One of them videos

I finally got around to completing one of the two videos that I had on the docket, but we have to lead into it a little.

The backstory: With the gout of warm weather a short while back, the various amphibians around the yard (among many other critters) leapt into action and were out making a dogawful racket some nights – as in, it was actually painful to listen to from short distances. But there were several varieties of sounds, and I was unable to place all of them, or really most of them. I have found various sources for frog calls, but cannot pin down close matches, possibly because of the differences in recording equipment, possibly because there may be regional variations in calls, and possibly because species do not always engage in the ‘typical’ calls that are recorded. So we’ll start with what was obtained with the audio recorder and the parabolic mic, but I will strongly suggest you keep one hand on the volume control – the peaks are sharp.

Amphibious calls early spring 2026

I failed to remark on it within, but it seems damn near every bit of audio I snag at night has a distant train – I never realized how often they can be heard, always several kilometers off, but it’s a lot. I guess I just tune them out when I’m out there.

Those experiences prompted m to try again with video, especially one particular night that was very warm and the frogs were remarkably easy to spot, which is not often the case; most times, I can be right on top of them, knowing they’re in a particular direction within two meters, and never see a damn thing. So these clips weren’t too shabby (well, except for the instability,) and included several bonuses.

[A note about that wobbliness: The monopod, used most often for the nutria and beaver videos, is far too long to be useful for subjects less than half a meter off of the ground, so I eschewed it in favor of more flexibility. These clips made me realize that this isn’t feasible either, and I’ll have to use a mini-tripod or some kind of short brace, and I’ll show what I ended up using later on when I find something that works decently.]

By the way, my primary source of info is this Herps of NC page, which has recordings for almost all species that can be found, though if you’re inclined to check it out yourself, know that I’m located closer to the coast about in the middle, where the various large rivers give way to the sound. I’ve been misled by the pictured ranges though, so I don’t treat this as gospel, but we can effectively rule out those species that appear only in the mountains in the western reaches of the state.

Now, last year at about this time I was doing the same thing, and made a few tentative identifications of southern leopard frogs, Atlantic coast leopard frogs, and possibly either wood or gopher frogs. The problem is, in the intervening year I’ve only found one of those species for sure, the southern leopard frog, and so I can’t be certain that any of the others are even in the area; I’ve looked carefully, believe me, because with the tantalizing hint from the calls, I’d be happy to add any of them to my photo stock, but there have been no signs whatsoever.

After these, the nights went absolutely frigid and almost all such activity ceased, but it’s warming up again and so I’ll possibly have some further chances to pin down more species. We’ll see…

It’s Thursday – you know what that means

It means… actually, it doesn’t mean a damn thing, because I haven’t done a weekly topic on Thursdays since, oh, 2021, but I like the idea of new people coming here and thinking they’re missing out. Well, sure, of course they are, if they’re new, but even more so than they really are. All this presumes that new people are actually coming here, and this whole paragraph isn’t solely for the benefit of one person or fewer…

That said, while lamenting that I have a backlog, I’m also doing a shitty job of getting to them, and this week has been no exception. I have two videos to edit together, but before that, I decided to catalog the clips so it’s easier to find them, and that takes longer than expected, even longer when you obtain more clips before you’re done. And get into editing another video, one that won’t appear here. And refit the hotend of the 3D printer, so you can finish the repair of the clock that you decided to tackle. And run around several different places picking up stuff for even more projects.

So with all that, a faint theme as I get something up here, and that theme is, ‘Flowering.’

potted Japanese maple tree in greenhouse leafing out in beginning of February
Way back on February 3rd, I got this pic of the potted Japanese maple in the greenhouse getting its early start on leafing out, showing the red-edged leaves that indicate they’re brand new. These were quite small, and I regret now not getting something for scale. Because in the interim, the tree continued apace and has since been moved out of the greenhouse and is developing its thick full canopy already.

potted Japanese maple flourishing outside the greenhouse
Last year, we believe we left it in the greenhouse a little too long, and it got heat-shocked and never quite looked healthy all summer long, so we moved it out on the first of this month and it’s been kicking it nicely, despite the fact that we’re having another cold snap and the nights are dropping to near-freezing. All of the Japanese maples that we transplanted into the yard last fall are leafing out enthusiastically, though not anywhere near as far as this one, and even the ginkgo that faltered in the front yard and got transplanted to the shadier back is taking hold this spring. So it’s all looking good so far.

Especially happy has been the almond tree, which flowered and began leafing out almost simultaneously.

new almond blossoms dripping with overnight fog
On the morning after a heavy overnight rain, I got out after the sun had risen a little higher and snagged some of the almond flowers, because it doesn’t appear I can pass up wet blossoms, and someone can go have a field day with that sentence. In years past, I’ve remarked about seeing the first flowers on this tree, three of them(!), and this year it was literally too many to count. It’s happy here.

Then, when sorting, I played around with one of the other frames with a tight crop.

tight closeup of wet almond blossom
And unable to leave that one alone, I then shifted to monochrome.

wet almond blossom in monochrome, Blue channel only
One of my upcoming Tip Jar posts (see, there are things you’re missing,) will go into this in detail, but this was another example of channel-clipping, solely the Blue channel this time, which caused the yellow pollen to go dark, and we all know why.

Those same rain conditions produced an abstract on one of the not-leafing-out-yet-then Japanese maples, the big one:

hint of background landscape lensed through raindrop on Japanese maple bud
I intentionally tried to get the focus on the image seen through the raindrop, though no green was showing on the landscape at that time so it’s a bit stark. Let’s see, this was taken ten days ago, and in the interim (probably with some thanks to this very rain,) this tree started leafing out as well – the hint of it is right there in the pic.

Later that evening, it was unseasonably warm overnight and the anoles were taking note.

Carolina anole Anolis carolinensis seen head-on when sleeping upright on budding branch of Japanese maple tree
This is another Japanese maple (the thing with the red things,) serving as the vertical bed of an apparently cranky Carolina anole (Anolis carolinensis,) though really, the anole was only vaguely aware that I was there. The anoles had wasted absolutely no time in doing their warm-night-perch-on-plants thing, and The Girlfriend and I counted over twenty one of these nights before giving up. Like I said, it went cold again and they stopped this for the time being, but we were surprised at how quickly they took advantage of it.

