Thursday, 29 August 2019

The Wannabe Tiger

Having finally got round to mowing all the long grass at the bottom of the garden I thought it a good idea to fix the trail camera on a low post looking at that area.

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The trail camera. IR night lighting at the top. Three passive infra red sensors at the bottom. (one pointing forwards and the others angled at 45 degrees). Camera in the middle.

Left it for a couple of days and discovered, though it worked, it worked too well.
The only stranger captured was this wannabe tiger strolling through:

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Camera set up to take three shots in fairly quick succession every time it is triggered.

Of course you can guess who always features at some time or other:

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But, there was a big problem. The branches, top left and right, waft about in the slightest breeze and keep triggering the camera during sunny daylight hours. That resulted in hundreds, and I mean hundreds, of photos with not a life form in sight and a lot of extra drain on the batteries. There is a lower setting for sensitivity but that risks missing anything of interest. For the moment it has been moved back to its original position.

I did consider a few other solutions.
1) set limits on the times it is operational.
2) use a higher pole and point the camera down more.
3) cut down the tree branches in its view.

With the first I would miss any daytime visitors.
The second wouldn't give me the profile view of visitors that I want.
I've done enough tree pruning for now. I want to keep some greenery.

Recently I made a start clearing the overgrown fruit cage.
There are more weeds and grass than anything else.
Then I can get rid of the blackcurrant bushes (not allowed to eat those any more).
Maybe plant more raspberry canes.
I stick to working outdoors before 9.30 a.m. to avoid the heat.

Wednesday, 28 August 2019

The 'Guess What' was ....

A few days ago I posted this close up

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which was part of

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a piece of cork tree bark.

Tuesday, 27 August 2019

Night Visitor

Every so often I put out the Floureon trail camera to see what night life there may be about.

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Until the latest session there was little of note to be seen. This time, on just one night over the couple of weeks it was operating, it captured something different. I know there are foxes about and felt sure they must visit my garden occasionally. Here at last is the proof.

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and half an hour later

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Since then I have cut down much of the long grass.
Pure coincidence I did that on the same day the fox visited.


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I don't put the camera out very often as it uses eight AA batteries.
Batteries work in two banks of four.
I must rig up a permanent 6V supply for it.
Then I can set it to take short video clips as well as stills.
Also I will fix it lower down to have a better view of smaller creatures.
This old camera has only 5M pixels and responds in 1 second.
I see many of the latest ones have a 12 - 16M pixel camera and a response time of less than 0.5 second. Tempting - if I get more night visitors.

Monday, 26 August 2019

Looking Waspish

Hoverfly on Thistle flower

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Taken with Nikon Coolpix S9050

Sunday, 25 August 2019

Harvest Time

The last local field of grain being harvested on a glorious sunny afternoon.

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Shot at 1920 x 1080 and 50 fps on the M5. Mainly at 150mm zoom.
Hand held in blustery conditions.
No extra processing in iMovie apart from shortening the video clips and adding a soundtrack.

Saturday, 24 August 2019

Guess What ....

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... this is a photograph of.

Thursday, 22 August 2019

Common Darter Dragonfly

First one obliged by allowing me to get within about four feet to photograph it while it rested in the garden.

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Then I found another when we went walkabout down the lane

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Both times they co-operated long enough to obtain some video



A bit wobbly as all were taken hand held.
All taken with the M5 and 18-150mm lens.
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