Thursday, July 22, 2010

Ducks Are Like Elephants....Sort Of

About a twelve weeks ago or so, we had several families of ducks in a pond that is "L" shaped around our house.  First there were 13 but in just a matter of days this was down to just one and its mother.  We figured the mother to be a young duck because she didn't stick around for very long.  My guess is that by the time this little one was 4 to 6 weeks old the mother was gone.  All the little thing did was swim around the pond calling for its mother by going peep peep peep.  Hence, we called it Peep.  We worried about it on stormy nights and whether it knew to stay near or in the water for protection from critters on land.  It would follow large ducks around during the day but at night, it was anybodies guess.

I would guess that at about eight weeks of life for this little guy another mother of 13 ducklings showed up.  This mother was definitely older.  She stood vigil over the babies all the time.  However, she too lost a few over time.  She got down to 7 and stabilized.  She would not let Peep join in her group.  Peep had to swim with the larger ducks or pay the price of having some feathers plucked out.

About another 2 or 3 weeks went buy and another mother duck showed up with only three little ones.  There were 2 that were darker and larger and one that was lighter in color and smaller.  You cannot tell the sex of ducks at this age.  This mother was also a good mother in that she stayed with her young, watching their every move and teaching them things. 

Did you know that ducks dive?  They do this in a playful manner as well as a way to wash their feathers.  They do the bottoms up eating thing where they literally go head down, butt up, all while there feet are paddling so that they can eat whatever is just below the surface.  Well, this is something the mother teaches her young.  We saw most of the seven diving one afternoon but two were not so the mother swam next to them and pecked at their backs.  One dove without hesitation but the last one was stubborn.  I guess it didn't want to get water in its ears or up its nose.  The mother was more force full, she won, they were all diving.

Sometime just before the 4th of July we noticed one of the adult females was injured.  It was the mother of the three.  I had started feeding them cracked corn, you shouldn't feed ducks bread, and they got to where they would get quit close to me.  There is something about territorial boundaries in duck-land.  If I was feeding the three, somehow the seven knew it and would come a running.  Their mother would then chase the three off and any other duck that got too close, males included.  Well, all but one male, he must have been dad.  This created a problem with the injured duck because she too would be ran off and she wasn't strong enough to get away quickly.  Her injuries turned out to be really bad.  She had lost the use of her left leg and wing.  Part of the wing had been torn off, the long flying feathers and there was a gash under the wing where something got hold of her.  I would end up protecting and feeding her myself.  It got to the point that I would put food out and when it was gone she would quack at me for more.  She ate out of my had and her little ones would do the same as well as climb into my lap. 

Two weeks ago a duck showed up out beside the house and it looked really bad.  I thought it was the injured duck  and she had taken a turn for the worse.  I took a close look and it was the same leg and wing.  The wound was open (again I thought) and it had maggots on it.  I finally realized it was one of the three and was one of the larger ones.  I watched it for a couple of days, personally feeding it and trying to get water to it.  I saw it moving around in a field, looked just like its mother, hopping to get places.  Then, weekend before last we were working out back near the pond and we noticed it wasn't moving.  I went to check it out and it was very weak.  All of a sudden, it jumped and turned facing the water.  It layed there for about a half an hour and then went in.  I don't know if this was a suicide on the ducks part or that it thought it could get in.  We didn't see it get in but when we noticed it, the poor thing was on its back trying to right itself.  It would loose effort and its head would go under water and then pop back up for air.  During this time, the other ducks stood on the bank of the pond and watched.  They made no sound.  When the duck finally drowned, the mother with now 6 babies started quacking.  She moved all little ducks off the bank and up towards our yard.  Only the mother of the drowned duck, a mother of two new (4 wks old) babies and she stayed in the water.  They just stood there watching.  The wind blew the little thing towards the east end north side of the pond.  I would guess 20 minutes went by before there was any action on the part of the ducks.

Just three or four days earlier one of the 7 babies made a big mistake and didn't get out of the road fast enough.  It was hit and died instantly.  Again, all the ducks came and stood by the road as if to say their good byes.  They couldn't see it happen as the pond is 15 feet below the road.  There is no sound to be heard and yet more than 12 ducks stood in observance.

The drowned duck finally floated to the other end due to a large rain that raise the pond level to where it was beached near the house.  After a couple of days I went down and buried it.  It the time span of being beached and a couple of days after the burial, the mother and the siblings would lay near the deceased duck.

