I wanted to photograph the solar eclipse but didn't want to spend a bunch of money on a solar filter that I wouldn't use afterwards very often so I bought a 5 by 5 inch piece of solar paper that I sandwiched between two pieces of cardboard that had a hole the size of my lens cut out in them, then fastened that onto a cardboard tube that fit snugly around my camera lens. I put the homemade solar filter on a tripod and hooked up a remote trigger so my finger on the shutter button wouldn't cause the camera to shake while taking pictures.
The Lost Little Blue Herons
The heron rookery had just come into view when I spotted what at first glance appeared to be a small great egret but upon closer inspection had the wrong bill and feet color, size, and shape. I snapped several pictures to help with later identification at home and continued on my walk. After checking on the heron rookery and swapping SD cards on a trail camera I had on a nearby wetland, I returned home. When I got home I looked the new bird up and found that it was a juvenile little blue heron, a bird that was not normally found in northwest Ohio. Range map from Cornell with a red dot where these two were found I saw from my trail camera footage that there were two of them in the area. I have since been told that it is possible that they flew too far north after being sent away by their mother in a process called brood dispersal. This seems to be the most likely reason these vagrant birds showed up so ...


If it looks stupid but it works its not stupid -sun tsu art of war
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