Ten Species – Ninety Minutes
This afternoon with the temperature in the 70s F, sunny skies and no wind (i.e. ideal odeing weather) I spent an hour and a half (5:00 to 6:30 PM) photographing
Photographer
This afternoon with the temperature in the 70s F, sunny skies and no wind (i.e. ideal odeing weather) I spent an hour and a half (5:00 to 6:30 PM) photographing
Late this afternoon, I spent about forty minutes watching (and photographing) a young male moose in shallows of Gregg Lake north of the road*. Much of the time the light
I observed the first of the seasons dragonflies (Hudsonian White-faces) in our yard a couple of weeks ago. However, today was the first day I got out to photograph odes.
This week I spent 48 hours on Star Island, one of the Isles of Shoals, photographing birds during the northward migration. The trip was organized by Eric Masterson. I took
Yesterday, I spent several hours watching and photographing the eagle nest just south of the boat ramp on the Connecticut River in Hinsdale, NH. The best viewing sites are a
Early spring, a season of gray and brown, worse for the psyche than November. What a feeling of relief when yellow explosions of forsythia and daffodils finally appear beginning in
On Saturday, my friend Victor and I headed to the Middlebury (VT) College Museum of Art to view an exhibit of photographs titled “David Plowden: Portraits of America“. Of course,
Yesterday morning dawned clear and warm. At that point of the day, I had no intention of going eclipse watching. However… Sitting at the breakfast table at about 8 AM,
Photographs made this month (March 2024) that did not fit in any of my other posts.
A couple of days ago we had some ‘nice’, almost summery clouds even though it was a typical cold and blustery March day. I went on a short photo drive