Category Archives: Nature Photos

This is how a camera dies

It begins with a simple mission: photograph a white-marked tussock moth caterpillar (Orgyia leucostigma) who has enjoyed two days meandering about the patio.

A white-marked tussock moth caterpillar (Orgyia leucostigma) crawling down the patio fence (2010_05_14_054641)

The larva spent most of that time on the outside edge of the ceiling.  Not easy to photograph up there given the high contrast of shooting at the sky.

A white-marked tussock moth caterpillar (Orgyia leucostigma) crawling on the patio fence (2010_05_14_054655)

But when it came down to the fence, I couldn’t resist the opportunity to grab some pictures.

A white-marked tussock moth caterpillar (Orgyia leucostigma) crawling on the patio fence (2010_05_14_054666)

While I was clicking away, I realized the camera sounded funny.  That usual SLR shutter sound was coming across sickly and labored.  Then I noticed the images didn’t look right.  And finally I saw what looked like something hanging in front of the lens.

(2010_05_14_054664)

And with each new picture it grew progressively worse.

(2010_05_14_054745)

Then the camera died.  Really, really, really died.

A bit of detective work poking at its innards revealed the second shutter curtain has broken (I originally thought it was jammed or loose).  Though the mirror and the first shutter curtain work normally, the second shutter curtain is in more pieces than it should be.  That has unfortunately jammed the entire shutter mechanism.

Now when I turn the camera on, it immediately goes to a fatal error.

This is traumatic, poppets.  It’s the kind of thing that’s worth a tear or two.  Me without a working camera?  It’s a travesty and a deep wound.

So I’m left with this question: Do I have it repaired or do I purchase a new camera?

Meanwhile, the collection of unpublished photos is quite large, hence there is no fear that this means an interruption in sharing the things I’ve seen.  What it does mean is that all new scenes are on hold.  Temporarily.

[This is another caterpillar that you shouldn’t touch.  Though not as dangerous as southern flannel moth caterpillars, white-marked tussock moth caterpillars can still deliver a troublesome allergic reaction if you come into contact with the setae—the hairs.]

Moments

Transient and fleeting.  A part of history as soon as they become the present.  Sometimes only captured by the mind’s eye and quickly faded into dim memories.

A Spotted cucumber beetle (Diabrotica undecimpunctata) on a common dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) (2010_03_14_051351)

Spotted cucumber beetle (Diabrotica undecimpunctata) on common dandelion (Taraxacum officinale)

A great blue heron (Ardea herodias) standing in the shallows (2009_07_26_027929)

Great blue heron (Ardea herodias)

A twinflagged jumping spider (Anasaitis canosa) hiding on an outside electrical socket (2009_04_26_016720)

Twinflagged jumping spider (Anasaitis canosa)

A ring-billed gull (Larus delawarensis) in flight  (2009_11_26_041016)

Ring-billed gull (Larus delawarensis)

A blue-ringed dancer (Argia sedula) perched on a blade of grass (2009_07_07_026225)

Blue-ringed dancer (Argia sedula)

A barn spider (Neoscona crucifera) hanging in the center of her web (2009_10_10_031194)

Barn spider (Neoscona crucifera)

A swift setwing (Dythemis velox) perched on a stem (2009_07_06_026092)

Swift setwing (Dythemis velox)

The other bagworm

Two bagworm moths live around these parts.  One, the very small and oft unseen Dahlica triquetrella (seen in the first image here) never grows longer than about half an inch/twelve millimeters.  Being so thin and so well camouflaged, they’re usually mistaken for small bits of dirt or wood.

The other species, the evergreen bagworm moth (Thyridopteryx ephemeraeformis), can have bags up to two inches/50 mm in length, yet their size does little to make them more obvious.  Take this one as an example:

An evergreen bagworm moth (Thyridopteryx ephemeraeformis) hanging from a tree limb (2009_07_04_025856)

Hanging on a tree like that, they easily can be confused with some kind of seed pod or cone growing from the tree itself.

