birds

General discussion about the sport of hang gliding
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: birds

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://www.texastribune.org/2020/07/02/texas-border-wall-private/
Privately-funded border wall in Texas at risk of falling if it's not fixed | The Texas Tribune
Jeremy Schwartz / Perla Trevizo - 2020/07/02

That pattern repeated in Texas. Kolfage took aim at the National Butterfly Center as well as Rev. Roy Snipes, the parish priest at La Lomita church, an iconic sanctuary built along the Rio Grande in 1899. Both are critics of the private wall effort and previously convinced lawmakers to exempt their properties from future government wall-building plans.

Kolfage tweeted that they were "promoting trafficking of children," and that the butterfly center was home to a "rampant sex trade."
Gawd, I wish I'd known that while I was down there a bit under six months ago. What a waste. (You must need a secret code word or sumpin'.)
The center's executive director Marianna Treviño-Wright also received death threats. One irate Facebook user told her, "You need to all be in jail or hanged."

It was "shocking" to be on the receiving end of such hate, said Treviño-Wright, who worries about the financial impact on the 100-acre wildlife center, which educates the public about biodiversity and relies on grants and donations.
This private wall section that some of Trump's enemies have put up to make him look bad is on the bend of the river immediately downstream of the Butterfly Center.

About my only hope for any future of this planet is that this virus does something to significantly clean up the gene pool. (Hey Bob... Consider going maskless to a big Keep America Great Again rally to show your unqualified and undiminished support. (1020 signatures so far.))
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: birds

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=63272
The Storm Blew By
Col Rushton - 2020/08/06 12:53:33 UTC

I reckon your National Weather Service got it fairly right-Florida just missed it but their warnings were right elsewhere.

At least five people have been killed as Tropical Storm Isaias swept through US states on the Atlantic Coast. From North Carolina up to New York, Isaias left more than 3.4 million residents without power. It spawned tornadoes, uprooted trees, damaged homes and caused floods and fires.

Stop cherry picking and look for trusted sources for a balanced view of "whatever"..

There's more than one "storm" coming for everybody on this planet, the greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance-it is the illusion of knowledge..
James Gustave Speth

I used to think that top environmental problems were biodiversity loss, ecosystem collapse and climate change. I thought that thirty years of good science could address these problems. I was wrong. The top environmental problems are selfishness, greed and apathy, and to deal with these we need a cultural and spiritual transformation. And we scientists don't know how to do that.
Everyone I know here in OZ is also wishing you guys a positive outcome in Nov -

Here's the Juicemedia reminding Aussies how the voting system works before our last election..

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bleyX4oMCgM
Got off fairly easily right here on the high ground. In mid morning heavy rain and the trees started swaying a bit for a short interval - nowhere near what you'd get from just a nasty gust front. Lost power mid morning but got it back after about twelve hours with the refrigerator in surprisingly good shape. And had enough juice in the laptop and iPhone to stay connected and batteries kept NPR coming in. Blue skies, light air most of the day - with several short heavy downpours.

That quote really hits the nail on the head. We're watching our planet being irreversibly demolished. Same way hang gliding has been demolished by the same pieces o' shit for the same reasons. And I realized a long time back that NOTHING would ever turn that around.

Praying we can get that motherfucker out of the White House and into prison for the rest of his life - at an absolute minimum - as soon as possible.
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: birds

Post by Tad Eareckson »

One of the many reasons I've been depressed recently and not so recently is 'cause of all the stuff I no longer see. Even seeing something killed on the side of lets you know that until recently at least one of them was still around. Much easier and slightly less depressing to list the kills I DO see rather than the ones I haven't for years (often many) - Raccoon, Possum, Gray Squirrel, Woodchuck, White-Tail.

A few weeks ago I got a Black Racer with about a mile of road to go to back home - three feet maybe.

At about 2020/08/26 11:00 EDT I stepped out front door and something big, black, heavy EXPLODED off the steps and hit the shrubs across the sidewalk at about Mach 0.6. The front faces east and the area was baking in strong direct sunlight.

I used to see Rat Snakes out front at least several times a season but I've never seen one react like this and was thinking Racer - four feet or just shy. I saw no patterning. Went into some holly shrubbery I'd given some brutal years overdue cutting back just yesterday afternoon.