Back indoors now, I noticed that the flowers on the lavender plant that The Girlfriend had obtained looked a little funky, and this was because they were producing nectar, I believe. So I had to get pics of that, too.

lavender Lavandula flower spike showing hint of nectar
Lavender is a popular cultivar, and as such it has a million varieties and subspecies, so the best I can say is Lavandula – which is a great phrase to keep handy when you have no response to something your weird friend says. These spikes are somewhere around 30-40mm in length to give you an idea, and you can see the faint hint of what I saw here, but we can go in closer of course.

closeup of lavender Lavandula flowers showing nectar drops
I’m taking this to be nectar, anyway, and the golden hue might simply be because they’re emanating from yellow flowers behind them – I admit to not gathering a sample with a syringe and putting it on a slide for a closer look. Slack, I know, but I said I’ve been getting sidetracked in far too many ways, so give me credit for resisting this one, okay?

Actually, I didn’t think about it until typing this up just now, or I probably would’ve. But no! Focus! Focus!

[And get to the other task that popped up while I was typing this. And then focus!]

Tip Jar 11: Shooting modes

USAF Air Demonstration Squadron Thunderbirds mirror pass
Program Auto? Sport Mode? Shutter-Priority? Manual? What mode should I be using on my camera?

Well, no one mode will do it all for you, but it’s true enough that you can accomplish damn near everything with only two or three – I generally switch back and forth between Aperture-Priority and Manual, but that has quite a bit to do with my subject matter and shooting methods. So let’s look into these, bearing in mind that I’m not going to cover all of them because at this point, i don’t even know how many actual modes manufacturers have created. But we’ll hit the main ones for sure.

Specialty/Creative modes like Sports, Macro, Portrait, Scenic/Landscape, and so on, usually designated by a little picture/icon of some sort. I call these the ‘Ducky-Horsey’ modes, and I routinely recommend against them, for the simple reason that, if you don’t know exactly what they’re doing, then you don’t know how they’ll benefit you or what might even be working against you. Often, the camera manual will explain what they do, such as pushing the shutter speed as high as reasonable for Sports Mode, but this is also trivially easy to do on your own, or with Shutter-Priority. In general, they’re intended for the photographer that doesn’t want to learn how the camera works, and that generally translates to having as little control over our creative processes as possible. We can do better.

Green Square/Auto Mode/Intelligent Auto/etc. Note that this is differentiated from Program Auto, often designated with a P. In short, these are the ‘point-n-shoot’ modes when, again, you don’t know what you’re doing with a camera. The camera meters the incoming light and selects the shutter speed, aperture, and ISO (most times – not always) and allows you to just fire away. If that’s your bag, fine, go for it, but again, we can do better. At the very least, look at what settings the camera is producing and try to understand why, to begin to understand how to control things better, but overall, I recommend against this mode too.

Program Auto. I’ve seen this mode from numerous manufacturers, so while I doubt it’s universal, you will be able to translate it if necessary. I call this, ‘Auto With Benefits,’ and there’s a distinct edge to using this over the various full auto modes above. The main one is, you can use one of the dial controls (or occasionally, push buttons/rocker switches) to make adjustments without affecting the exposure. So let’s say you do that little half-press of the shutter button and the display shows that the camera has chosen 1/125 second shutter speed and an aperture of f16. But you know that you want a faster shutter speed to freeze action, so you roll that dial over, and the camera adjusts both the shutter speed and the aperture in equal increments to keep the same exposure. So if we want 1/500 second, four to six clicks on the dial (depending on our settings) will bring us to that, also changing the aperture to f8 – same exposure, using the wider aperture to account for the light reduction from a faster shutter speed. Usually, this mode also lets you select the ISO you prefer, rather than setting it automatically, and will also allow exposure compensation if desired. If you have to use an auto mode, use this.

Note that none of the Auto modes (or any mode) has anything to do with autofocus on the lens, which can be switched on and off at will regardless of the mode. ‘Auto’ is an overworked prefix in photography…

Aperture-Priority (AV on Canons). A semi-auto mode, this lets you select the aperture that will always be used for every shot, and the camera meter will set the shutter speed accordingly. Note that if the shutter speed is blinking in the display, this means it cannot actually go far enough to get a ‘proper’ exposure with the aperture (and ISO) you’ve chosen, and so the exposure will not be accurate. You may also occasionally get a blinking display or an annotating icon if the shutter speed drops so low that camera shake/motion blur is likely. This mode is best for situations where you want distinct control over the depth-of-field, which is primarily what the aperture controls.

Shutter-Priority (TV on Canons, for silly reasons). Largely the same as above, but this let’s you pick the shutter speed you will always use instead, while the camera selects the aperture. This one is far more likely to produce that blinking warning, since apertures have a lot less flexibility than shutter speeds. This mode is best for controlling action, whether it’s stopping/freezing it or purposefully blurring it. However, you may also use it to keep the camera within the flash synchronization speeds when using a flash, so you have proper coverage and not partially blackened frames.

The funny thing is, the two -Priority modes are largely interchangeable, if you know what you’re doing halfway decently. You’ll see what the shutter speed is while in Aperture-Priority, if it’s it not to your liking, you can change it easily by changing the aperture instead. And vice-versa of course. So if you prefer one over the other, or more of your shooting demands stopping action or controlling depth-of-field, use what works, and just keep an eye on the setting the camera chooses to accommodate it. Since a lot of what I shoot is macro work that demands as much depth as possible, I prefer Aperture-Priority, but ti doesn’t matter a whole lot.

Manual. This is it – we’re in total control now. The camera sets nothing, so we select the shutter speed, aperture, and ISO like the photographers of old. Exposure compensation is meaningless, since that depends on the camera meter, which is now coupled to nothing. The camera meter may, however, be using that same exposure compensation scale to tell us that it believes our exposure is inadequate – just, you know, FYI. We’d use this mode for several reasons: we know what the exposure really should be, or we’re aiming to do very long exposures, or we’re using studio strobe units with known light output, and so on. I use this most often for macro work, since the flash unit has a fixed output and so the shutter speed stays set at 1/200 and ISO typically at 250, while the aperture compensates for the distance (and increasing or diminishing light thereby reflected from) the subject. But it’s also useful for long night exposures, or esoteric techniques. For most of these, what the camera meter tells us is dead wrong.

