Thursday, July 31, 2014

Aloe


Opening, originally uploaded by ParsecTraveller.

This is just one of many aloes that can be seen in the Desert Botanical Garden in Phoenix. They are such cool plants!
The most striking one I've seen, however, is the spiral aloe. Its leaves grow in a perfect geometric spiral in multiple rows. Truly a spectacular plant to behold.

Summer's Eve at Hollow Rock


This is the first image I've made at Hollow Rock in quite some time. Hollow Rock is one of my favorite places to photograph in winter, but for some reason I don't go there much in the summer. I don't know why, since it is a great place to shoot no matter what the season. At any rate, this image was made at 9:37 p.m. It is a 30 second exposure shot with the aid of a 3-stop reverse-graduated neutral-density filter. The hardest part about making this image was tolerating the mosquitoes. They were AWFUL!

Friday, July 25, 2014

Tennessee Aquarium and Chickamauga

I got to sleep in! Bob got up and ran for an hour. He didn't realize there was a half-marathon in Chattanooga this morning or he would have signed up for it. He was bummed he missed it.



At 10:00 am, we were at the Tennessee Aquarium to learn about aquatic life from the Appalachians down the creeks, streams and rivers to the Mississippi River Delta. What a fascinating place. AAA calls it a "Gem" in their TourBook, we agree.





The River Journey building had a special exhibit on sea horses, pipefishand sea dragons. I am so interested in those creatures and the exhibit did not disappoint. We saw different-colored seahorses, weedy sea dragons and leafy sea dragons--so unusual-looking. I can't wait to get home and post pictures.




Weedy seadragon.






Potbelly seahorse.






Leafy seadragon.



From the special exhibit, we took a longescalator
ride to the fourth floor where we started our river journey in the
forest aviary. All kinds of birds flitted above us, not many at our
level. We also saw two otters in their den--it was their bedtime as
they're more active at night.




The
tour through the building took us down ramps past three- and four-story
aquariums showcasing fish from the local rivers, lakes,
reservoirsandmangrove swamps. Off to the sides of the ramps, each
floor had exhibits which chronicled the life cycles of alligators,
crocodiles, frogs, salamanders, turtles, fish (from piranha to koi to
giant catfish to trout to shiners to minnows to gars to beluga sturgeon
to bass, etc.), snakes and more. Bob was most impressed with the
international river displays. The diversity and variety was amazing!
Wemeandered and wandered to wonder.




Follow the Tennessee River fauna from the mountains to the ocean.














Ducks and turtles.



After we finished the River Journey in two hours, we walked next door to the Ocean Journey building. Our first "room" in this building was the tropics. Our journey started with the sting rays...the first two were unique--one black with white polka dots and the other was a copper/brown pattern--from tropical rivers in South America, Asia and Africa. In the center of the tropics display area was a touch tank where we could "pet" a sting ray.








Bob at the touch tank.

A side area housed butterflies of all colors and types. Very pretty.



The Ocean Journey building had a special display on jellyfish. Even though we had seen a display on jellyfish years ago at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, we spent some time checking out this exhibit. Jellyfish are so weird, but almost hypnotic to watch as they pulse in the water. Large aquariums housed sharks, rays, penguins, lookdowns, sea turtles and giant Japanese spider crabs. To tour this building took an hour.




Giant Japanese spider crabs.




Bob appearing ghostly in the jellyfish tank.

From the aquarium, we drove up the hill to the Hunter Art District on the bluffs. We found a bakery (!) and went in. The proprietress started explaining all the kinds of bread she had. As soon as she got to the cinnamon rolls, which looked divine, we stopped her, bought our cinnamon rolls, and ate them as we walked aroundthe small art gallery parkoverlooking the Tennessee River. Grades: art: B; cinnamon rolls: A+, view overlooking the river: A+; weather: A (sunny, not a cloud in the sky and about 68 degrees).




Good bakery in Hunter Arts District.

There is so much to do in Chattanooga!



But wait, there's more; although this next attraction takes us into northern Georgia. For the rest of the day, we explored Civil War history at Chickamauga-Chattanooga National Military Park.






Cravens House.








View from Lookout Mountain--Point Park.




Chickamauga and Chattanoga National Military Park, Lookout Mountain.









Starting at Cravens House and Point Park atop Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, we ended up at the Chickamauga Battlefield in Georgia.



At the Chickamauga Battlefield Visitor Center, we read history, watched a 25-minute movie, then drove a 7-mile cell phone audio tour around the battlefield. At each of eight battlefield sites, we called a phone number, then entered the number for each part of the tour we were on. Bob turned on his cell phone speaker and we had an audio tour the new high-tech way. Civil War history comes alive when you're on the battlefield and can see the forests and fields where the fighting and strategies took place.














Civil War Re-enactment Encampment





As we drive to the last audio tour marker, I commented that it was getting to be deer time of day ("deer o'clock" as we call early morning and late-afternoon- into-dusk). Not less than two minutes after I said it, there were four deer in the woods next to us. At our last stop, we saw about 14 deer across a field from us. "Deer o'clock" indeed.



From Georgia, we headed north to Dayton, Tennessee, home of the famous Scopes Trials (deciding whether schools could teach evolution instead of creationism). We are spending the night in the Best Western in anticipation of an early morning visit to Fall Creek Falls State Park,thenon to Mammoth Cave National Park, which we'd like to tour tomorrow afternoon.



I better get some sleep! Travel Bug out.

Monday, July 21, 2014

A little behind


We found a burrow that looked lived-in, and set up the game camera to spy on the occupant. There were not as many photos as we'd expected though -- not enough to prove this an active burrow. It's possible these armadillo passers-by are just checking it out. (Who knows, maybe the previous resident left behind something tasty!)





I believe these pictures represent at least three different individuals. The last one looks like a mama about ready to pop. Which reminds me, Happy Mother's Day!
-----
Between various volunteer "jobs" and some large wholesale orders, I'm like that first armadillo above: a little behind. Got to make soap like a crazy woman next week!

Saturday, July 12, 2014

Found?

So looking round for the missing abseilers I spotted their van, and guessed that they must be in there getting kitted out in all their gear.
But THEN this team came into sight, and I understood - what else would you do before launching yourself off a tall building but fortify yourself with a strong brew and a bacon roll. Or perhaps that Scottish delicacy, a Lorne sausage roll. I know I would (tho not the Lorne sausage).

Friday, July 11, 2014

Lake Superior Ice Cubes


































I absolutely LOVE abstract Lake Superior ice, and I think this definitely fits that description! I don't know what causes the ice to form in such a way, but this sure is fascinating. Jessica said "it looks like someone dumped their cooler out!" It was this comment that gave me the idea for the image title. This is right along the water's edge of Lake Superior at Hollow Rock Resort in Grand Portage, MN and was taken with my Canon 100-400mm lens.