With that advantage I picked up the back third as it was slowly creeping into the dense cover on the far side. Repositioned myself around on the east/sunny side and there was another explosive movement up through the foliage to about five feet with an abrupt stop.

Knew exactly where it had to be but never again got another glimpse of at inch of it anywhere - despite putting in a fair bit of time and effort (to the delight of the local Tiger Mosquito population). Didn't wanna disturb it further and also wasn't wild about losing the two or three ounces of blood which is the usual cost of dealing with this species. And I felt I'd seen enough of it to eliminate Rat Snake as a suspect.

Those steps have been swarming with Five-Lined Skinks this year and these are on the menu for Racers but I think the sun was the draw for this situation - wouldn't have been easy given the huge size differential.
Steve Davy
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Re: birds

Post by Steve Davy »

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Tad Eareckson
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Re: birds

Post by Tad Eareckson »

I unfortunately don't have Netflix but this guy's gonna be on Fresh Air...

http://www.npr.org/programs/fresh-air/
Fresh Air : NPR

...today and I'll definitely be tuned in. And if ya miss it they'll have it online by tomorrow at the latest.

This:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Pg2CDCm34w


is the least scary and most irritating wild animal "attack" video I've ever seen. If you wanna kill and eat something you don't try scare, intimidate it. She's OBVIOUSLY just trying to move this guy (I'll stop short of asshole) along away from her kids. I might have been walking backwards but I'd have been savoring every second until she'd decided I was safely out of range.

A rattler doesn't rattle 'cause he wants to bite you. A rattler rattles just to keep everybody safe and avoid conflict. The rest of the animal kingdom managed to grasp this concept millions of years ago. And I'm sure that was also the case for the first humans to make it to these continents.

Compare/Contrast this Coyote:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NqVE9qfg7yI


He's not trying to scare the guy. He wants to kill him and eat him - not necessarily in that order.
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: birds

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Pg2CDCm34w
ORIGINAL - Cougar Attack in Utah | Mountain Lion Stalks Me For 6 Minutes!
Kyle Burgess - 2020/10/12

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Pg2CDCm34w


I found what I thought were bobcats on the trail during a run. Turns out they were cougar cubs and their mother was not happy to see me. She escorted me for over six minutes to get me away from her cubs. Although she was acting very aggressive, the cougar had no intent on hurting me. The mother cougar was most likely caught off guard and did what she had to do to protect her cubs. Mama, cubs, and I are safe.
Incredible piece of video - although quality and sound leave a bit to be desired. And I think seventeen stills work better than the running time of six and a quarter minutes. Kyle has the situation exactly right. Pity he wasn't acting quite accordingly at the time on Saturday evening.

The sequence says it all. I've left the images continuous such that if you "zoom out" you can save yourself some scrolling and get at least three to appear in a row.

ImageImageImageImageImageImageImageImageImageImageImageImageImageImageImageImageImage

01-25110
- 01 - chronological order
- -2 - minutes
- 51 - seconds
- 10 - frame (30 fps)

01-25110 - 02-25120 - 03-25126 - 04-25201 - 05-25204 - 06-25208 - 07-25213 - 08-25411 - 09-25419 - 10-25423 - 11-25426 - 12-25428 - 13-25506 - 14-25512 - 15-25517 - 16-25521 - 17-25612

Slate Canyon Trail appears to start heading up into Cougar Country at about 40°13'30.02" N 111°37'00.24" W. The title shot is 13-25506. Note the dust cloud Kitty has kicked up in the last couple of frames. Quite a display of controlled power.

P.S. Fascinating interview with octopus student Craig Foster this afternoon.
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: birds

Post by Tad Eareckson »

While working yesterday on my previous post (analysis of activity on the Worlds largest hang gliding community and smallest local coffee shop) I stumbled upon:

http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=36874
The test fly at Lennox which became my next sports glider..
Col Rushton - 2020/10/25 20:13:26 UTC

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s7piahDQgSw
and decided to give it a spin as his videos tend to be of pretty good quality.

IMMEDIATELY recognized the site and IMMEDIATELY started thinking Butcherbird attack.

http://www.kitestrings.org/post5950.html#p5950

And just over a second and a half beyond the four minute mark... I guess the attacks are so routine that nobody thinks they're worthy of any mention. Even the bird looks like he's just attacking 'cause it's a just a stupid site requirement.