And again, Manual does not affect lens focus – the lens can still autofocus in Manual mode, if desired.

time exposure at night under full moonlight of the lights of passing rigs, I-81 outside Syracuse NYBulb (B). This term is a ludicrous holdover from a century or so ago, when a bulb was actually used, but it hasn’t been that way since the forties at least. Essentially, it’s full manual like above, but your only shutter option is the shutter stays open as long as you hold it open, by pressing the shutter release (not recommended) or using a remote release. Sometimes, this isn’t its own mode but rolled into the shutter speed options. Again, esoteric or experimental techniques lend themselves to Bulb mode the most – it works well for lightning at night, or manually-triggered flash in otherwise dark environments. And the reason that I don’t recommend using the on-camera shutter release is that you’re almost guaranteed to shake the camera doing this.

Custom Modes. Generally, if you’re at the level of experience where these are most useful, you probably don’t need me telling you what these are. They allow a collection of settings to be used, for circumstances where you might have use for them frequently and don’t want to have to adjust everything. Note that these modes may let you preset a lot of settings and functions, such as specialty options within the Custom Functions menu, white-balance, and so on. If this is something that you might switch back and forth between frequently, these custom modes may be a huge help.

A caveat, for all circumstances really: You may have noted above where I put quotes around ‘proper’ exposure. All of the modes except Manual and Bulb rely on the camera’s exposure meter to provide necessary info for the correct setting, but the meter has no idea what the scene is – it only tries for an average amount of light. If the scene or subject isn’t average, this exposure and thus the settings can easily be wrong. No mode will correct for this, so you’ll have to be on your toes for the situations that require compensation. There is a function called Auto Bracketing that can help, but switching back and forth between this and normal shooting can be fussy at times.

All that said, it’s up to you to pick the modes that work best for you – and know that, as experience grows, they won’t matter all that much, since you’ll adjust the settings to get the results you want.

A few boids

I’m not doing terribly well on cleaning out the backlog, partially because there’s no real subject/theme among most of the pics, so I’m just throwing up a couple for the time being, recent avian images.

red-headed woodpecker Melanerpes erythrocephalus on top of dead snag in Goose Creek state Park
A few days back, The Girlfriend and I did a pass through Goose Creek State Park in the late morning, turning up surprisingly little – the place seemed almost abandoned by all wildlife. A few woodpeckers were flitting around, and I finally managed to get a few sharp frames of one, this red-headed woodpecker (Melanerpes erythrocephalus.) Annnddd that really was it for the park, save for a distant and perched osprey.

Not a whole lot better luck a couple days later, as a male yellow-bellied sapsucker (Sphyrapicus varius) did a brief visit to the yard, not coming out into the open very well.

male yellow-bellied sapsucker Sphyrapicus varius on tree in backyard
I’ve seen very few of these and would love to get better pics, but my experiences have all been brief and at a fair distance – this is the best I’ve gotten of their color pattern. You might think, with that name, that their bellies would be, I don’t know, yellow or something, xanthic maybe, but apparently they only occasionally sport some yellowish hues thereon. Leave it to ornithologists to give it a name like an old west epithet.

male yellow-bellied sapsucker Sphyrapicus varius on tree in backyard
Nearly all woodpeckers that visit make some kind of sound that helps indicate that they’re around, but I only knew this one was there because I spotted the black-and-white wing patterns as it flew in, and it was totally silent as it foraged for a minute or so before flying off.

Unlike this red-shouldered hawk (Buteo lineatus,) which announced its presence unmistakably as soon as I hove into view this morning, perhaps telling me to get lost.

red-shouldered hawk Buteo lineatus staking out territory just off backyard
There’s a pair that definitely is laying claim to the area, though near as we can tell they’re not actually using the nest they were working on earlier – again. They did this last year, beginning work in the late winter but then ditching that, and we’re not sure if they decide against it because of our presence, or some other factor. I mean, we were around when they started, so it’s not like they suddenly discovered how close we were, but perhaps the female is a lot more wary than the male and informed him that the neighbors were, shall we say, not their kind of people. Birds. Whatever. Which is not to say that they won’t still hunt in the backyard.

And now I feel bad, because the next two pics are of a species without a color in its name – could have had a thing going in this post, more of that subject/theme idea, but noooo

male wood ducks Aix sponsa blurring in slow shutter speed in fading light
The other evening as the sun dipped behind the trees, the wood ducks (Aix sponsa) were making a raid and I fired off a few frames of their frenzy. Normally this would be grounds for discarding, but I kinda liked the surreal action aspect, which does indeed suggest their frenetic activity when they finally decide to descend on the corn. And another:

male and female wood ducks Aix sponsa blurring due to slow shutter speed in fading light
This is even more abstract; while the female with her back to us is obvious, there are the heads of two males blurred so badly they produce only a bare hint of color smearing in the frame, the residues of wiping the paintbrush dry. This is high fart, this is. Or maybe just a funky effect that struck my fancy. You decide – I could expound on some emotional, existential, metaphorical aspects but such things make me itch.

That’s six more cleared out. Only, um, thirty-two more to go? I’m not counting, and they’ll get here when they get here.

Gotta do this backwards

I have a small collection of the same subject from two consecutive days, but the best images were the first and tapered off a bit from there, so we’re doing them mostly in reverse order.

Four or five days ago (depending on when I actually post this – it’s 11 PM right now,) the day dawned quite foggy, and I looked out at the pond and saw practically nothing. No, it wasn’t quite that bad, but it was thick, and the wood ducks (Aix sponsa) were barely showing.

male wood duck Aix sponsa perched in tree in heavy fog
One male was perched in one of the trees on Duck Island, just checking out the environs before heading down for a snack, where it met up with its mate (I’m assuming, anyway – they tend to travel in pairs.)

female and male wood ducks Aix sponsa foraging in shallows at pond edge
The fog was ever-so-slightly thinner by then, though by the time it had really thinned out, the ducks had moved on, so this was about all I got for the morning.

The previous afternoon, however, had been much better, with the setting sun lancing between the trees and illuminating their feeding area brilliantly. Though, as I said, we’re doing this in reverse order, so we have an image from when the sun had passed behind the trees and the area was wholly in twilight.

nutria Myocastor coypus feeding on corn near pond edge while two male wood ducks Aix sponsa wait anxiously
A nutria (Myocastor coypus) had come up and was gorging itself on corn while the wood ducks swam quite close, anxiously waiting for the rodent to finish up and let them have a crack at it. Which is kind of amusing, because we put down a lot of corn, all along that pond edge, so they easily could have grabbed some without being anywhere near the nutria; I suspect this was almost a matter of territoriality, though the ducks really don’t dispute it. They just look on disapprovingly like elderly ladies regarding buskers, tut-tutting around conspicuously until the setlist is over.

