Let’s start with, did I get out myself and photograph or video the occultation of Venus by the moon yesterday that I was alerting you of?
No. I mean, I did get out, and the day had been all nice and clear, but by the time of the occultation, the sky had produced thick yet wildly variable clouds that couldn’t make up their minds whether they wanted to be assholes or not. They apparently decided on, “Sure, why not?”

The moon and Venus are back there somewhere – this is the clearest view that I got in the appropriate direction, and lasted only a couple minutes. The clouds were boiling away up there, but hiding much more than they were revealing, and I never even got a glimpse of the moon.
The same could be said for 87 minutes later, when Venus was due to be re-emerging into view. The sky was slightly less obscured then, but I still never got a peek at the moon. Just to rub it in, that evening as we walked back up from distributing corn, both were showing super-distinctly in the evening sky, with some earthshine as well, but of course Venus was by then about four moon lengths (or widths, or heights – not sure really) away.
While out there for both attempts though, I did snag a few frames of the sunbeams playing around the edges of nearby clouds, showing just how high the humidity was.

Seeing this, I begin to suspect why I never located the moon, even when the breaking clouds seemed like they should have revealed it. The crescent would have been fairly dim against the sky, but the intervening haze would also have been catching the sun, possibly making the difference in contrast so low that I may only have seen it if I was looking in exactly the right spot and concentrating. While Stellarium gave me precise alt/azimuth positions, I have no way of aligning the camera to those and have to estimate and then search.
Still, while out there, I captured a couple of different subjects, like the Air Tractor that’s been buzzing us for the past couple of weeks, which I’ve never timed right until now.

According to my Flight Tracker app, this is registered to NC Geological Survey, which the “GS” in the registration number seems to confirm even when the online record shows differently. Looking a lot like a kit plane, this Air Tractor is purpose-built towards crop dusting, with a single-seat cockpit, high-lift wings, and a powerful turboprop engine (a jet turbine rather than a piston engine, though still driving a propeller.) This gives it a distinctive sound, easy to differentiate from the typical aviation four-bangers that pass close by, not to mention a much better turn of speed, necessary for the additional weight and maneuverability that the job calls for. Near as I can determine, this one’s been doing touch-and-goes (practice approaches and climb-outs) at the local airport, possibly for training. If you like my pic, you can get a model of this very aircraft.
Also up there was something I’d suspected, given last year’s activity, but hadn’t yet seen until yesterday.

A Mississippi kite (Ictinia mississippiensis) was wheeling overhead, and they definitely seem to like later afternoon to do this, meaning they’re virtually always silhouetted against the sky and completely shadowed underneath, like here. I chose this one for the little wisps of clouds breaking up the background, and the faint color of the sun shining through its feathers. Plus the fact that autofocus had locked on pretty well, something that’s not as dependable as it should be – this may be somewhat my fault too, since my ability to keep the bird centered over the autofocus region is sadly lacking. Still, I got a better frame on top of that.

Yay! Sidelighting! This happens all-too-briefly, only when the bird banks away from the sun while also being opposite the sun from my position, but it gives a much better indication of their pale grey color with dark eye band and flight feathers. No indication that this one had a brood this year, but I haven’t ruled it out yet either.
I’ve been slightly more active with photos than I have been, so we’ll keep going here. The previous evening, I was out checking on things by the headlamp and came across a telltale sign, going back in to get the camera – at the time, it was raining ever-so-gently, not enough to stop me, but that’s what we call ‘foreshadowing.’ Any macro photographer knows that, with the purchase of a macro lens, you also gain the ability to summon light to strong breezes just when you’re trying to focus upon a subject on a branch or plant that will be swayed by said breezes. This might also be said for braving a light rain with the equipment, since on more than one occasion I’ve summoned downpours with the very thought, and this was one of those occasions. I was actually turning the flash unit on when the rain started in earnest, and it soon turned into a fierce downpour as soon as I abandoned this quest and returned to the house. I couldn’t tackle the subject until nearly an hour later, after I was sure all this had passed, but this also had the effect of changing my subject slightly.
This is roughly what I’d seen initially, though:

Butterflies on a butterfly bush (Buddleja davidii) are not uncommon, hard as that may be to believe, but this one was holding a little too motionless, especially since it kept this pose through the downpour. If you’re looking close, you’ll see why, but there wasn’t an angle I could achieve that showed things any better.

See it? Yeah, there’s just a little white blob, above and to the right of the butterfly, that had been a little more visible before the rain hammered down. We’ll go in closer.

I’ve been watching this butterfly bush for signs exactly like this, because the crab spiders adore using them as hunting grounds, and that’s what you’re seeing here: the abdomen of a crab spider (likely Mecaphesa, but further ID not happening, as surprising as that might be.) However, this is also probably evidence of my tampering with the natural order, since one night about a week before this, I discovered a white crab spider dangling from a web strand from my arm, courtesy of my nighttime perambulations, and carried it over to this specific bush, where I’d seen it hunting at least twice since then. So call this, “staged,” call this a “safari park photo,” call this a “habituated species,” if you like. Whatever makes you happy – it’s important that you be happy…

One last clue – again, couldn’t get a view of much else – with a leg that’s even paler than mine. Which is weird, because I’ve been in shorts for two months now and won’t be back out of them until November, with a pretty good amount of outdoor activity, and yet, my legs still look Irish. Ah well.
I’ll be nice, and close with a not-bug – in fact, something cute. I know – you didn’t think I could.

We never could determine why, but for the first 18 months or so of our living here, we’d never see an eastern cottontail (Sylvilagus floridanus) in the yard. Right next door in the neighbor’s yards, from time to time, and elsewhere in the neighborhood, but they seemed to avoid our yard. This year, we’ve finally started seeing them as visitors, so I snagged a shot the other day while I could. Nothing else to say about it, just, “Here is a rabbit,” but you can’t complain about lizards and toads this time.





















































I toyed with Schlieren imaging over twenty years ago, and actually achieved a trivial result with it using the heat distortion from a candle flame, seen at right, but have never tackled it since. 