This is why I say, Ducks Are Like Elephants...Sort Of.  They don't move the dead like elephants do but they surely seem to recognize that there was a death.  One of their own and even if it was from another family.

The pictures will be self explanatory I hope.


THE FUNERAL

Monday, June 28, 2010

Just About Lost the Camera

Last night we had a storm come through. Wasn't much here but was interesting to see in the distance. With this I got the bright idea to go out on the deck and to try my hand at night/lightning photography. We weren't getting the visible bolts that everyone makes over, no we were getting the ones in the clouds that light the cloud from within. Almost like heat lightning but with the thunder and brighter.

I had my tripod all set up and was just trying to get the camera set for the shots with the correct shutter speed and f stop. I was just experimenting with everything as well as the focal zoom or how much if the sky I wanted to try to capture.

It started to get a little windy so I thought I would take advantage of a lull in the action and pull the umbrella from the stand and lay it on the deck. Just as I got to the table with the umbrella a huge gust of wind came and all I had time to do was turn and see my camera go from an upright postition eight feet from me to fifteen feet from me on another deck level three steps down. Even with the wind and thunder I could hear the camera hit the lower level hard. Maybe it was the camera and not thunder that I heard, or my voice screaming, NOOOOOOOOO!

I went ahead and got the umbrella save and then picked up the camera. The back light screen was still on and I didn't hear any rattling. I tried to manually zoom it in and out and I realized I had problems. I could see hundreds of dollars going down the drain. I took it in where I could see better. I took the lens off the camera and still had problems moving the lens in and out. The camera at this point seemed okay, only the lens was affected.

While giving it a real good slow look over I noticed the focus ring was gapped more on one side than the other. I could only turn it part way in either direction. Figuring I had nothing to loose at this point so I applied some real pressure to the ring on the side with most of the gap and voila, it snapped back into place. I put it back on the camera and took some inside shots. Seemed okay, thought I would try it tonight at sundown.

When I first got the lens it had a "tough" spot when moving it that I was told would go away and it did. Well it's back. I can live with it since I don't do moving focusing like one would do for a video and I hope it too will go away with usage. It does keep the lens from drifting in or out when the camera is pointing up or down.

Killing two birds with one stone here, the following pictures are the same picture.  First is the original taken with my Canon Rebel XTi.  The lens is a Tamron 18 - 270mm / 3.5-6.3 / 72mm DiII VCD.  The second picture is the original doctored with nothing more than the program that came with the camera "Zoom Browser Module".  For more intricute detailing I us Gimp 2.6.  Works just like Adobe Photoshop without the manuals in your hand.  It is a free download on the net.  If you need help, it's online.
Details: ISO 1/500, f-8.0, 270 mm focal, auto white balance, size = 2.10 MB / 636 KB.


This set of picture is just to show the zoom of the lens.  Kind of an after thought of tonight.  Secong picture is zoomed in on the right hand side of the cloud.

                           

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Some New Additions To The Neighborhood

Everytime I mowed lately I had noticed that I heard a bird or two squawking when I got to a certain place in the yard.  Well, I found it.  First I found the blue shell on the ground and figured something got to the nest first.  After finding the nest I discovered the shell was just thrown out during house keeping.  Can't quite tell but it looks like there are three Robins.  Could always be a fourth hiding because at first I thought there were only two.


Saturday, June 12, 2010

New Visitor To The Pond





Periodically we get a new visitor to the pond near our house.  Near isn't really the word.  It butts up to the property line and we weren't told about it when we built but after the spring thaw and rains, it isn't too bad.  We get to watch a lot of water fowl and other creatures.

Awhile back I had a white bird show up  that looked like a Blue Herron except it was white.  Smaller but I figured it could have been a young bird.  I sent another blogger, Abe Lincoln, who is an expert on birds the question as to what this bird was.  Turned out to be of the family of Herrons know as an Egrett.

Well, now I am at it again Abe.  This one showed up last night and has been around quite a bit.  I have more pictures if needed but I figure you will tell me it is too of the Herron lineage.  It is rather small and looks like it is carrying three colors.  A brown, a cream and a darker color that I am not sure of on its wings.  Notice the head feathers when it catches the fish.  You'll have to open the picture bigger to see what I mean.


