herons, and a few Glossy Ibis.  The rookery was in a large marsh on a ridge where low shrubs grow such as Bayberry and Wax Myrtle.  Nests were low and among tangled branches that help protect the nests, eggs, and offspring from predators.  It was a perfect locations with little chance of flooding and rich waters nearby with abundant food to provide for the growing youngsters.  

Photographing colonial birds in a rookery setting requires a very careful approach as to not negatively effect breeding success.

Herring Gulls

Surrounding the heron colony in the tall stands of salt-meadow hay Herring Gulls nested.  They chose a perfect location since they could swoop over the rookery harassing the herons and attempting to grab eggs and hatchlings. On several occasions, I saw a gull dive down and hit exposed heron.  There was evidence that high water flooded the lower part of the marsh and destroyed some of the nests.

Precautions

I took great care to minimize any disturbance of the nesting birds to avoid interfering with nesting behavior, possibly causing displacement of eggs or the herons abandoning nests. I keep. my visits infrequent, limited in time, and when temperatures were moderate.  Since my intent was to document natural behavior and interactions between individuals, I would have been foolish and unethical to disturb the birds.

My route through the marsh was difficult since I had to avoid soft mud, holes, and tidal guts.   I benefited from past experience reading the marsh and noting what grasses and substrate would support me.  

Dressed in camouflage, I approached the colony slowly and indirectly.  I photographed from a  low position, sitting or kneeling on the soggy, water-saturated ground.  Once in place, I  minimized my movement.  It was usually distant noise that would cause the birds to flush from their nests -- the rumble of trucks, planes, boats, and construction projects..  Luckily, the birds quickly returned to their nests and young.  

Equipment

Lenses primarily used included my 200-500 mm and 80-400 mm Nikon lenses.with my D500 and D850 Nikon cameras attached. The telephotos were necessary to keep my distance from my subjects and yet isolate them.  Zoom lenses provided for flexibility.  As the birds moved and interacted, I could adjust my focal length to capture the range of motion.  Most shots were taken using a tripod with a sturdy ball head or gimbal mount.  I used waterproof sleeves over the base of the tripod legs to protect the joints from damaging grit and corrosive brackish water.

                                  

Changes from May into June

During May, many herons displayed breeding plumage and bright colors around the eyes and bill.  A few still were engaged in mating, courting and nest building, with some birds carrying sticks.  In mid-June, courtship feathers were less obvious and the facial colors had faded a bit. There were eggs in some nests and young birds in others.

Capturing action

One of my goals was to capture arial fighting and aggressive behavior as birds landed in the bushes and jockeyed for position to access their nests. I carefully observed the colony concentrating on areas where there was more activity and less tolerant birds.  Aggressive actions included nipping, stabbing, feather pulling, hackle raising, or just landing on the back of an opponent.

I had the best luck capturing the arial fights when using my 80 – 400 mm lens and shorter focal lengths since it was nearly impossible to predict exactly where and when the action would occur.

                   

Focus Difficulties

If the birds were flying with sky in the background, I focused using a small group of focus sensors. When multiple subjects were involved, I selected an f-stop that offered a bit more depth of field than usual such as an F11 or 16.  But to freeze action with high shutter speeds, I had to use higher ISOs than I typically prefer (often 1000 or 1250).  When the birds were perched on branches or were landing,  I often used a single focus point over the bird's eye.

With auto focus, I had problems with the sensor locking on branches and leaves, not the bird.  Sometimes manual focus was required. Because the nest were located deep within shrubs, I struggled to get clear shots of the birds landing and interacting without branches, grass, shadows or the wings blocking their faces.

Final Thoughts

Most folks find marsh foreboding with muck, unpleasant smells, and pesky flies and mosquitoes.  For me, they are marvelous places filled life and new things to discover.  When  involved with projects like this one where I am deep within a marsh, I find solace and a connection with nature.

