waldo (
waldo) wrote in
shutterspeed2010-08-12 06:51 pm
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Two bugs and a little birdie
Yay! Animals. This is mostly what I do. Here's a few shots from the last group I was putting on my photography blog...
I have been shooting a TON of dragonflies this summer. I think since last March I've gotten yellow, red, blue, green, black and brown ones. I'm particularly keen on this one because you can see the shadow of his wing-veins on the lilypad. (You may have to blow it up to see the details.)

From the "photography makes me stupid" files. I made an animal alphabet book for my baby nephew. I *only* used photos I took. (I shlepped the camera to the pet store and camped out in the fish aisle to get the X-Ray tetra... until they kicked me out.) But anyway - I needed a Y. So I chased Yellow-Jackets around a pond for forty minutes trying to get a good shot. This was the one I ultimately used.

The bane-of-my-existence bird. I kept finding these things ALL over Chicago. And they're highly photogenic. Seriously, you can walk right up to them. But I Googled until I couldn't Google any more trying to figure out what it is. FINALLY, looking for something completely different a while back, I found out what this is by accident. Anyone know? I put the answer in my journal. :) Seriously nature, WTF?

I have been shooting a TON of dragonflies this summer. I think since last March I've gotten yellow, red, blue, green, black and brown ones. I'm particularly keen on this one because you can see the shadow of his wing-veins on the lilypad. (You may have to blow it up to see the details.)
From the "photography makes me stupid" files. I made an animal alphabet book for my baby nephew. I *only* used photos I took. (I shlepped the camera to the pet store and camped out in the fish aisle to get the X-Ray tetra... until they kicked me out.) But anyway - I needed a Y. So I chased Yellow-Jackets around a pond for forty minutes trying to get a good shot. This was the one I ultimately used.
The bane-of-my-existence bird. I kept finding these things ALL over Chicago. And they're highly photogenic. Seriously, you can walk right up to them. But I Googled until I couldn't Google any more trying to figure out what it is. FINALLY, looking for something completely different a while back, I found out what this is by accident. Anyone know? I put the answer in my journal. :) Seriously nature, WTF?
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There are others, but I haven't gotten good enough shots of them yet to do a good match to a photo.
Those are the Illinois ones I know. I haven't checked on my Florida ones yet. (So behind in sorting photos)
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http://www.flickr.com/photos/holyoutlaw/sets/72157624545978876/
I'm west of the mountains (Seattle) so we have different species.
I bet Florida was dragonfly heaven.
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You can just hit the 'dragonfly' tag to find the relevant posts. :)
Your 'blue dasher' and my 'eastern pondhawk' do look an awful lot alike. I wonder if they have different common names in different areas.... [does a quick Google]
Ah! Yours has blue 'shoulders' mine has more green. Well, in the males... :) The female is all green, obviously.
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Looks like a Blue Dasher in your icon? Can't tell from the angle on the lilypad.
I'm going to guess female blackbird...*goes to check*...ha! yeah, people don't pay so much attention to the females sometimes. I didn't really make the connection until this summer. Red-winged?
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And yes, the bird is a female Red Winged Blackbird. I seriously wonder what's going on on that Y-chromosome to make the males look so RADICALLY different than the females. :)
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Blue Dasher: http://bugguide.net/node/view/598/bgimage
Eastern Pondhawk: http://bugguide.net/node/view/577
IDK, lots of birds are even more sexually dimorphic--there's a parrot species that was originally identified as two species until they realized the green ones always mated with the red ones or something like that. And of course dragonflies are SUPER dimorphic.
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