An evergreen bagworm moth (Thyridopteryx ephemeraeformis) attached to the side of a building (2009_07_04_025850)

But when they’re stuck to the side of a building—or in this case, the side of an outhouse—even the best camouflage fails to hide the fact that something more than plant material lurks beneath all that collected debris.

Which brings me to the sky is falling…

As I stood in the riparian woods along Dixon Branch watching a yellow-crowned night-heron (Nyctanassa violacea), something dropped ever so slowly onto the top of my head.  I reached up and gently lifted it out of my hair.

An evergreen bagworm moth (Thyridopteryx ephemeraeformis) hanging from a thread of silk (2009_07_25_027685)

Ah, an evergreen bagworm moth.  It dangled from a tether of silk that stretched some 30 feet/ten meters into the treetops.  Given the length of thread and the light weight of the larva, slight breezes that I couldn’t even feel sent the little critter swinging like a pendulum.  And that its descent was painfully slow meant it spent more time swinging than it did dropping toward the ground.

An evergreen bagworm moth (Thyridopteryx ephemeraeformis) dangling from a thread of silk (2009_07_25_027686)

From that heavily cropped version of the previous image you can see the larva leaning its head back through the top of the bag.

It is unfortunate that when I decided to swap lenses for better close-ups, the camera likewise decided to die.  Very dead.  And why did that happen?  Sweat.

I apparently had been dripping large amounts of sweat from my forehead directly onto the seams of the camera body.  How much I don’t know, but I do know I had to blow-dry the innards for 15 minutes before it would even power on.  Lesson learned.

Phalaropes

Almost a year to the day from when last I saw them, Wilson’s phalaropes (Phalaropus tricolor) are back at White Rock Lake.  Passersby in the scheme of things, stopping to wine and dine on the freshly awash floodplain.

Wilson's phalaropes (Phalaropus tricolor) swimming in shallow water (2009_05_04_018210)

In a case of reversed sexual dimorphism when compared to the birds most people see, like cardinals and warblers, female phalaropes sport showy colors while the males have more subdued hues.

Wilson's phalaropes (Phalaropus tricolor) swimming in shallow water (2009_05_04_018214)

Yet neither gender can be called unattractive.

Wilson's phalaropes (Phalaropus tricolor) swimming in shallow water (2009_05_04_018144)

And finding them here as they make their way northward always presents me with a gift.  Even if they don’t like photo sessions and always stay too far afoot for better images.

Mother’s Day bouquet

Showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa) (20080422_04421)

Showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa)

Firewheel (a.k.a Indian blanket or blanket flower; Gaillardia pulchella) (2009_05_31_021051)

Firewheel (a.k.a Indian blanket or blanket flower; Gaillardia pulchella)

Seedbox (Ludwigia alternifolia) (20080921_12589)

Seedbox (Ludwigia alternifolia)

Purple horsemint (a.k.a. lemon beebalm, horsemint, lemon-mint or plains horsemint; Monarda citriodora) (2009_05_31_021019)

Purple horsemint (a.k.a. lemon beebalm, horsemint, lemon-mint or plains horsemint; Monarda citriodora)

Wild carrot (a.k.a. bishop's lace or Queen Anne's lace; Daucus carota) (2009_05_31_021020)

Wild carrot (a.k.a. bishop’s lace or Queen Anne’s lace; Daucus carota)

Berlandier's yellow flax (Linum berlandieri) (2009_05_31_021054)

Berlandier’s yellow flax (Linum berlandieri)

Downy phlox (a.k.a. prairie phlox or fragrant phlox; Phlox pilosa) (2009_04_11_015027)

Downy phlox (a.k.a. prairie phlox or fragrant phlox; Phlox pilosa)

Texas greeneyes (Berlandiera betonicifolia) (2009_05_31_021013)

Texas greeneyes (Berlandiera betonicifolia)