Marshes are critical ecosystems that need our protection, not destruction  They are highly productive and a haven for wildlife. They trap sediments and remove nutrients and toxins from the water that can clog our waterways, poison wildlife, and deplete life-giving oxygen. 
Falll 2020 – Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge – Photo Workshop Location

Falll 2020 – Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge – Photo Workshop Location

 Trip Report, Chincoteague NWR, November 2020 

Nature Photography

Chincoteague NWR is located on the southern Virginia end of the barrier island of Assateague.  In the fall, the refuge attracts large numbers of snow geese along with ducks, swans, herons, ospreys, shorebirds and other migrants. It is also the home to wild horses, deer, raccoon, fox squirrels, and other animals.  Used to being protected, the wildlife is unusually tolerant of humans and presents visitors with great photo opportunities. It is one of my favorite places to photograph wildlife in both the fall and spring.  I have been conducting photo workshops there for many years. Numbers of species and the variety has shifted over the years. The refuge is located along the Atlantic Flyway.  Once over 40,000 snow geese stopped at the refuge doing fall migration  Now they stop farther north but still several thousands visit the refuge today along with shorebirds, swans, and other waterfowl.

Chincoteague NWR website:

https://www.fws.gov/refuge/chincoteague/

Trip report – Fall 2020

First Stop – Sunrise

For sunrise I typically stop along Beach Road at the first large pool on the right after passing the visitors center– Black Duck Pool.  There are convenient pull offs for cars on both sides of the road. At sunrise, I often see deer crossing the water.
 
I had a treat one morning at sunrise when a large flock of White Ibis circled overhead with many landing in front of me. They were joined by herons and a few ducks. When photographing the birds against colored sky and water, I had to be careful that their silhouettes did not merge with the silhouettes of other birds or the surrounding grasses.

Several mornings were foggy and allowed me to create images different from many I have taken here before at this location. The two photos below were taken on one of those mornings.  I like the layers revealed by the lifting fog and sense of calm these images invoke. In terms of exposure if using aperture priority, I had to increase my exposure compensation by at least +2.  Remember that the light meter assumes it is pointed at something mid-tone and will darken the exposure to make it so, thereby underexposing the image.

First Stop – Sunrise

For sunrise I typically stop along Beach Road at the first large pool on the right after passing the visitors center– Black Duck Pool.  There are convenient pull offs for cars on both sides of the road. At sunrise, I often see deer crossing the water.

 
I had a treat one morning at sunrise when a large flock of White Ibis circled overhead with many landing in front of me. They were joined by herons and a few ducks. When photographing the birds against colored sky and water, I had to be careful that their silhouettes did not merge with the silhouettes of other birds or the surrounding grasses.

Several mornings were foggy and allowed me to create images different from many I have taken here before at this location. The two photos below were taken on one of those mornings.  I like the layers revealed by the lifting fog and sense of calm these images invoke. 

In terms of exposure if using aperture priority, I had to increase my exposure compensation by at least +2.  Remember that the light meter assumes it is pointed at something mid-tone and will darken the exposure to make it so, thereby underexposing the image.

 

Black Duck Pool
After shooting sunrise, I will check out the scene across the road for horses and herons in the early morning light.  If there is nothing of interest, I typically drive towards the beach checking out the borrow ditches on the side of the road for herons, ducks and other visitor that are in good light and in a suitable non-distractive background.  

Note: In the summer it is difficult to photograph wildlife other than in the early morning and late in the pm since there is a lot of traffic on Beach Road as folks head  to the public beach for the day.

On the morning that I saw the flock of ibis at sunrise, I found a large number of individuals engaging in a feeding frenzy at the junction between the borrow ditch on the left and Swan Cove. They were joined by a few herons. This is the first time that I have witnessed such a high number of ibis together.  When they finished feeding in one area, they moved up the borrow ditch congregating at various points along the way.  My car worked beautifully as a mobile blind.  I could move the car and follow the birds as they traveled upstream. I shot from the car as to not disturb the birds and used a bean bag on the window sill to securely support my lens and camera.

 

Occasionally in the same area I have encountered a fox or raccoon, so I am always checking the edges of the road for cooperative subjects.

 

Swan Cove
One of my favorite spots to photograph is Swan Cove. It typically attracts are large number of birds including shorebirds that often feed in the shallows near the road at low tide.   On this trip I encountered a group of Yellowlegs and Dowitchers feeding close to the shore.   Again I used my car as a mobile blind, shooting from the window with my 600 mm lens mounted on my home-made beanbag. On a day there was little wind and I was able to capture images of the birds with their reflection in the water.  I always look for small ducks and grebes in this pool.  On this trip I was able to photograph several tolerant Pied-Billed Grebes, Buffleheads and Ruddy Ducks close to shore, sleeping, preening and diving for food.