01-12709
- 01 - chronological order
- -1 - minutes
- 27 - seconds
- 09 - frame (30 fps)

Nice shot of the launch / top landing area.

01-12709
http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50554768516_ba3b62f857_o.png
Image

28°48'27.16" S 153°36'12.08" E

02-21627
http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50554902702_e1bb961be5_o.png
Image
03-40129
http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50554035788_e1dacdb1a9_o.png
Image

Nope. There's no possible way to drive these things off - let alone bring them down. Might as well park for a bit and take in the view.

04-40224
http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50554902387_e0863abea4_o.png
Image
05-42318
http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50554768151_12b42df771_o.png
Image
06-42420
http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50554768036_b9dcee937b_o.png
Image
07-42426
http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50554902162_0318548e7c_o.png
Image
08-44428
http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50554902112_b2bce65aa8_o.png
Image

Must be moulting season in the Southern Hemisphere.

09-51509
http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50554035423_49dc3af39f_o.png
Image
10-51521
http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50554035348_ee3ec9ffac_o.png
Image

It's hard to get much farther east of this place on the Australian continent.

11-60606
http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50554035303_4d258bea08_o.png
Image
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: birds

Post by Tad Eareckson »

Went out on my first Jupiter/Saturn mission last evening. They're following the path of the Sun - in Jupiter-Saturn order, local sunset for me was 16:44 EST, and:

http://in-the-sky.org/data/planets.php?day=11&month=12&year=2020
Objects in your sky: The planets - In-The-Sky.org

said the sky would darken enough for them to appear at 17:03 and 17:21 respectively.

Sky was about as clear as one could hope for, temperature was pretty mild, loaded up all the weaponry, dressed, rolled at sunset to:

39°03'02.83" N 076°39'08.30" W

to get away from the trees and give my what I thought would be a good horizon. Found out upon arrival that there was some high terrain which screwed me out of the hoped for horizon but set up and started looking anyway.

On the iPhone I have Skywalk 2. It identifies your location, gives you a sky map, guides you to your selected target - position the phone accordingly and you're looking at the same sky on the real deal and your display.

Although it's worked great in the past it was totally demented on this occasion and was guiding me way the hell to the west of sunset and below the horizon so I tossed that and switched to freestyle mode.

While the light was fading and I was striking out an assembly of untold hundreds of noisy Canada Geese were heading south to my west for bedtime quarters.

I'd gotten it in my head that the planets would be pretty low on the horizon but things were still pretty light down there and I was getting zilch in the way of anything shining through. (Using the 95 millimeter scope at 30 power.) So I started going higher where the sky got progressively darker to see what it would take and... OH! WOW! (If it had been a snake...)

Jupiter and its Galilean Moons - Io, Europa, Ganymede, Callisto - Saturn and its rings. Brilliant, beautifully lit, reddish bands of the former and separation between the planet and rings on the latter, both in the field of view with the scope at minimum zoom. WAY higher than I'd been expecting but still a very comfortable viewing angle.

Relocated back down to:

39°02'53.22" N 076°39'05.09" W

in the ballpark of my usual area and played around a bit more. Tons of cars going by, at least a quarter of them would've known what I was doing, nobody stopped. That bit was a little depressing.

Packed up and drove home, the pair was still blazing through the leafless tree branches at the top of the driveway. Lit up the laptop and went to Wikipedia to educate myself more about my targets. Tried to see if I could recalibrate Skywalk and return it to functionality.

Pretty solid overcast at present this morning, long term forecast is rather crappy but says I have a good shot Friday, supposed to do the Lower Kent Christmas Bird Count Sunday in shit weather, Great Conjunction Monday (also the Solstice) is looking grim...

Do what you can while you can with this one.
---
2020/12/12 19:50:00 UTC

Cleared up pretty good, will probably score again this evening. Long term forecast has gotten less dismal - 2020/12/18 looks good, 2020/12/21 not bad.