Yet before that, the light was excellent.

Canada goose Branta canadensis and male wood duck Aix sponsa in combined portrait
C’mon, like I was gonna pass up this composition? This is almost certainly going on the walls here, because it says, ‘Walkabout Estates’ pretty damn well I think.

The same male wood duck got his own portrait, with a decent reflection to go along.

male wood duck Aix sponsa with reflection in late afternoon light
I’m sorry the sides bleached out a little, but this is one of the best captures of their colors that I’ve achieved yet, and I’m glad they didn’t spook when I opened the upstairs window – I think they’re getting better about that, as long as I’m slow and quiet about it.

Before that, however, was the scene that drew me to the window in the first place, where a couple of males had perched in that same tree on Duck Island, a favorite of theirs.

pair of male wood ducks Aix sponsa perched on same branch of tree on Duck Island in late afternoon light
Actually, I think there had been more, but only these two remained by the time I got up there, with a female swimming past in the background. At least the branches were mostly out of the way, and I could shift the camera to the right to eliminate the cypress trunk that blocks most of Duck Island from that vantage.

Which brings us to the final image, though whether this counts as the strong finish or the strong start, I can’t say.

male wood duck Aix sponsa perched in tree on Duck Island in late afternoon light
Which portrait do you like better: this one or the one with the goose? This shows the ‘unfinished painting’ look of the belly coloration, making me wonder if that serves some purpose. They’re vegetarians, so it’s not like the colors do something for the fish beneath or anything. I’m not coming up with any valid ideas on this.

Anyway, that’s seven more out of the backlog in the blog images folder – still more to go, to say nothing of what I might snag before I catch up. The year’s off to a good start.

No, not there, there!

Just illustrating one of the common pitfalls of nature photography.

The other day while I was up in the bathroom observing the ducks (which sounds weird if you haven’t been following along,) a pileated woodpecker (Dryocopus pileatus) was hopping excitedly between a couple of trees in relatively plain sight, and I say “relatively” because there is no completely plain sight on the trees in the backyard. Bald cypress (Taxodium distichum) are notorious for throwing out lots of thin little branches in every direction, and these get in the way more often than not.

adult male pileated woodpecker Dryocopus pileatus on bald cypress Taxodium distichum in backyard
This was among the first of the frames, showing how much stuff lies in between, which makes autofocus get very spastic, unsure of what it should be locking onto, and so it very often jumps around, back and forth. Meanwhile, the woodpeckers are typically rather hyperactive and twitchy, never holding still for longer than a literal half-second, so switching to manual focus would be extremely demanding and likely no better.

This is a male, by the way, as evidenced by that red cheek patch, but a female came a little closer and so the rest of the images are of her.

adult female pileated woodpecker Dryocopus pileatus on bald cypress Taxodium distichum in backyard with motion blur
Might have been sharp enough – look at the feet – but her motion wrecked the frame. One of the few that had the sunlight hitting her eye for a catchlight, too. Most of what you see here I’m not even going to keep, along with a whole lot of other frames – I shot 77 in the few minutes she was cavorting around on this side of the trees.

adult female pileated woodpecker Dryocopus pileatus on bald cypress Taxodium distichum in backyard, sharp but posed oddly
Sharp, not bad, I can live with the little twig getting in there, but an odd pose and not a very good portrait. Figures.

adult female pileated woodpecker Dryocopus pileatus completely blurred out with AF locked on intervening branches of bald cypress Taxodium distichum
I left this one full-frame to show that I didn’t have to crop a lot, but more so you can see the conditions. However, this is early spring and the cypress have not started budding out yet – in high summer, she wouldn’t have been visible at all, or at least not more than a fraction, and I probably would have been trying to get underneath her for a clearer view, which would have made me obvious and so she probably wouldn’t have gone for that.

close crop of adult female pileated woodpecker Dryocopus pileatus rooting in crack with long tongue
Tight crop, sharp enough (not perfect,) though not a great pose – but we can see the tongue rooting into a crevice in the bark, so there’s that at least. And a damn branch.

adult female pileated woodpecker Dryocopus pileatus blurred while hopping to another perch
Action shot while hopping to another branch, looking like a comic strip character that got a sudden shock – I should have dubbed in some exclamation points over her head…

adult female pileated woodpecker Dryocopus pileatus with acceptable sharpness but intervening branches
Annnnddd this is about as good as it got; pretty good focus, a bit of sky shine on the eye even though it lacked a good catchlight, decent light, dynamic pose – and twigs. This is the kind of frame that makes me think, Well, I could dub them out in GIMP, but then debate whether that counts as cheating in my own personal standards of acceptable nature photography. I much prefer to get them right in-camera, and we see pileateds often enough here that it’s not like this was my only opportunity.

But yeah, one of them fancy cameras where I could just say, “pileated woodpecker,” and the autofocus would know what it should be locking onto would be great. Oh, they don’t have them yet? And they would cost several thousand dollars if they did? And that still wouldn’t get the intervening branches out of the way? And speaking the subject out loud might send them off anyway? I guess I better learn to live with the present shortcomings – that’s part of the challenge and skillset, right? I’ll keep telling myself that…

Estate Find 55

There were about 2-3 minutes today when seeing this was actually possible, so The Girlfriend and I are extremely lucky to have been there when it happened. But as we were walking the property and discussing where some trees would be going, I spotted this microspud booking as fast as it was able across the gravel driveway.

very small eastern mud turtle Kinosternon subrubrum on concrete driveway
This is easily the smallest turtle I’ve ever found, which we’ll see clearly in a moment. It’s an eastern mud turtle (Kinosternon subrubrum,) and this is about the size of a newly-hatched one, except that this happens in late summer. Plus the mud on its back indicates that it recently emerged from hibernation, assisted by last night’s rain, though why it was practically on the highest point on the property and over a hundred meters from the pond (and not along an easy route either) remains beyond our comprehension.

