Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Birds of Prey Show

Eastern Screech Owl
Smallest owl with ear tufts in North America
~
This past weekend was the annual Beaver Brook Fall Festival. It was rather pathetic compared to past years filled with vendors and more people. This year, the only real highlight (aside sipping my first hot apple cider of the year - its tradition for me to only have my first one here each year) was the Birds Of Prey show put on by a nonprofit raptor rescue: Wingmasters They rescue injured, orphaned or sick raptors. They release to the wild when the birds are ready, but some are handicapped for life and must stay.

I took pics of all the birds they showed and educated us on, however the bright sunlight and white tent made for poor quality images. However, here they are with one fact I took away from the show for each (my favorite fact/story is for the Barn Owl at the bottom);
Northern Saw Whet Owl
Adults only weigh up to 3.2 ounces.
~
Red Tailed Hawk
When you hear "eagle calls" in movies - its usually the call from this hawk they dub in
~
Peregrine Falcon
Can travel between 100 - 200 miles per hour! (160 - 321 kph)
~
American Kestrel
Worlds smallest falcon. Yes. It's a falcon.
~
Great Horned Owl
Has no natural predators. Deaths usually are caused by man.
~
Golden Eagle (Lakota) with Wingmaster Julia (Lakota thinks Julia is her mate)
Has a wingspan of 6 feet
~
North American Barn Owl
Often found hunting voles in cemeteries back in colonial times because they would live in bell towers (and barns obviously). They would stop voles dead in their tracks by shrieking and stunning the vole. Couple that with a ghostly white face flying over the headstones, and many ghost stories around cemeteries arouse from the hunting techniques of this lovely owl.
(also.. I've seen Labyrinth... this is possibly a goblin king)
~


Friday, October 1, 2010

Lovely Autumn

Monarch on New England Asters



With the exception of the random tropical storm that came up the coast yesterday and today, autumn has decided to make its entrance for the year. Apples, pumpkins, corn - all at least a week or two early. The deciduous trees are changed for the most part, but it will be a short lived fire of color this year. We only had about 6 days of rain in over 2 months.


Beaver Brook Maple Tree Because of the lack of rain, I was rather surprised to even see any decent foliage this year. I'm sure when I leave my home tomorrow, after the tropical downpours and winds, all these orange and red oaks and maples and yellow birches and beeches will be branch bare.Maple Leaves at Beaver Brook
With autumn comes lovely asters, mums, sunflowers and a forest load of busy chipmunks and squirrels.





White Mums at Maple Hill Gardens








Most of the time, chipmunks are hard to capture with my little digital camera. Between their size and speed, my basic 5 year old camera can't deal with it. However, lucky in one way and tragic in another, I came across a sick chipmunk. This poor chipmunk actually came out of its hole in the ground and ran into my foot as if almost about to attack. I examined her and found there was nothing I could do for her - she was in the last stages of distemper. I took a picture of her, and put her back in her hole, careful not to come in direct contact with anything but the end of her tail. I'm sure she's gone by now, and wanted to include her here.






Cow Birds... lots of em


Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Ruggles Mine in Autumn

Grafton New Hampshire
Ruggles Mine, in Grafton NH is located on the top and side of Isinglass Mountain. Over 150 minerals are found here including beryl, mica, amethyst, rose and smokey quartz, garnet, etc. It also has uranium minerals like as gummite. I was lucky enough to mine near one of the owners and his workers right after they found a fresh deposit of this rare mineral. Now I'm the proud owner of some glowing green specimens that sadly didn't photograph well. Needless to say, I'm expecting my super powers or extra fingers to grow in any day now from the radioactive material. :D


This is the entrance tunnel that leads to the actual mine itself. The walls are granite, feldspar, lots of glittery mica and probably a lot of other things I didn't notice. Ruggles Mine is not an "underground" mine in the traditional sense. It's actually a pit mine - open air without the claustrophobia to egg on anxiety. Aside the steep hill, it's an easy trip.




This is the first view of the mine you get from the tunnel. The camera doesn't give you the "wow" factor it deserves. This is the only place I can think of, aside the sea, that was mammoth in size when I was a child, and still is today years later. Just for perspective, I took this shot with my father next to the pillar and got a bonus when I realized I caught this huffing and puffing lady climbing up the hill.






The mine has many caves. This is the only one that contains water - maybe only a few inches deep at most. I got some cool orbs on this photo too, if you expand the image, you'll seem them.





This shot is the mine from the middle up. That's a long hill to climb!









