I was partly wrong the other day when I said only slugs and snails like all the wet weather we have been having. I forgot to include the Blackbirds. They love it when the ground becomes waterlogged as it drives the worms to the surface!
Here is the snail I saw the other day:
There have been quite a few different fledgelings visiting the garden, usually with the adults:
Have a great weekend observing the wildlife around you.
Friday, 6 July 2012
Thursday, 5 July 2012
Great Tits - House Sparrow
This morning I spent some time watching adult Great Tits feeding a brood of three or four fledglings. I wonder if this is a second hatching or a pair who left things late in getting started.
They were right down the bottom of the garden so this is a small crop:
Who ordered the chopped peanut?

The House Sparrows which nest under the tiles of my property have raised quite a few babies and the parents are used to me walking right under their nesting site. This adult male was quite content for me to get reasonably close for a portrait shot:
They were right down the bottom of the garden so this is a small crop:
Who ordered the chopped peanut?
The House Sparrows which nest under the tiles of my property have raised quite a few babies and the parents are used to me walking right under their nesting site. This adult male was quite content for me to get reasonably close for a portrait shot:
Wednesday, 4 July 2012
Something Has to Like This Weather
Hardly a day seems to go by without several doses of heavy rain. Today it was a case of sunny intervals mixed with showers where the rain came down like stair rods. The only creatures in my garden which seem to enjoy continual damp conditions are slugs and snails, like this one spotted as the rain stopped for a few minutes:
Tuesday, 3 July 2012
Guess What
I have an indoor plant which, personally, I have never seen flower before.
It has several long spikes each tipped with a group of buds.

This plant is in a 7cm pot, needs lots of water and the edges of the leaves are trimmed with what look like long spikes.
I wonder if you can guess what the plant is.
Answer in a few days when the flowers open.
Intervalometer:
As an addendum to my description of the intervalometer in my last post - it is not limited to a maximum of 399 shots. That is the maximum fixed number of shots which can be chosen. As well as that it can be set for an infinite count where it will keep taking time lapse shots until it is switched off.
It has several long spikes each tipped with a group of buds.
This plant is in a 7cm pot, needs lots of water and the edges of the leaves are trimmed with what look like long spikes.
I wonder if you can guess what the plant is.
Answer in a few days when the flowers open.
Intervalometer:
As an addendum to my description of the intervalometer in my last post - it is not limited to a maximum of 399 shots. That is the maximum fixed number of shots which can be chosen. As well as that it can be set for an infinite count where it will keep taking time lapse shots until it is switched off.
Sunday, 1 July 2012
Time Lapse Visited Again
Regular readers may remember my earlier experiments using the 350D and a home brew intervalometer to make a time lapse video of cloud formations. A few months ago I looked in to buying a commercial intervalometer (a gadget which fires the camera at set intervals). The Canon one is more that a bit expensive at over £100 but I found there are third party makes which are considerably cheaper at £12 to £25 a time. I bought one of the cheap ones from Amazon UK and have finally got Round Tuit and given it a trial.
The unit can be set to any delay before taking a photo, any delay time between shots and any number of shots up to 399. It runs on two AAA cells and has a decent sized clear LCD display. You have to buy one with the correct plug to suit the make / model of camera you want to connect it to.
Here is the camera set up with the intervalometer:

A close view of the LCD display.
Top right is an LED which goes green two seconds before a shot as it sends a signal to focus the camera then red as it fires the camera.
(the dark line is a reflection) .....

..... showing 7 seconds to the next shot and the next shot is number 335 (counting down from 399)
For this video shots were taken at 15 second intervals:
Canon 350D, Canon EF 70-200mm f2.4 lens
Set to 70mm, manual focus, auto exposure.
The Windows program 'Images to Video' was used to make the still shots into a video.
I'm not sure why the camera seems to wobble a bit, maybe the gusty wind though the tripod seemed very firm. On reflection I think it was caused by the image stabilizer in the lens making slight alterations. I must remember to switch that off for such activities.
The unit can be set to any delay before taking a photo, any delay time between shots and any number of shots up to 399. It runs on two AAA cells and has a decent sized clear LCD display. You have to buy one with the correct plug to suit the make / model of camera you want to connect it to.
Here is the camera set up with the intervalometer:
A close view of the LCD display.
Top right is an LED which goes green two seconds before a shot as it sends a signal to focus the camera then red as it fires the camera.
(the dark line is a reflection) .....
..... showing 7 seconds to the next shot and the next shot is number 335 (counting down from 399)
For this video shots were taken at 15 second intervals:
Canon 350D, Canon EF 70-200mm f2.4 lens
Set to 70mm, manual focus, auto exposure.
The Windows program 'Images to Video' was used to make the still shots into a video.
I'm not sure why the camera seems to wobble a bit, maybe the gusty wind though the tripod seemed very firm. On reflection I think it was caused by the image stabilizer in the lens making slight alterations. I must remember to switch that off for such activities.
Saturday, 30 June 2012
A Palette in the Garden
What, you may well ask, is the connection between an artists paint palette and a floral display. The answer can be found on The Poke, one of my favourite sites which brightens up this dreary world we live in these days. As it says in their header - Time Well Wasted.
The idea is a brilliant piece of lateral thinking and I love the finished product.
What am I rabbiting on about? - look HERE.
The idea is a brilliant piece of lateral thinking and I love the finished product.
What am I rabbiting on about? - look HERE.
Friday, 29 June 2012
Friday at the Flicks - Juvenile Collared Dove - Rainy Day
When the juvenile Collared Dove visited a few days ago I managed to shoot a couple of pieces of video:
A few shots from yesterday - torrential rain - fast moving clouds - Penny paddling - muddy sunset where the clouds were more shades of brown than reds and oranges.
Both videos have soundtracks made with music apps on the iPad.
SketchSynth 3D lite for the Dove
Loop Twister for the rain.
For those who are interested - one way of getting the sound output from the iPad to the PC is to use a gizmo like the Behringer U-Control UCA222 which takes the sound from the earphone socket of the iPad and sends it to a USB port. It is powered from the USB port so needs no extra batteries or power supplies. On the PC I use the program Audacity to record the sound and save as an mp3 file:

The photo shows the iPad running the app Loop Twister and the Behringer unit is the red box on the right hand side.
A few shots from yesterday - torrential rain - fast moving clouds - Penny paddling - muddy sunset where the clouds were more shades of brown than reds and oranges.
Both videos have soundtracks made with music apps on the iPad.
SketchSynth 3D lite for the Dove
Loop Twister for the rain.
For those who are interested - one way of getting the sound output from the iPad to the PC is to use a gizmo like the Behringer U-Control UCA222 which takes the sound from the earphone socket of the iPad and sends it to a USB port. It is powered from the USB port so needs no extra batteries or power supplies. On the PC I use the program Audacity to record the sound and save as an mp3 file:
The photo shows the iPad running the app Loop Twister and the Behringer unit is the red box on the right hand side.
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