very small eastern mud turtle Kinosternon subrubrum held in The Girlfriend's fingers
This is the first of the scale shots – luckily The Girlfriend was right there and could hold the turtle for some detailed frames, rather than me attempting to juggle the camera one-handed.

underside of very small eastern mud turtle Kinosternon subrubrum showing double-hinged plastron
This is how it was identified, since the very similar striped mud turtle (which is not striped in North Carolina, for some reason, and would not have them at this age, nor would we have been able to see the stripes on the carapace under the mud anyway,) only has a single hinge on the front plastron and not the two faintly seen here. Also, the common musk turtle, also found on the property at times, has a much smaller plastron.

very small eastern mud turtle Kinosternon subrubrum on US quarter coin
Neither of us was carrying change, not expecting to pay any tolls nor find a gumball machine in the yard, but The Girlfriend ran in and grabbed a quarter for another scale shot – the adult treefrogs are larger than this. I spent a lot of time last year monitoring turtle nests hoping to catch some hatchlings, or better, some actually hatching, all for naught, but at least we snagged this one for a photo session.

very small eastern mud turtle Kinosternon subrubrum at eye-level on concrete drive
I made the attempt to get a few frames in the grass/weeds for a natural setting, but it vanished beneath the leaves almost instantly, so we have this eye-level portrait on the driveway again after that aborted attempt.

There are a bunch of other pics from this morning, and some from last night along with audio clips, as well as all of those images that were taken earlier that I’ve been trying to get to, so there’s post fodder for a while now, but obviously this one was going to jump in front. I mean, not literally of course…

Tip Jar 10: Shutter speed

So, shutter speed. What is it? Should we fear it? Was it bestowed upon us by aliens? The answer to two of these is, “No,” so let’s look at the remaining one, and add in how to avoid the stumbling blocks.

female ruby-throated hummingbird Archilochus colubris approaching salvia
Basic answer: shutter speed is how long the camera is admitting light to the sensor or film. Except not really – it’s how long it can be, as long as there’s light, and we’ll cover that in at least two later Tip Jar posts. Managing it allows us to control certain elements of our images. A fast shutter speed (such as 1/500 second or higher, but this is not a set dividing line) lets us freeze action, prevent blur from camera shake, and capture decisive moments in action. A slow shutter speed (1/30 second and down) allows for motion to blur within the image, or allows minimal light (such as stars) to accumulate, or even gives us time to set up conditions. They both have their advantages and pitfalls.

First off, how fast is fast enough to, say, stop sports action, or a car going past – are there distinct guidelines? And there really cannot be, since it’s not how fast things are going, but how fast they’re crossing the frame. A jet in the sky going 450 knots at 30,000 ft is easy, since from our perspective it’s just drifting along, while a bicyclist passing right in front of us at a mere 15 kph can blur fiercely at the exact same shutter speed. Then of course, the focal length dictates how wide the frame will appear, so a shorter, wider focal length (say 24mm) will make action appear slower than a longer focal length (250mm) because the frame covers a much larger area in the former. About the best I can provide is, for sports, you probably want nothing slower than 1/250 second.

Bell 407 "Sky 5" of WRAL-TV Raleigh
Or maybe not. Sometimes it’s cool to have the blur of the limbs or sports implements, because that implies the speed of them. I spoke with a photographer that specialized in aerial photography of other aircraft (besides the one he was in to get the photos,) and he never used a shutter speed faster than 1/250, even when it was to his advantage to try and prevent any additional blur from the movement of either aircraft. The reason? Stopping the propellers or rotors from all motion looks unnatural, as if he pasted in an image of the aircraft over the sky – some blur is necessary and expressive. You might also note, if you look at car ads online or in magazines (what are those?) you’ll often see blurred wheels to imply the speed of the car while everything else is sharp. In many ads, this is digitally created, but that balance point between blurred wheels (propeller/rotor) and a sharp vehicle is possible, though often quite specific.

Then we have the other pitfall, which is camera shake. When using a camera handheld, too slow of a shutter speed can allow the camera to twitch during exposure, blurring everything. And even using a tripod doesn’t always eradicate this, since they can vibrate too, especially lightweight tripods in the wind. This is also affected by the lens, since the longer the focal length, the more every movement is magnified.

Now, there is kind of a rule for this – it doesn’t apply as cleanly as it used to. That rule was, your shutter speed should always be above the reciprocal of the focal length, which is one of those phrases that sounds nice and neat while not being very explanatory. So, instead, just add “1/” – if your focal length is 300mm, your shutter speed should be above 1/300 second. 135mm? 1/135 second, which isn’t usually a setting, so go the next option higher than that (typically 1/160 or 1/180 second.) The reason this isn’t a distinct rule is that some people are steadier than others, but more importantly, a lot of lenses or cameras have some kind of stabilizing function that helps compensate for camera shake.

For instance let’s say you’re using a 500mm lens, but it has stabilization that permits “up to four stops benefit” – and you’ll almost always see that “up to” modifier in there. If we use the rule above, you’d want a shutter speed of 1/500 second or higher, but the lens says it can improve that by (up to) four stops. Meaning we can cut the shutter in half (how a stop is measured) four times. Beginning at 1/500, we go to 1/250, to 1/125, to 1/60, to 1/30! We can get away with a shutter speed as low as 1/30 second!

Probably not. Manufacturers usually oversell the effectiveness of any such advancements, and I generally recommend not trusting anything beyond half of their claims – thus, only two stops. And this is on top of making every effort to remain steady in the first place. I recommend experimenting freely to know the actual effectiveness of your equipment, but using that rule above as your guideline, treating anything else as a bonus.

And of course, this only compensates for camera shake. Even if we could dependably use that 1/30 second, this will be worse for any action actually taking place – and when we’re using a longer focal length like that, we’re often going to be capturing some kind of action.

Canada geese Branta canandensis taking flight over pond
Does it sound like everything about shutter speed comes with conditions, or some kind of caveat? That’s actually fairly true. Much of photography is a tradeoff, or simply accepting the limitations.

A related limitation is frame rate. It’s easy to believe that, with the camera set for rapid-fire repeated frames as long as the shutter release is held down, you’ll capture the exact moment you want, let’s say a bat just as it hits the ball. We’ll assume 1/500th second shutter speed and 10 frames per second, which is a high rate for most cameras (standard is 2 to 5 per second.) This means, if you hold the shutter down as the ball approaches, you only capture 1/50 of the action in any given second (ten frames times 1/500.) An actual swing takes far less than a second, so you might have only two or three frames that even have a chance of catching that millisecond of contact. You can’t depend on it, is what I’m saying.

