October 2008

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10 days ago we went to try and find a Kestrel I had heard was in a park on the waterfront in East Providence.  I subscribe to the Yahoo RI bird list and try to get out following some of the sightings when we have the time.  When we got to the park, which is a boat ramp and a green haven in the middle of an industrial area we saw the Kestrel on a light pole where it had been seen the day before, alas just as we got our camera’s out it took off not to be seen again.  We stayed around for a while and I got some images of one of the many blue jay’s raucously calling to each other:

Blue Jay with turning leaves

Blue Jay with turning leaves

As we were leaving we saw a Red Tail alight on the mast of a sailboat and then soar gracefully down behind a retaining wall.  Less than a minute later it popped up onto the wall and posed for us with a mouse between it’s talons:

Red Tail with Mouse

Red Tail with Mouse

Two days before was another of those gorgeous indian summer days (I’m not sure if that’s politically incorrect now to call it that)  Cool cool morning and then warming into the mid 60′s.  The morning garnered me these two images:

Olney Pond early foliage

Olney Pond early foliage

This one is a bit contrasty and the light a bit harsh:

Olney Pond Reflections

Olney Pond Reflections

This was the day after I saw the pair of Red Tails out by the reservoir and I was out shooting most of the day until all of the sudden my neck spasmed and I started to develop a migraine.  So after this shot I tosed in the towel, got a cappuccino and went home to nap.

Pond off of Angell Road

Pond off of Angell Road

These last 3 all had a polarizer used and it shows, unfortunately.  I didn’t pay much attention to the sky, I was using it to maximize my reflection in the water and because of that the first image is a bit harsh and the last image shows the gradation in the sky where the polarizer was doing it’s work to where it wasn’t much active at all.  One of my next tutorials to find is a way to fix that (masking!) without it looking artificial.

All of these were adjusted in Lightroom2 and finished off in Photoshop CS4.  CS4 is pretty impressive, the first image of the blue jay was cropped using the jaw droping new  content aware scaling.  The new adjstment panels are a huge improvement and I really like that images are opened up as tabs so you can just click on the tab you want to work with instead of minimizing the other images.  You can pull an image off the tabs so they float free as well which is good for signatures and adding layers.

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My favorite birds hands down are Accipitrids better known as Raptors-Hawks, Eagles, and Kites.  There’s something about these magnificient birds of prey that get me to stop and keep me mesmerized as I watch them soar and hunt.  So when ever I go out shooting I always hope for a sighting and gnash my teeth when they fly just above my head or past my car when I don’t have a camera at hand.  Not to say I don’t like the gentler ones, they’re beautiful and I enjoy photographing them, it’s just the Raptors really get me excited to shoot.

I was lucky enough to get a day off two weeks ago that was just perfect.  Went out shooting before dawn and got some nice foliage shots (that still need to be keyworded and picked over) and when I got to Diamond Hill Reservoir in the early afternoon I was treated to a Red Tail Hawk circling above the pond on the east side of the reservoir and calling out:

Red Tail Hawk calling

Red Tail Hawk calling

It was joined  soon after by another:

A Pair of Red Tail Hawks

A Pair of Red Tail Hawks

The hawk on the left is an eastern adult  and the one on the left is a rufous-morph adult both are red tail hawks.

Another view of the pair:

Red Tail Hawks

Red Tail Hawks

And one last one of the Eastern morph adult:

Red Tail Hawk-Eastern Adult

Red Tail Hawk-Eastern Adult

All in all an excellent hawk day for me.

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Fall Foliage

It’s just past that mystical time of the year where the days start getting crisper, the crickets start chirping faster and the leaves begin to turn golden yellow, brilliant red and blazing orange.  This was one of the best fall foliage years in over 20 years according to what my friends in Vermont and New Hampshire have said, the combination of just the right amount of rain early in the fall and then dry days that weren’t too warm brought out incredible color.  We didn’t make it to either NH or VT this year, our work schedules didn’t allow for a three day weekend for Columbus day, the traditional peak of viewing in northern and middle NH and VT but I did get to do some down here in RI.  I tried to get up a bit early every nice morning and go to local spots before work.  Barney’s pond was a favorite and one morning two weeks ago the color wasn’t quite peak but the conditions were really wonderful with a light mist coming of the pond (and the two swans on the right in great position) and the sun just rising lighting up the clouds.  Very little was done to the image.  I actually brought down the pink saturation in the sky and increased the clarity and vibrance by about 15 in Lightroom2 (yes, I have learned to love it-most of the time)and that was about it.

Sunrise on Barney's Pond

Sunrise on Barney's Pond

I managed to get out a few times locally but have been lazy in getting the images finished after doing a quick import and pick in LR2.  It’s getting a bit quieter as it gets colder so hopefully I’ll have a few more posts in the next week.

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