 

Black Duck Pond
Often later in the morning I check out the
 marsh and fields across from Black Duck Pond.  I typically look for horses in the marsh and around small stands of trees. Around 9 a.m. on more than one morning, I got a number of photos as the horses crossed the marsh and fed on the grasses.  Sometimes blackbirds would land on their backs, I am guessing, eating insects.

 


In this same area I found a cooperative female Belted Kingfisher sitting on a post. I spent a delightful hour with her as she flewdown to catch fish, landed on the post again, shook off water, preened. and stretched its wings. I got a number of great images shooting from my car with my 600 mm F4 lens combined with a 1.4 teleconverter



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Also in the same marsh where there were pools of water and a channel, I was able to photograph herons feeding, groups of Buffleheads swimming the channel as well as Double-crested Cormorants swimming, diving or sitting on dead snags drying their wings.  This past year the water level in the marsh was perfect for shooting across marsh at sunset.

Little Toms Cove
I frequently check out this area near the water control devices that allow water to pass under the road to Swan Cove. Often when you have an obstruction in waterway, macroinvertebrates and other organisms accumulate around the opening often attracting fish and birds.  This year I encountered a bird that I had not photographed before, a Surf Scoter, a sea duck typically seen flying over the ocean.
  This past November there was a Horned Grebe hanging out in the same location. When the tide is out, I often see rails or oystercatchers feeding on the exposed mud flats. 

  

Sea Ducks
In the winter some photographers go to Barnegat Light and State Park in New Jersey
,  The photographers brave the cold to photograph sea ducks from the jetty at the inlet — a favorite is the Harlequin Duck.  I have not visited the site in the winter but have seen great results. However, conditions can be dangerous with icy rocks and a rough surf with waves that might swamp you and your equipment. 

Atlantic Shore
I always check out the beach for a colorful sunrise or shorebirds feeding along the water’s edge. The best time to photography is when the tide is low and when more of the beach is exposed. When photographing shorebirds, in the morning at Chincoteague it is difficult to avoid shadows covering much of the bird without moving out into the surf. However with post processing in Lightroom and Camera Raw, you can lighten the shadows with a selection brush.  I always concentrate on birds that are  moving towards me, not retreating.  In the afternoon, it is easier to capture these images since  the bird often is lit by the soft warm light at the end of the day.

                              x

Bayside
On the bayside of Little Toms Cove opposite the beach, I often find an assortment of shorebirds, herons and an occasional fox. On this visit, there were Great Egrets flying back and forth feeding near posts marking private clam beds. I also photographed aa Black-bellied Plover and a Dunlin in winter plumage feeding amongst the oddly colored organism called Sea Pork.  It is a colony of  tunicate organisms which are plankton feeders.  Though an oral siphon, they draw seawater through their bodies and pass it through a sieve-like structure that traps food particles and oxygen, eventually to exit through the atrial siphon.  One sunset when the tide was out, I captured the remarkable colors and patterns as the setting sun lite the mud flats.

      

Wildlife Loop
On fall afternoons, I often checked out the wildlife drive around Snow Goose Pool (only open to cars after 3 pm). This time not long after I entered the drive, I saw a flock of ducks explode in flight from the marsh.  It took me a minute to realize that a bald eagle had swooped over the group. It missed catching a duck and flew back to the pine tree where it often perched near its nest.  Unfortunately,  I was distracted by the ducks, I missed the shot of the eagle.  On other trips I have seen a pair of eagles siting on the edge of the marsh in the same area. Northern Harrier (Marsh Hawks) also hunt in the area.

    

Shoveler Pool
Farther around the Wildlife Loop is Shoveler Pool which typically attracts ducks, geese, and swans. I was not disappointed this year for small groups of Pintail Duck, Green-wing Teal and Black Ducks took off and landed in the pool. Each day there were a number of Tundra Swans resting and feeding in the same area. Some individuals were quite aggressive, chasing geese and other swans. Before attacking, they often became very vocal, extending their necks low to the water and picking up speed. This fall the water level was low with weeds poking through the water’s surface, often leaving me with a somewhat distracting background behind the birds.