This also applies for birds in flight, when the frame rate might actually synchronize with the wingbeat and you catch the wings in the same position for every frame – this has happened to me more times than I care to admit. Additionally, when the camera is cranking out frames that quickly, the autofocus is usually not tracking because it has no time to adjust, so many of the frames may simply be out of focus. Short bursts, and/or trying for specific timing of that key moment, will often work much better.

The other option for using faster shutter speeds, or even just to combat camera shake in handheld shots, is using a flash, and this is an essential tool for photographers. The on-camera flashes included with most cameras are ridiculously weak, usually only good for a few meters, so a dedicated off-camera unit is better. Now, due to the limitations of shutter design (and basic physics,) most flash units have a maximum shutter speed allowable for their use, usually in the range of 1/125 to 1/250 second – faster than that, and part of your frame may not be illuminated at all. UNLESS you have a dedicated high-speed flash, often called a focal plane or FP flash, which communicates with the camera and compensates for faster shutter speeds, though be warned: the faster the shutter speed, the shorter the distance the flash will carry.

ice cube frozen in mid-air after bouncing in water puddle
There is another interesting technique, and that’s using the flash duration as the ‘shutter speed’ – essentially, it doesn’t matter how long the shutter is open, if the conditions are very dark and all of the light is produced by the flash. In such cases, the burst of the flash is your exposure time, which was used in this case, and also in capturing bats in flight. Things need to be pretty dark to accomplish this, though.

So now let’s go into slow shutter speeds, which are useful for very low light, or introducing that blur in interesting ways. The vast majority of the time, you’ll want to use a tripod, and a remote shutter release is frequently a great idea; it’s possible to introduce shake (especially at longer focal lengths) just by pressing the shutter release on the camera. And in fact, there’s an additional tool for such work, primarily with SLR/DSLR cameras, and that’s mirror lock-up, often an option within the specialty menu.

With such cameras, there’s a reflex mirror within that directs the light to the viewfinder, and it slaps quickly out of the way to let the light reach the sensor (film) right when you press the shutter release, part of that chi-clicky sound it makes. But this motion sets up some vibrations within the camera itself and it takes a few seconds to fully die down, and this can be especially noticeable at longer focal lengths because, again, it’s magnified. Therefore, for shutter speeds between about 1/10 second and perhaps three seconds, this vibration is enough to blur the image a little – for faster than 1/10 second, the vibration usually isn’t enough to register, and for slower, it generally has died down enough not to overwhelm the image, but it does depend on what you’re capturing. Mirror lock-up brings the mirror up well before the shutter opens, so the vibrations have time to die down before exposure starts. The best option is for two presses (on the remote shutter release): the first locks the mirror up, and the second then opens the shutter itself, and I prefer this because the default time delay is two seconds, and there have been times when that simply isn’t enough – I count off four or five seconds. This is usually with astrophotography, trying to gather the very faint light of stars.

long exposure from base of Looking Glass Falls in Brevard NC
Shutter speed will often rely on using an advantageous ISO setting – higher ISO for higher shutter speeds, and thus lower for lower, and aperture settings will often assist this too. In the case of capturing the blurring water of a waterfall to make it seem cottony, you’ll want, at most, 1/10 second shutter speed, usually lower, but if you’re doing this during the day, cutting the ISO down as far as it will go, and closing down the aperture quite small, will usually let you get a proper exposure. It helps if you’re doing this in shade, which will also help the appearance of the water, since in sunlight, single droplets catching the light for a millisecond can produce sparkles brighter than the rest of the water, and you’ll have white speckles in your ‘cotton.’ Nobody wants speckles in their cotton.

[There is an additional tool, if you like doing such shots, and that’s a neutral density filter. It’s not the density that’s neutral, but a dense filter that’s neutral in color – essentially sunglasses for the lens, which reduces the light coming through and let’s the shutter speeds go longer. They’re usually sold by the number of stops they reduce light. In a pinch, a polarizing filter can work, and stacked polarizers can be used as adjustable density ‘sunglasses,’ but with modern cameras, always ensure that they’re circular polarizers for proper exposure metering.]

black-crowned night heron Nycticorax nycticorax in flight with twig
An interesting balance in shutter speed is with creative panning. If you’re tracking a moving subject accurately, it’s possible to get a sharp image of the subject overlaid on a motion-blurred background, which is great when it’s done right, but a tricky balance. It can be a habit to pause all camera movement when tripping the shutter, which isn’t a bad habit in most cases but works directly against a good panning shot; the motion must be continued as the shutter trips. It doesn’t take too slow of a shutter speed to blur the background if the movement is adequate – the image above was shot at 1/80 second, 300mm focal length.

While knowing how to use a ‘proper’ shutter speed is an essential tool for all photographers, the fun comes with experimenting with it and seeing what you can come up with, so play around and be creative!

Madame Mesquite

And so, part two of the visit to Mattamuskeet National Widlife Refuge, focusing entirely on the one species that made a cameo in the first. The foreshadowing of the day came early on, when we saw a pair of birds far in the distance crossing the road.

pair of tundra swans Cygnus columbianus in flight in distance
This is cropped from the full frame at 600mm, so suffice to say I wasn’t identifying them based on what I saw in the viewfinder, though if I’d done more research on the area I should have known, since it’s notorious for hosting them in the winter. The gradual reveal to us, however, was fairly classic.

trio of tundra swans Cygnus columbianus in flood plain at Mattamuskeet National wildlife Refuge
Again cropped, though less so, but shot across the car (The Girlfriend was driving) out the window and across the flood plain alongside the drive. Here, you can just make out the typical swan ‘nose bridge’ of the beak.

Finally, a pair got close enough and unobscured by reeds to make a decent portrait.

pair of tundra swans Cygnus columbianus in identical poses on flood plain in Mattamuskeet NWR
Enough suspense; these are tundra swans (Cygnus columbianus,) quite fond of Lake Mattamuskeet and usually overwintering there. Had we gone down in this direction on the first visit twenty years (shy two weeks) ago, this would not have been my first views of swans in the wild, and don’t ask me how I’ve gone that long without ever seeing one. I could have gone longer too, had we delayed this trip a little more, since they’re about ready to migrate north for nesting season.

