Saturday, July 2, 2022

FZ80 Impressions

 

Fog & Forested Ridges

I've been getting my new Panasonic FZ80 dialed in to my own nature photography needs -- setting up single-point focus and AF/AE lock, figuring out the distance limits for close-up shots, and especially turning off the touch screen so my nose doesn't change the focus point whenever I compose in the viewfinder! 

I took it along when I biked up to Mt. Tam on Friday to swap out the memory card in my trail camera, and it was fun to poke around the creek areas and snap a few frames of the local flora and fauna. Sometimes it's fun to just go out and shoot without a tripod and remote release, without mirror lock-up, without diffusion screens or focus rails, without a backpack full of gear, and without making the kinds of investments of energy involved in using my "real" camera. Of course, all those cut corners show in the resulting images, and that's okay. Sometimes I just want to grab a bite to eat, not make a fancy meal.


Two Hikers on the Landscape


Skipper on the Gumweed


Acmon Blue on the Gumweed


Buckeye in the Grass
(instead of on the dirt trail, its other preferred camouflage)


The Pencil Thin Garter Snake I Almost Stepped On


Some Sort of Dragonfly Nymph or Mayfly?


California Newt
(with out-of-focus water boatman above its tail)


Even Pesky Horse Flies Need A Drink of Water Sometimes
(fortunately they were not biting yet; maybe they don't go for blood
until it's time to reproduce)


Grappletail Basking In The Weeds


Leopard Lily With Cooper's Hawk Feather


Chipmunk On The Move
(the autofocus is quick, but there's a lag in the viewfinder after you take the picture,
so it's not possible to smoothly follow a moving subject)







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Tuesday, June 28, 2022

Sierra Buttes

 

Morning View of Sierra Buttes

Somehow I had never been to Sierra Buttes before, or anywhere on Hwy. 49 north of Tahoe for that matter. (Another first: being stuck in 102-degree heat during a traffic jam caused by an accident near Nevada City). I had to cut short my photographic exploration of California back around 2012-13, in part because I was spending too much money on gas, especially since I had been driving a Jeep Cherokee. I recall being horrified to be charged more than $4/gallon back then. On my return from Sierra Buttes on Monday (in a much more fuel-efficient Mazda 3) I felt lucky to get gas for under $6/gallon ($5.89 at a Pilot Flying J near Sacramento).

The trip to Sierra City was more of a much-needed R&R for my wife and I than a photo safari, but I did get a chance to do some photography while my wife enjoyed plein air painting in the relative cool of the mornings. We stayed at a place called the Sierra Pines Resort on the North Fork Yuba River. I was a little taken aback by how rustic the cabin was at first, dark and cave-like, but it had a kitchen and was in earshot of the river and close to the Buttes. 

Alas, we endured two days of PG&E power cutoffs that lasted several hours each time. When the power died, the soothing wind- and bird-song of the forest was immediately replaced by the noisy growling of a diesel generator which, to add insult to injury, only powered the restaurant, not the cabins. On our last morning I blew a circuit breaker when I ran the coffee pot, microwave, and toaster all at the same time. The front office was closed, but Pam found the breaker box hidden behind a framed picture on the wall near the front door, and breakfast was soon served. Hey, it was still more comfy than camping, especially given the afternoon heat all week.

We didn't do a lot of hiking despite being very close to the Pacific Crest Trail, but the one main hike we did was outstanding -- a short two-hour cardio workout to the Sierra Buttes Fire Lookout. The return trip, all downhill, only took an hour. Another time we took a very short walk on the PCT to reach a small waterfall in a lovely canyon close to the highway. As we left Monday morning, the Sierra Pines restaurant was doing a brisk business feeding PCT hikers who were loading up on pancakes and such before heading back out on the trail.

I was going to break up all these shots into multiple posts over several days, but I don't want to have to return to the computer so much this week, so I'm spilling 'em all at once. Click to view 'em larger.


Afternoon View of Sierra Buttes


Enjoying the Lakeside Breezes


Mule Ears & Larkspur Along Gold Lake Highway


Down by the River #1


Down by the River #2


Down by the River #3


Sierra Garter Snake Resting By The River



Exhibit at Kentucky Mine Museum

Lake Trout

Paddling Her Own Canoe

Painting by the Pond

California Camas


Trail to the Fire Lookout


Stairway to Sierra Buttes Fire Lookout


PCT Hiker Boxes


Google Maps Must Have Thought I Still Had The Jeep


What The Sign On The Right Said


Mountain Pride Penstemon


Near the Fire Lookout Trailhead


Paintbrush & Buttes


Paintbrush With Mariposa Lily


Paintbrush in the Mule Ears


Lorquin's Admiral Butterfly on Bitter Cherry Flowers


Three Wallflowers


Mariposa Lily with Jeffrey Pine Cones


Close View of Mariposa Lily


Three Mule Ears


Close View of Mule Ears

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Friday, June 17, 2022

Return to the Reef

Seal Cove Reef

I hadn't really planned to visit tidepools again so soon, but who can resist a minus 1.8-foot tide that's timed to let you sleep until it's light out? My plan was to head north this time, to either Duxbury or the reef below the Palomarin trailhead, but I ended up choosing the far shorter drive to Fitzgerald to save on gas.

The harbor seals once again did not realize which part of the beach has been closed for them, and a park ranger had to herd a bunch of us a hundred yards away from each of the groups on the reef in the aptly named Seal Cove. One of the groups appears on the left side of the image above (as usual, click images to view larger).

The most striking feature of the reef this morning was the wide swath of seaweed that covered quite a bit of the beach to a depth of maybe half a foot. It was interesting to walk through the slippery sea of weed with no idea what lay below -- whether smooth sand, jumbles of rocks, pools of water, or nests of sea serpents.

There was so much beautiful algae on the beach that I had to prod myself to get out on the reef. I roamed around for quite a while without finding any nudibranchs (always among my favorite prizes) and had to remind myself not to let the lack of slugs detract from the fascinating beauty of the tidepools. I know we're supposed to hate purple sea urchins, except in sushi, because they gobble up kelp forests, but they are so gorgeous in a tidepool, especially when the sun comes out. I couldn't remember the last time I went tidepooling on a sunny day. 

I mentioned to the park ranger that it seemed like sea star wasting disease was still a thing despite what I've heard about a comeback, but he said he's counted thirty in a day. I'm not sure that actually constitutes much of a counterpoint to my observation of seeing so few. Fitzgerald used to be crawling with several kinds of sea stars, including bat stars, leather stars, spiny stars, and the brilliant sun star, but now I feel lucky to find one or two ochre sea stars that haven't begun turning to gelatin.


Colors & Textures in the Wrack


Glassy Pool


Snail with Hat


Waning Gibbous Moon


Giant Green Anemone


The Naked and the Cloaked


Red & Purple Sea Urchins


White Spotted Sea Goddess (?)


Possibly Doriopsilla albopunctata


Basking in the Sun


Rough Around the Edges


Sculpin in the Pebbles

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