In the background of this pool was a stand of dead pines. These are Loblolly Pines which were killed by an infestation of Southern Bark Beetles that attack old or diseased trees.  In several places in the refuge you will see similar stands of dead trunks. Refuge personnel replaces these dead pine trees with hardwoods such as red maple, water oak, and sassafras, creating a more varied habitat for wildlife. During your visit you may see young trees wrapped in plastic for protection.  

If all goes well in May, I will return to Chincoteague NWR to photograph, hopefully to capture new and different images.

                          

My COVID 19 Quarantine Survival Story

My COVID 19 Quarantine Survival Story

    My COVID 19 Quarantine Survival Story

With the emergence of the COVID 19 virus and the “Stay at Home Order”, like many people, I temporarily panicked. How long would the virus be an issue, two weeks, a month? I could deal that.  But a year or more, I had no concept how I would emotionally and financially survive. Almost all my in-person speaking in engagements and photo workshops scheduled for the spring and summer had to be cancelled.  Even my fall programs are in question.  

Cardinal in spring

Carolina Wren photographed in local park attracted by feeder.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

But I could not change conditions and was not financially destitute like many people, so I started to look for ways to turn this situation into a positive opportunity.  I had plenty work to do on the computer—organizing and editing images, updating presentations, prepare advertising, producing a newsletter, etc. But I needed to be outside photographing at least part of the time. With no backyard where I could photograph, I decided to look for photo opportunities in my neighborhood. I checked out a number of trails and parks searching for non-crowded places with urban wildlife. Although some areas had limited possibilities, I did discover two gems.

Red-bellied Woodpecker landing on tree trunk.

Male Red-Bellied Woodpecker spotted when I heard it.

 

Initial Project:

At one park there was an osprey nest where I spent some time and I got the image above. Another park, five minutes from home, offered a number of opportunities to photograph squirrels, groundhogs, ospreys and an assortment of other birds.  I created a feeder station in an open field near a line of shrubs.  I baited the scene with birdseed, peanuts, suet and peanut butter. I added small evergreen branches and blooms from nearby trees for a natural looking environment. Squirrels and a variety of birds such as cardinals, wrens, sparrows, and grackles visited the site.  Unfortunately, my setup disappeared when park maintenance workers unexpectedly cut the grass in the field.   In addition, when the “Stay at Home Order” was issued, the park became a popular place to exercise.  Many visitors came with huge bags of peanuts and bird seed which they liberally spread along the trails, attracting the resident squirrels for entertainment. With food everywhere, nothing came to my feeders.  So, I had to find another location for photography.

 

Osprey with fish often head before seen.

Nuthatch on branch in park.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2nd  Project

Elsewhere in the park, I located a large old tree stump. It was adjacent to a path and as people passed by, they tossed peanuts and seeds on it attracting squirrels and also a variety of birds –chickadees, titmice, wrens, doves, blue jays, nuthatches, and red-bellied woodpeckers.  To the scene, I added perches for the birds and some extra bird seed.  I set up my tripod and camera just off of the path and was able to photograph a number of bird species. But more people kept coming to the park, making photography here more difficult.  

Young Gray Squirrels in tree cavity.

3rd Project

While I was taking my daily walk for exercise, I discovered a tree cavity that was home to a family of young gray squirrels. I placed my tripod just off the path and for several days photograph the activity at the hole until the young squirrels outgrew their living quarters and left. 

Young Gray Squirrel in tree cavity stretching.

Young Gray Squirrels in cavity.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4th  & Continuing Project

During the spring, I had reconnected with old friends.  One living nearby owed several acres of land with an open field, a vegetable and flower garden, and woods.  She is an animal lover and already had bird feeders at two locations in her yard.  Better yet, on occasions, she saw foxes, groundhogs, and racoons from her porch.  She was kind enough to allow me to photograph at her home and set up a blind.   She loved seeing the resulting images.  The experiences photographing at her house during June and July, and August will be covered in my next newsletter.

Pair of Black-capped Chickadees