Posts by ChrisW
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And how are the reflective qualities of the river you ask? Not bad I'd say - this of my first homecoming dawn with 7-sec reflection of almost the last of the waning moon, the earth-shine on the rest of its face too. Bellatrix and Betelgeuse (beautiful names!) the shoulders of Orion out to the right.
And part of a 15-sec exposure from the same fencepost a few minutes earlier, showing Aldebaran and the inverted V of Taurus above the moon, and to the left nestled within the now-bare branches of the walnut tree, Matariki/the Pleiades/Seven Sisters, the last of the moon phase signifying the end of the Matariki month.
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Capture: Upside Down, Inside Out, in reply to
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Capture: Upside Down, Inside Out, in reply to
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Southerly: Now I Am Permitted, in reply to
2009. 2001? 2004? 2007?
Accurate like a Ken Ring weather 'forecast'.
My one and a half-pai working foveas can each see 2005, also a 1 for January, so near enough your central estimate. -
Capture: Autumn lite, in reply to
link to this. His photos from the cockpit are incredible.
Flashy sterile boringness I thought.
But strangely evoked these non-sterile patterns of 'lights' against the dark - half-composted feijoa leaves and related debris under the feijoa tree, erratically rummaged by black chook and lesser blackbirds, after a rather warm day and night. Quick hand-held grabs early yesterday morning in blue-sky shade. -
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Capture: Autumn lite, in reply to
So it's all go where you live then?
All go!? Truly hectic pace of life around here! Why just the other day - five days ago in fact - probably this same pukeko on the willow log, did that little bowing to the water thing, not narcissistically, nor to shit like shags do to lighten the load before takeoff, but about to use its legs and all body muscles to help fling itself in the air, flap like mad
and it was gone, past the miniature wind-wand, leaving the imprint of its wing-wind on the water behind it. At first I was a little disappointed I'd missed the photo of that spectacular takeoff I had to put in words here, but then I saw the bio-mimicry of that airborne pukeko again ...
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More BioMimicry, an hour earlier.
I haven't seen a pukeko wander out on the willow log when another bird is there too - this time an oddly patterned little shag is drying its wings.And a few seconds later, the pukeko adjusts its angle for the walnut foliage to consider its next move, while another non-bird flies by, drifting up on the tide.
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Capture: Autumn lite, in reply to