Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Friday, October 16, 2015

Mallard Nest Tubes


Late March, made a few Mallard nest tubes. Was able to set up one nest tube. Harder than I thought it would be. Had to hold off a day or so, before putting up 2 remaining tubes. Watch my Nest Tube Video at the link on the bottom of the page.


Click-on photo to see enlargements.



Buffelhead Duck speeds by as I cross the marsh.



I had this feeling of being watched.




Mother Goose giving the EYE.



Mallard Duck Nest Tube.



The Muskrat, the keepers of the marsh.





Ring-necked Ducks.




Migration stop-over.




Moving to another hole in the marsh.


Click the link below to view my YouTube video:




Thanks for the view.



Saturday, January 26, 2013

Margined Blister Beetle



I was first introduced to the Blister Beetle in the mid 70's. In a way that I would not wish upon my worst enemy or best friend( in creationist science your best friend is your worst enemy, talk about weird science, lol). Back to the point. I was strolling down the street, was a beautiful summer's eve, when I felt something crawling on the back of my neck. I reached back, gave it a whack and picked it off my neck. First glance I was relieved that it was not a hornet, yellow jacket or bee. I thought only a beetle,  good.  As I continued my stroll and examination of this unknown beetle, I observed a reddish fluid on the beetle and my fingers.  Suddenly, my neck and fingers began to burn, as if a hot comb was pressing against my skin. The back of my neck and fingers blistered something awful but the pain became scientific bliss when I realized that I had my first Blister Beetle.



The beetle in the photo is the Margined Blister Beetle (Epicauta pestifera). Common in the eastern USA. These beetles are vegetarians as adults. The eggs are laid in the soil, upon hatching the instar (nymphs) seek out grasshopper eggs for food.  During a drought, when grasshopper eggs are few, they substitute ground nesting bee larva for their food. Some consider them parasitic but they are actually insect predators(insectivores). The blister agent is secreted by the males and given to the females during mating.  She puts the fluid on the eggs.  This makes the eggs poisonous and repels any creature that finds the eggs. The toxic chemical in the fluid not only burns but it also kills horses, grazing animals and humans when the beetles are eaten. Old timers out there, remember the aphrodisiac "Spanish Fly", well, the ground up beetle was it. Now banned around the world because it is a deadly poison. If you ever wondered what a  Spanish Fly looked like, here it is.          

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Fall Photo Round-Up


Another year has passed me by, only got out a couple times to enjoy the call of the wild. No luck at all with my duck hunting and managed only a few photos from my limited outdoor adventures.  So I'll share what I have.

During this season of duck hunting, I saw more Pileated Woodpeckers than ducks. I've been hunting flooded timber for more than ten years and seeing this species of woodpecker but this is the first year that I have been able to get a photo of one. 
Sometimes the treasure you seek is not the treasure you find.

Pileated Woodpecker

Pileated Woodpecker 2



Pileated Woodpecker 3

Pileated Woodpecker 4

These Mallard dekes are two of several that I carved almost 15 years ago, made from light brown cork and basswood heads they have with-stood years of abuse.

Hand-Carved Cork Working Decoys

This morning the clouds moved in and made the sun look like the full moon.

Dark-Sun

I have a weakness for the morning sun 's reflection in still water.

Double-Sun

Each and every plants fight an on going battle for their place in the sun.

Allusion of Chaos

Magenta sky at the break of day.

Sun-Rise over the Decoys

The heavens bleed after a good day of duck hunting.

The Sky Turned a Blood-Red

 The moon appeared to rise so far to the north and early on this afternoon that I actually thought there was a problem with the Universe, LOL.
Bayou Moon







Thursday, October 27, 2011

Pileated Woodpecker

I saw an article and film earlier today.  The film was of the Imperial Woodpecker. The article also mentioned the Cornell Uni. search to find the Ivory-billed Woodpecker in the impenetrable swamps of Arkansas. These were extremely large birds and they were dependent on the old growth forest. Loss of  habitat caused both bird's extinction. 

Pileated Woodpecker hunts for insects
Well, during a duck hunt in an impenetrable swamp in Indiana, the silence of the flooded timber was shattered by the laughing call of a pair of very large woodpeckers.  Wish I could say  I saw an Imperial or Ivory-billed but I can't , they're extinct. The bird I did see is now the largest of the woodpeckers in North America.  One of the bigger birds to be seen, it was a Pileated Woodpecker.


Big bird makes a big hole
About the size of a Mallard. Body and wing feathers are black and white,  its head is topped with a crest of red feathers. They are an impressive bird. A three inch bill is used to chip away wood in their hunt for insects.  The holes made in the trees are large, in a matter of a minute or two, this bird's hole was a six inch square and four inches deep. 


Many species of ducks nest in woodpecker holes
Many animals benefit from the work of the woodpeckers, other birds find grubs in trees that have been chipped open by the Pileated Woodpecker and many other animals expand the woodpeckers holes and use them for nesting hollows.



Black wing fringe, Pileated Woodpecker(Dryocopus pileatus)
Yea, this picture is grossly over-exposed but I like it. It's a good example of the identifying feather pattern of the Pileated Woodpecker. The black fringe on the flight feathers is characteristic of the Pileated.  The Imperial and Ivory-billed  wings are white fringed.  









Wednesday, October 26, 2011

October Buckeye




On a spring-like October afternoon, a Buckeye butterfly takes a last sip of Zinnia nectar, before hibernating for the winter. 