And lastly here's a lovely Garter Snake that lives in a wall of quartz crystal and aquamarines.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Gulls in Flight!

These are images I took with my trusty ole digital camera out at Lake Winnipesaukee's Ellacoya State Park. We went out there to swim, but all we did was bob waves thanks to constant 25 mile per hour gusts. This normally placid waterfront was plagued with whitecaps and 5 foot waves that were a blast to dive into. Even more intriguing to me were the gulls. They hovered near head level, seemingly hovering as they flew into the wind. Enjoy!



Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Summer Flora

Between a lovely trip to Pickity Place's Gardens and Maple Farm Gardens at Beaver Brook, I've no shortage of vegetation images this year. The above was a flower tucked away in the back of Pickity Place's garden. Pickity Place is a historic old farmhouse which served as the reference for illustrations in a very old printing of Little Red Riding Hood.

The blue flowers are also from Pickity Place. They reminded me of the 'Blue Girls' in my current writing project so I took the snapshot to remind me to work harder on my writings. lol















The mushroom was on a trail near Maple Hill Farm's gardens. If you click and expand it, it makes a whimsical wallpaper. So do fields of daisies...









And lastly I have 2 unknown flowers. The yellow one is from Pickity Place. It was unusual as it bloomed downward and compact. The other is from Beaver Brook and my sister and were intrigued by it, so I took a shot for her.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

June Compilation 2010

American Toad on Kidder Mountain
Wood Turtle Mama in Merrimack
Red Eft (eastern spotted newt in land phase)

Over the past 2 weeks, I've been taking a lot of random nature photos. I don't really have much of a story for any of them this time around, but these will give you a taste of my recent adventures (which have been sadly far and few but should pick up again soon).

Mountain Laurel Blooms at Monson

Waterlilies to the Sky


Dragonfly Buddy at Beaver Brook

Thursday, April 29, 2010

April Flowers

I need to identify this wild tree. It's usually the first to unfurl large green leaves. In late April and early May, it opens fairy rings of white flowers with crosses of tiny flower clusters in the middle. Every year, I tell myself I'll take time to ID it... still haven't yet.
Of course, I have to take a billion shots of my personal favorite. This is the painted trillium - a classic wildflower of the Heald Tract in Wilton. It takes 7 years for them to bloom... and the blooms only last 1 week a year.
This is the most unusual trillium I've ever seen. Never before have I seen one with 4 petals and 4 leaves. It's a genetic rarity. Almost all trilliums grow with only 3.



I discovered a nearby forest this year in which grows red trilliums - aka "Wakerobins". They're called wakerobins because they are fabled to bloom at the time when robins return from their wintering grounds in the south. I say "fabled" because the robins arrive about a month before these beautiful wildflowers bloom.

The same week, I traveled to the Maple Hill Shade Garden at Beaver Brook in Hollis, NH. It was perfect timing to photograph a Tulip Tree at the climax of its bloom. Of course, I couldn't resist taking an "inside" shot of one of the blooms.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

"Heavy" Snow

Over the past couple of days, our area of New Hampshire has been on the brink of freezing. As a result, the snowfall has been very wet and very heavy. With powdery, drier snow, the trees are not weighted and splashed in white, but with the past few storms, they're weighted with pounds upon pounds of thick snow.

These photos were from my walk today in Beaver Brook. I took the Whiting Trail down to the main trails. It was a tough walk. In many places, the trail was over knee deep in heavy snow; not the kind you can just trudge and kick through.
The last picture of the bridge and the pine hill I took carefully whilst driving into Wilton. Not bad considering the car was moving. Don't worry. There was no other cars around at the time and I was very careful. ;)

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Photobucket Crossover


Because I take more pictures than I can possibly blog about and because I could use some online backup for my files, I've put many images on photobucket. As of right now, I've uploaded most of my reptile and amphibian photos from the reporting program images I send to the state. I've also combed through about 4000 images to find a few flowers to make an album. Check them out!

NH Wild and Garden Flower Album

Wild NH Reptile & Amphibian Album

Friday, January 1, 2010

Bird Watching with My New Camera

I don't have much to write today, just photos to share which I took today at Beaver Brook's Bird Blind. I'm still getting the hang of my new camera. Almost all of the photos I took below are from at least 15 feet away and required using the digital zoom, so the quality isn't pristine, but I think they came out pretty nice.

Woodpecker eating suet.

American Robin

White Breasted Nuthatch

Dark Eyed Junco


American Goldfinch (I never saw these in winter before!)