But yes, I appreciated the mirrored pose.

Overall, most of the photo opportunities were largely the same, swans milling about at a moderate distance and not doing a lot. I snagged a few frames as a pair flew past, again, still distant, but several times closer than the initial view.

pair of tundra swans Cygnus columbianus flying past, Mattamuskeet NWR
And then, getting still closer as we drove along, taking care not to spook them too much, which is now laughable, since they didn’t pay the slightest attention to the drive.

solitary tundra swan Cygnus columbianus seen from the back, flood plain in Mattamuskeet NWR
Eventually we got to one of the observation platforms that looked out over the flood plain, getting up above the grasses and able to see better. It was well placed, because there was more open water there and thus the swans (and numerous other species) were congregating in clusters stretched across a few hundred meters in width and depth from us.

Here we started doing some recording, because the calls of the swans (that had been gradually getting more noticeable as we drove) were now distinct, a great sound that i couldn’t decide was more reminiscent of distant coyotes or a bunch of rowdy cowboys. I’ll let you decide:

Tundra swans and others at Mattamuskeet NWR

You can hear the camera in there of course, since The Girlfriend was now wielding the mic, and a little wind noise that the dead cat didn’t quite eradicate even though it did reduce it significantly. If you’re sharp-eared, you might pick out calls from other species in there – I know I could hear the American coots from time to time – but mostly you’re hearing the swans. And a minor altercation that the damn autofocus kept snagging the grasses in front of, so I have no pics of it, only the audio.

Here and there, I spotted the dirtier coloration of a yearling, according to the birder we met there – I wasn’t familiar enough with the species to know how their plumage changed with age and season, but this is just about it.

one yearling and two adult tundra swans Cygnus columbianus swminning in flood plain, Mattamuskeet NWR
They may get a little darker than the specimen on the left when they’re even younger, but that happens in their breeding areas, way up north of here, so it’s unlikely I’ll ever see that phase. After their first year, they become the pure white with very subtle variations seen in the rest f the images

Another gave one of the few active displays while we were there (which was roughly midday,) standing up and flapping vigorously for a few seconds.

tundra swan Cygnus columbianus flapping energetically while another looks on, flood plain, Mattamuskeet NWR
I actually have four frames that make it look as if it’s conducting a symphony, too few to make an animated gif from.

tundra swan Cygnus columbianus flapping energetically while another looks on, flood plain, Mattamuskeet NWR
Male? Female? no idea, though we do have a couple more snoozing Northern shovelers (Spatula clypeata) in the foreground.

As we were driving back out, we noticed a pair of swans had now moved across the bordering channel and were in the grasses right alongside the drive, so we approached quite slowly, pausing as I fired off frames. We go out of order here and show the second, completely unconcerned with the car not seven meters away, posed on one foot philosophically.

tundra swan Cygnus columbianus standing unconcernedly on one leg alongside wildlife drive, Mattamuskeet NWR
That one was beyond the first, which was lying deeper in the grass and appeared to be far spookier, so we took our time in approaching while I cataloged this vehicular stalking.

tundra swan Cygnus columbianus peering from tall grasses alongside wildlife drive, Mattamuskeet NWR
The amount of yellow on the base of the bill doesn’t indicate anything and can vary a decent amount, though apparently the European variant typically shows more.

As we got alongside this one, it remained wary and appeared to be issuing a warning hiss, though we were close enough to hear it if it did, and no sound at all was issued.

tundra swan Cygnus columbianus with beak open peering from tall grasses alongside wildlife drive, Mattamuskeet NWR
And then, it stretched up a little taller and began surveying out across the water, so it was less concerned with our presence than it appeared at first, and our careful approach wasn’t really necessary – especially since we had drifted to the other side of the drive to avoid stressing it, and a passing car zoomed between us in a decidedly incautious manner that provoked no response from the swan.

profile of tundra swan Cygnus columbianus  alongside wildlife drive, Mattamuskeet NWR
But this minor change in pose allowed a little more light to cross its face and make for a more distinctive portrait, and I was fine with that.

As I said in the previous post, the worst part was that the light was uniformly behind all the waterfowl, something that really couldn’t be compensated for except perhaps high summer at dawn (which the swans, at least, would probably not be around for.) Still a nice little outing and not too terribly far to drive, and it was great day for it, very pleasant temperature and softer light from the haze. So we’ll be back, as well as checking out at least two other areas that are also relatively ‘local,’ sometime in the near future – before spring is out, most likely.

And now I have to catch up on the various pics I’ve been getting around here…

Matt Amos Keat

It’s taking a little longer to get to this than intended, because other things keep happening, and I’ve decided that there are enough images to go along with it that I’m going to split it into two posts; this is the first. So let’s go out to Lake Mattamuskeet, North Carolina.

Lodge and tower near shore of Lake Mattamuskeet (not in foreground,) North Carolina
The Girlfriend and I have been planning to do this trip since we moved to the new location, because while we’re not close to it, we’re much closer than we’d been before. Lake Mattamuskeet is a large but very shallow lake in the coastal plains, now enclosed by the Mattamuskeet National Wildlife Refuge, and a favored spot of waterfowl. The lake is not that seen in the pic here, which shows the landmark pumping station, the remains of a project intended to drain the lake and turn it into farmland a little over a century ago, and so that’s not a lighthouse, but the smokestack of the coal-burning pumps. When this project failed, the station was turned into a hunting lodge for a few decades, with the smokestack converted to an observation tower; both structures are now too unstable to allow entry.

unidentified warbler on reeds at Lake Mattamuskeet, NC
But it’s the birds we’re after, even when I can’t offer an identification of this one – some kind of warbler, but there’s so much variation in species colors among sexes and ages and seasons, and this looks to me like a mix of a couple, though I’m not songbirder and I’m relying on the illustrations in my Sibley Guide (like I says, I just takes picchers.) This was among the first birds seen, as we were out on the long causeway that crosses the lake, but we added to that in moments.

lone osprey Pandion haliaetus on bare tree in middle of Lake Mattamuskeet, NC
Visible from the main overlook on the causeway is a patch of trees on an island, which is where this osprey (Pandion haliaetus) sat – and then The Girlfriend spotted a bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) nearby on the same island, though both were so distant that identifying them took the binoculars or the long lens. Nothing was happening, no one was moving, so we poked around a little and were about to leave that spot when this changed, and suddenly there were three ospreys, and they were all intent on convincing the eagle to get the hell out of Dodge, which it wasn’t buying.