Friday, June 11, 2010

Time For Car Shows

Title: Taj Krueze Car Show
Date: Saturday June 12, 2010
Time: 11:00 am - 4:00 pm
Location: Carillon Park

John Dixon owns a Porsche Museum in Dayton, OH. It is available as a banquet hall so that you can end  the presence of these fine automobiles. I have other pictures posted in this blog. 

Every year there are a series of events that Mr. Dixon holds that lead up to this weekends car show. There is a wine tasting evening and a dinner / dance. There is a hot go-kart race on a boulevard where the streets are closed to traffic. Teams are formed with one or two drivers and pit crews. Prior to the car show there is a 100 mile drive that ends at the car show as it starts. All the proceeds go to the Ronald McDonald House at the local Children's Hospital.

I am including some shots of some of the past shows where I took pictures and some race shots as well as some of my favorite drivers and or hero's of the sport.




 
 
 
 
 
 
 






































Here you will find my Porsche wanna-be, my garage done with airbrushing. This is something I have never done before. Still learning. Last is my best friends yellow Vette with a split window '63 overlay.






Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Blue Herron Feeds and Takes Flight

We seem to be getting a lot of action from the Blue Herron's of late.  Generally we get one at a time but recently we have had as many as three.  This one is one of the larger birds that visit the pond. 

The first two shots are at a distance of about 60 feet.  The later shots are when it decided to take flight to get to the otherside so it ended up around 150 feet away. 

I played the fool and crawled down to a wall that is on the ponds edge next to my house.  I was able to get to within 20 feet or so but that spooked him, hence the reason for flight.  I'm sure that any neighbors that may have seen me think I am nuts.  Nope, just retired with time on my hands.


Wednesday, May 26, 2010

A Humble Tribute To Abe Lincoln

I met a guy totally by accident.  Well, we have actually never met face to face but we have sent messages through our blogs and in e-mail. 

I'm a car guy, even though my blog doesn't seem to meet its title, I have a passion for things that have engines and wheels.  They don't have to go fast but if the engine is in the rear and it's made in Germany then you will find me breaking my neck to see it.  I can even tell you what it is by the sound.  Flat six or thunderous Detroit GM muscle.

While I was jumping all over the place in blog world, I found myself on a site in Argentina. I started looking at the Feeds-It to see where the followers were from and I found a name that intrigued me. That name was Abe Lincoln. He was from the United States. I thought it was a sudo name but I found that he was from a little town in Ohio that I had lived three miles north of him for over twenty years. I spent quite a bit of time in the local hardware store, library, some of the restuarants and their local auto dealership before moving thirty miles or so south to get closer to work after the daughter went off to college.

Well, Abe has been under the weather and I didn't know it. I haven't been able to get on my computer for several weeks because of my schedule. Now that's a joke, I'm retired.  Actually, I find myself a little more busy than when I worked because I find I didn't do anything during the day during the week because of work. My wife took care of the daily tasks that needed done of which I didn't have to be the one to do them. Anyways, I found through my following Abe link that he has had some trouble so I figured today I would post some wildlife pictures I took recently.

About a year ago I went looking for a lens adapter that would give me some greater range with my lenses.  I did a great thing, I spent more money than I wanted to.  I'm on a strick budget since I am on a fixed income and have had help in this matter with my former employer filing for bankruptcy thus loosing medical and pension etc, etc. Things are okay now, adjustment always sets in and rules, if you let it.

Again, I degressed.  I bought a Tamron lens that is 18-270mm in focal ability and 72mm across.  It's a VC lens meaning it has vibration compensation, kind of like steady cam in camcorders.  You don't always want this on, like when you are doing the zoom thing.  I have it on a Canon Rebel EOS XTi that is about fourteen years old and shows no signs of wear.  What this lens does is, I was able to put my other two lenses to rest. I only need this lens for everything I do. It is great for car shows.  I can get right up to a fender or wheel and take a shot of the whole thing or just a corner. Great depth of field the whole time. Only problem, I am still learning how to take great shots, the camera and lense and all their features and power.

So, without future interruption from me, here are some pics to look at and be sure to check out the above link to Abe's site.



Feeding time for the Robin.



















Only one left of the original thirteen ducklings.













This is somewhat transparent and only about 1/4 " in body length and 5/8" with legs stretched out.

Great White Herron.  Abe helped me identify this bird.                                                                                

Baby rabbit this spring found up around one of the neighbors yards with 4 more.                                          

         
Some morning mist on a new cornfield.