Played with the iPhone a fair bit. I think there was an issue with the magnetic compass, did some recalibration stuff...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86yUpUt8U6s
The REAL iPhone Compass Calibration Tutorial
Benjohn Barnes - 2010/06/08

Seems to be working OK now.
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: birds

Post by Tad Eareckson »

Prepped for the outing, stuck around by the TV long enough watch Navy blow their shot at a touchdown by a quarter inch, headed back to:

39°02'44.20" N 076°38'42.81" W

several minutes after 17:00 just as my planets were leaving a broken cloud mass - and I think it was drifting the other away anyway.

Great timing, beautiful lighting, I could get Saturn and Jupiter and all its moons in the field of view at 50X.

Nobody stopping again. The only individual who came by on foot was a jogger. I called an invite but maintaining his pace was way more important than this once-in-many-lifetimes experience opportunity.

A car turned into the drive and I flagged him for an invite but he was packed with a pregnant wife and a pile of little kids in need of getting home ASAP. OK, sorry to bother you...

BUT... Maybe fifteen minutes later he was back on the way out with the (too) little kids to get something to eat, stopped, came over, checked things out, had a blast. That was a pleasant change.

Thought I'd have a shot back in the neighborhood around:

39°02'44.20" N 076°38'42.81" W

Packed up and headed back. Yeah - great. Set up, locked on. It was REALLY warm (and I'd overdressed) and people were strolling, walking dogs, roller blading, pulling in driveways... I drummed up some business, things snowballed a bit, soon had a small neighborhood event going. Lotsa people blown away. Walked the rest of the way back up to the house to retrieve the step stool to accommodate a couple less tall types.

The people situation was really good but the horizon one not so much and branches eventually started shutting the location down. (And we were looking through a lot more atmosphere and that didn't seem to be helping anyway.) But I'd told people I'd be back at that location - Woodrail Drive - every evening on in doable weather for as long as the orbits would accommodate.

Then I figured we could start there - where the people situation was far superior - and, if folk were interested, relocate to Cecil Avenue and the pastures - with the superior horizon situation.

Monday and Wednesday look like washouts, ditto for Sunday plus the Bird Count, peak conjunction on the Solstice is partly cloudy and we should be able to live with partly cloudy given the two and three quarter hour window. (Not like the total solar where we had a window a wee bit over two and a quarter minutes and it would've takes so little to wipe us out.)

After peak Saturn races beyond Jupiter towards the Sun and we lose it after 12/28. (And I guess we're seeing that 'cause what's actually happening is that Earth is spinning around the Sun close and fast and making it look like Jupiter's being left behind when the actual case is the opposite.)

Stay tuned.
---
P.S. Davis Show was down at least by early yesterday (12/12) and remains so as of this posting time.
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: birds

Post by Tad Eareckson »

Another Conjunction mission successfully completed.

Day started for me at 05:30 with Venus blazing up in the east well ahead of the Sun and doing a pretty good job for a long time in the clear sky in that direction. Things started clouding up as the day wore on but it was high thin stuff with lotsa blue holding on and I wasn't too worried. Spent the later afternoon getting geared up for another block party with three tripods for two scopes and my Canon binocular.

Day was warm again, got on my spot at 17:05 a minute after Jupiter was supposed to first appear and got it immediately sans glass through the thin stuff, started extracting gear from the car, couldn't find it again for a bit after I turned back. I think the clouds had briefly overcome it.

I'd been hoping for a mob scene - thinking one would be inevitable based upon all the folk blown away the previous evening. Didn't happen. A little cooler, Sunday versus Saturday evening, thanks - been there done that last night... But there was a little activity in the yards farther in along my street - one guy around my generation and a flock of noisy kids about half of whom were too little. Got him and them plus a maybe high school junior sister to the station, had the step stool ready to go, the guy and three old enough were appropriately blown away.

Went back into solo mode after a while, clouds ate things up a bit before the trees would've. And I wouldn't have felt much like going back to the pastures for just me and nobody else the least bit interested anyway.

Tomorrow's still looking like a total washout.
---
2020/12/14 12:45:00 UTC
- A couple of the kids caught a Geminid meteor or two while I was facing and talking to them and they were facing me.
- Only the first half of today is gonna be a washout. Should get another shot this evening.
---
Saw the Davis Show forum back up at 23:30 UTC but the newsletter's still dead. Situation unchanged as of this post.
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