osprey Pandion haliaetus harassing bald eagle Haliaeetus leucocephalus in trees on Lake Mattamuskeet, NC
With the distance and intervening branches, this is as good as I got, and never a decent frame with all four birds together, especially when the ospreys knew the eagle was keeping an eye on them and thus didn’t veer too close. The cries of both were audible across the lake, but the eagle was making the most noise. In my experience, this is a little early for the ospreys to have returned, but my experience has been with Jordan Lake, further inland from the coast, so perhaps this is the normal timeframe around Mattamuskeet. Eventually, one osprey left and the other two resigned themselves to the presence of the eagle, perhaps because no nests were in evidence.

pair of ospreys Pandion haliaetus in bare tree on Lake Mattamuskeet, NC
From there, we went down to the lakeshore near the pump station/lodge shown at top, and began following the skirting drive in both directions. I’d only been here once before, perhaps two decades ago [actually, I just checked the stock folders, since I had the first of my digital cameras with me then and so have timestamps, and it was March 18th, 2006, heh!] and made the mistake of following the same path as that time, though it was only a pass-through then. That direction was the quietest and most wildlife-free choice, as we discovered this time around.

By the way, the weather was lovely and warm, and the turtles were all stirring, so much so that we moved four of them from the road while traveling there and back, or three if you don’t count this one actually within the refuge:

likely eastern mud turtle Kinosternon subrubrum on road in Mattamuskeet National Wildlife Refuge, NC
While the obvious markings don’t distinguish anything, especially when it refused to extend its head for a good look, I turned it over briefly as I carried it from the road and looked at the plastron, which was hinged front and back, making this likely an eastern mud turtle (Kinosternon subrubrum.) I also carried a yellow-bellied slider and two common snappers from the roads, one of which so covered with peat mud that it had clearly just emerged from its winter nap.

When we finally turned and began following the drive to the west, running between the lake proper and a vast floodplain, that’s when we started to see some real action. It’s amusing, in retrospect, how our expectations and reactions changed during the day.

American coot Fulica americana on flood plain in Mattamuskeet NWR
We spent some time trying to get a decent view of a few American coots (Fulica americana,) which turned out to be more and more numerous as we drove further, Now, a word about conditions, since it was bright haze the entire time, but on this section of the drive, we were facing almost entirely south, meaning everything was backlit unless we picked careful angles and timing. Moreover, there isn’t any time of the day or year where it would be a lot better, except for perhaps right at sunrise in high summer. That said, it’s also possible that sunset conditions at this time of year would produce lovely reflections from the water and potentially some nice silhouettes – we’ll have to see with further excursions. For now, this is what we have, and we can just barely make out the blood-red eyes of the coot in these conditions. It got slightly better later on:

American coot Fulica americana with aquatic plant in beak, flood plain in Mattamuskeet NWR
This one was pulling up plants from the bottom to munch on, though it looks like a shiv here, or perhaps Errol Flynn.

There were a lot of waterfowl species to be seen, though quite often at a distance, but I’m avoiding one in particular because all of those images (and probably some audio clips) will be found in a later post. Several flocks of ducks were only inclined to pass through well over a hundred meters off, allowing some wider flocks shots and little more.

flock of likely northern pintails Anas acuta passing over flod plains, Mattamuskeet NWR
These were probably norther pintails (Anas acuta,) though it was hard to say, since the only sharp image I got at this distance had them all banking the same way and thus showing little of their upper plumage. I got slightly better at another time:

flight of four northern pintails Anas acuta passing by in Mattamuskeet NWR
That’s enough to feel confident about them being pintails, but little else – it was more cataloging the different species; you can see them better in this post. Another species refused to show their faces, literally, though I’m fairly certain of these, too:

Canada geese Branta canadensis and northern shovelers Spatula clypeata all snoozing on flood plain in Mattamuskeet NWR
The larger ones to the right and behind are Canada geese (Branta canadensis,) but the smaller ones are northern shovelers (Spatula clypeata,) a duck species that I haven’t seen in the wild until now – and not really very well now, either, though the color pattern on the flanks seems to pin them down.

And then, another species, much closer this time.

female and male gadwalls Mareca strepera in channel in Mattamuskeet NWR
There’s a channel right alongside the drive, that gives way to the floodplain that, I imagine, gets a bit drier later in the year and turns into grassland; only a few species bothered being this close, and I didn’t recognize this one. We’ll go in for a closer look at the male on the right:

male gadwall Mareca strepera in channel in Mattamuskeet NWR
The head pattern and dark bill, stippled sides, and dark tail with lighter wing feathers above indicate this is a gadwall (Mareca strepera,) and I never would have determined that if it had only been the female – so many duck species have females that are practically identical, drab and mottled to disappear on the nests. A birder that we met told us there were also American wigeons and green-winged teals out there, though I never spotted those myself. To my credit, however, I spotted this one that I think he missed initially:

pie-billed grebe Podilymbus podiceps in channel at Mattamuskeet NWR
This is a pie-billed grebe (Podilymbus podiceps,) a species I’ve seen several times and never gotten a decent portrait of – this is so far the best. They’re tiny for waterfowl, smaller than the wood ducks and perhaps slightly larger than a pigeon, and pretty shy in my experience.

pie-billed grebe Podilymbus podiceps in channel at Mattamuskeet NWR
The males and the females look the same, so I can’t offer more than this, but at least the light wasn’t terrible.

variety of waterfowl in flood plains of Mattamuskeet NWR
I made a small mistake in not bringing the tripod, which would have allowed me to snag some video of behaviors, though I did bring the shotgun mic and recorder, so I have audio clips (that I have yet to listen to – I told you I’ve been busy.) This pic gives more than a hint of the other species that will be featured in the next post on the refuge, coming soon, and yet shows only a small percentage of the birds therein (and don’t ask me why focus jumped to the background birds.) Right now I’ll leave you with a semi-abstract on the railing of a walkway, muddy footprints probably left by a great blue heron, and expressive in its own way. More to come.

muddy footprints and dropping on railing in Mattamuskeet NWR, likely from great blue heron Ardea herodias

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