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

This was a Hot Summer


Thunder Bumper
Storm clouds to the south, low sun in the west. Somebodies getting rained on.



My future is behind me.
Self portrait, the mirror image from the rear window of my Explore.





Illinois Bundleweed
A native of the Midwestern tall grass prairie. A member of the Mimosa family of plants, commonly called the sensitivity plant.




Canada Geese
Geese loafing on a river mud flat. On the right is a tree felled (gnawed down) by a beaver.




Dog Bane Bush
A native tall grass prairie plant. Bane can mean "stay away", this plant is poisonous to dogs. It is also called Indian Hemp. Dog Bane fibers were used by Native Americans for rope, bowstrings and clothing.  



Unknown Plant
Haven't been able to ID this plant. If you know, leave a comment.




Portrait of a Soft-shell Turtle
I met this turtle on the trail. A big turtle, her shell was 2 feet long.  They have a soft leather like shell.



She was laying her eggs in the gravel. They are also called Pancake Turtle because of their low profile shell.



Over-Dressed for Heat-Stress
The start of another 2 mile hike in the blazin' summer sun.



Sawfly
Don't see many of these, a primitive wasp that looks menacing but are fairly shy.





Cooper Hawk
A young hawk use the yard as his training grounds.





























Hottie aka Luckie dog



Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Almost There!













Not far to go now, just a little ways down this ditch and we'll be able to cross-over.
Then a short wade to the blind where we'll set up to photograph the waterfowl that are using Lasalle Fish and Wildlife area as a rest area during their spring journey north.

Ranger looks as tho that pair of Canada geese and their clutch (the right side of pic), are fair game. Don't worry, he never saw them and besides I've got a rope leash on him, you see the rule on FWS properties is that dogs can run free only during the fall hunting seasons, all other times of the year, dogs must be on a leash. This is to protect the nesting creatures and their young. Its just the right thing to do so when you walk your dog in a natural area, protect the wildlife by keeping your pet on its leash.

Settle in to Blind 29.
















Blind 29 is located on an Island on the south-side of a cornfield. Don't look much like a cornfield from this picture , eh. At this time the Kankakee River is flowing near flood stage, unusually high water for all most a year. As soon as the river drops and the ground is dry enough, my friends who manage this FWS area, will be hard at work planting corn. The corn is grown to provide the Migratory Waterfowl that pass thru this part of Indiana, during the fall and winter with food and shelter from the elements. The sales of hunting license pay for this act of stewardship. Therefore, the FWS allows limited and controlled waterfowl hunts. In this particular unit, hunting is permitted only from state provided Blinds. Hunters are choosen to hunt by lottery at 4:30 in the morning.


















I almost never get to hunt the corn blinds, so I'm happy just to sit here in the spring and photograph the waterfowl and birds in their spring plumage. Keeping me company is a flock of Tree Swallows(Tachycineta bicolor). Reaping the rewards of the wetlands, mid-April and the bayou is humming with mosquitoes. The Tree Swallows nest in tree cavities and can be seen catching insects in mid-flight. They migrate to Central America for the winter. There are many other birds and animals that call the Bayou home and therefore benefit from the funds provided by the selling of hunting licenses to the folks who answer to the call of the wild.

Blue-winged Teal !













Here you can see whats left of the corn from a couple years ago ( a year of high water). Zooming above the corn, if you look closely (remember you can click on all the photos to enlarge them) is a group of Blue-winged Teal (Anas discors). A small duck, about 15" long. Flocks in flight resemble the flight of pigeons, rapid wing beats , ducking and dodging close to the water. A puddle duck, that likes shallow marshes and weedy mud flats. Their primary diet is made up of vegetation and seeds, but like all ducks they will eat bugs and aquatic animals if available.


Teal are Coming!

















Here are four Blue-winged teal. Two pair of bonded birds. Adult teal bond during the winter months and return to the northern breeding waters as bonded pairs. The females make a ground nest in the tall grasses along the shoreline of prairie pothole lakes in the north of the United States and across most of Canada. They are very prolific, sometime raising two clutches of young in a season. Quite a feat, considering they are the first to migrate south in the fall and the last to return to the breeding grounds in the spring. The USFWS says that Blue-winded Teal are the most abundant of the waterfowl and the most harvested.


Male(left) and Female Blue-winged Teal!














Photography of flying ducks is so frustrating and oh so rewarding, but we'll talk about the technical aspects of flight photography at a later date. Don't let me forget, Okay? Both sexes are about the same size, the male (left) has blue-gray head feathers and a white crescent that runs between the bill and eye, from the top of the teals head to its cheek behind the eye.















The breast feathers are a chestnut brown with dark brown specks on each feather. The tail is black. The female has a light brown head with a white patch behind the eye, her body is light brown, both sexes have an iridescent-green speculum and yellow legs and feet.



Why are they called Blue-winged Teal?



















As this pair is flying away from me (like most ducks do when I hunting them), the teal- blue shoulder patches can be seen. Both males and females(right) have them. Lots of time, these guy are moving so fast that a flash of blue is all I'll see and then they are history , as in did I just see .... naw, must have been my imagination.



Feathered Rockets!

















Teal are not the fastest flying duck but their small size makes them hard to see and for me impossible to shoot. I'm a much better shot with the camera. During the fall migration, the males are in eclipse phase. At that time the males plumage resembles that of the females, even tho the cheek crescent is there it is not as distinct. Look at the picture to the left and see if you can determine which birds are male and which are female.

Well, its getting late, I hope you enjoyed our short walk with nature, and I hope to see you soon....