Thursday, December 30, 2021

2021 Part 1

Here are some of my favorites from 2021. All are from the Columbus Zoo.

A northern cardinal at the trumpeter swan feeder.

A silvered langur with two tails?

Virginia opossum, with a tail that looks like a parsnip.

A box o' sand cats

red-fronted macaw

My pal Burt, a Grand Cayman iguana, looking wistful.

bonobo

Arthur, a southern three-banded armadillo

 

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Cincinnati

I went to the Cincinnati Zoo December 12 to see the hippos. Fiona has been the star of the zoo since she was born and shows up regularly on Instagram. Her dad, Henry, died in 2017, and Tucker arrived this year from another zoo. Fiona, Bibi (Fiona's mom), and Tucker get along very well, and I had to see them before it became too cold for them to be outside.

Fiona rests her chin on Bibi

There were terrible reflections that I still don't know how to defeat. There is a roof over the viewing area, but the sun was so low that it shone into the area from the back. I kept only a couple of shots, and they're not very good.

Tucker and his staff

The fish in the tank eat hippo poop and take care of the hippos' skin. I don't know why, but they were all over Tucker and not the other two.

Chester, an Andean bear, scratches his chest with straw. At least, that's what it looked like he was doing. He also dragged the blanket back and forth in front of him.

An arctic fox in winter garb rests.

A Florida manatee says hello.

A gray squirrel takes a lunch break. I don't know if he made the sandwich himself.

A grey bird grasshopper

A Peruvian fire stick

 

Sunday, December 19, 2021

Art?

I subscribe to Outdoor Photographer, and I was appalled one day when I read that it's common to, say, remove a utility pole from a picture submitted to a competition. The author was fine with this and wished for a category of competition that allowed lots of manipulation.

Three years ago I wrote that I don't cotton to enhancing photos in software and that I want to capture reality. Two years ago I wrote that software can fix mistakes, and I do fix mistakes in exposure or white balance (color). I still resist improving my pictures using software, until...

I took this picture of a bald eagle at the Columbus Zoo November 29th:


It's a decent picture, but I thought the white was too bright and washed-out in spots. I could have used a little negative exposure compensation at the time I took the picture, but I didn't expect a problem, and the picture looked okay on the camera. Sooo, even though I don't consider this to be a mistake, I brought the photo into Nikon's Capture NX-D.

-1 stop (exposure value)

I took out 1.0 exposure value (one "stop"), and thought, "That is an interesting picture." The eagle's head looks sharper, I hadn't noticed the blood--if that's what it is--on its beak, and there's more detail in the rat on the left. Hmm.

-2 stops

Interestinger or worse? Still more detail came out of the rats. Some highlights are lost (bright white places that can't be enhanced) in the eagle's head and the left rat, but it doesn't look bad over all. It reminds me of a portrait of some courtier standing in his dark tunic and leggings, holding a sword and pondering an apple, or a lady wearing a powdered wig and dark brocade dress and holding a golden chalice--a lot of dark with a few spots of light. I like it.

Why not continue?

-3 stops

This is too much. The rat's belly practically glows, and the too-white feathers stand out in the bird's head. Select a photo and then click through them to see the differences.

So where does this leave me and my desire to record exactly what I see? From Outdoor Photographer I take it that photographers routinely run "captures" from their cameras through Adobe Lightroom or other software to tweak this or enhance that. I still don't have patience for that, and I can't make a decision, anyway. I tried to decide which of the four eagles to keep and couldn't, let alone decide which part of a photo to sharpen and which color to enhance.

Language affects my attitude. A "capture" is somehow different from a "photo." A photo is a fixed thing, but a capture is a starting point for adjustment and improvement. Some photographers say they "develop" captures, which seems okay, rather than postprocess them, which is not okay. The end result is an "image," not a photograph.

I suppose I try to document an animal rather than produce a piece of art. If a photo turns out to have some artistic value rather than simply being a good picture of an animal, that's fine, but that's not my goal.

Monday, November 29, 2021

Pheasants

The Toledo Zoo has an outdoor pheasantry, which houses pheasants and other birds, and there are pheasants in the indoor aviary. The pheasantry's enclosures tend to have lots of shadows and bushes that obscure the birds. Which means I have goals.

These birds are male.

A great argus. His tail can be twice as long (during breeding season, I presume).

A Palawan peacock pheasant. I love the iridescent blue.

Palawan peackock pheasant

A golden pheasant. This guy would not lift his head. It's not a good shot, but it's better than the one from the Columbus Zoo: All I got was the underside of a tail.

Himalayan monal. If he left the shadows we could see how spectacular he is.

Swinhoe's pheasant

Cabot's tragopan

Cabot's tragopan

 

Saturday, November 13, 2021

Toledo

It's hockey season, and that means Toledo Zoo visits. These shots are from October 23 and November 6.

I was happy to see Marty in October, but I report with sadness that he was euthanized in November because of kidney disease. He was pretty important when it comes to polar bears in American zoos.

Nieve, an aged Andean or spectacled bear. The missing gardener and I call her Penny because she reminds us of Penny, the gardener's mother's dog.

coconut crab


Patagonian cavy, or mara. It gave me some side-eye as I moved around looking for the best view.

Emma, I think. Or Herbie.

 
red-billed leiothrix



male Siamese fireback

female Siamese fireback

Thursday, October 21, 2021

Robin Nest

Robins built a nest on the downspout next to the garage. I didn't follow events closely, but I took a few pictures June 26 and 27.



I was on a ladder in the driveway about 20 feet from the nest. The parents were wary.



I read that, in the beginning, chicks' poop comes in neat packages; that's what's in the parent's beak. Parents carry away or swallow the packages, both of which I witnessed. The hatchlings' digestive systems are inefficient and the poop contains significant nutrients that are useful to the parents.



Sunday, October 10, 2021

Spider Webs

These pictures are crummy, but I find spider webs interesting.

The first two are from 2008 using a Kodak camera I thought was pretty good at the time. A spider had made a web between a computer and a chair. I tried to put black paper under the web as a background, but that didn't work.


This one is interesting because of what happened. The web was hung between a tree and a tall plant next to the front porch. As I was still messing around, the owner came along and cut the web down.



This web was at the Columbus Zoo, woven between two trees. I saw it only because another zoo visitor was looking at it.