Saturday, 11 June 2011

  • Amazing raptors! Eagles, owls, and hawks!

    falcon 12-6-09
    All right! Ye old bird blog is back in action, folks! November and December can get pretty busy as Christmas approaches, and I?ve been scrambling around just like each of you. That said, I do apologize for the delay in posting something fresh. Just think of it as my way of considering you, my loyal readers, and not wanting to burden you with extra blog reading during this hectic time of year! Hope everyone had a great Thanksgiving!

    owl sm 12-6-09
    So, as you can already tell from the first two pictures, our big backyard remodeling project has been extremely successful. We added some walls, Christmas decorations, and made it look generally similar to the inside of a bird store, and amazingly, all these cool raptors that are willing to fly right to your safely-gloved hand began showing up! It has been incredible!

    owl lg 12-6-09
    Okay, okay, I can tell you are an educated bunch and these birds do appear rather tame and perhaps even injured. Could they all really have coincidentally arrived in our newly-remodeled backyard? And just who makes their backyard look like the inside of a Wild Birds Unlimited store? And why do those birds have bands and appear tethered to the gloved hands? Well, full disclosure?these are actually, and this may shock you, birds brought in by the American Wildlife Refuge to our local Wild Birds store for a very cool event this past Saturday. (That also means we didn?t re-do our backyard?)

    eagle long 12-6-09
    Seriously, we had a great time at the Cary Wild Birds Unlimited on Kildaire Farm Road. Our whole family went, and we learned a ton about these beautiful birds. Steve Stone is the director of the American Wildlife Refuge located in Rolesville, NC, and his team did an outstanding job Saturday. If you ever have the opportunity to attend one of their shows, I highly recommend it! To learn more about some of their birds, click here. That?s all for today?back again soon!  Dave

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    Comments

    It must be special to see these birds up close and personal,even if they are not in your back yard.:(
    Blessings,Ruth

    Great up close snaps of these beauties. I love these presentations and think they are a wonderful way of educating our public about raptors!! Wonderful shots, Dave?but oh how I wish these guys were in one?s back yards..how cool that would be. not that I don?t have my Alice Cooper to keep me busy?but oh those owls..Very nice!!

    Wow yes they are amazing? I cannot guess the feeling it is to be so close to them! Fantastic portrait you got!

    These are beautiful bird photos.

    Hey!?great post! I was feeling the same way about my blog?HA?but see, you pulled one out of the bag! You and yours have a great Christmas!

    Coming back again cause, I?m leaving in holidays now and wanted to wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy new year?
    See you in 2010..
    Cheers, Chris.

    Because I love your beautiful bird photos, stop by my blog today (12/30)?I have something that may interest you.
    And, if you have other readers that love photography, too, they should stop by too!
    http://myretirementchronicles.blogspot.com

    Hope you have a great 2010!!

    Ah?I?ve been away from blogging for a while and I come back to see that you?ve been cherry picking your photo opportunities ? ha,ha! (Don?t think I?ve forgotten that pine siskin comment my friend!) Wonderful photos!!! Hope your 2 boys are doing well.

    Nice raptors!

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  • Exploring NYC, Part II

    I'll explain in a moment why I'm presenting this screen shot from Jack Eichenbaum's "Geography of New York City" website, geognyc.com, which I encourage anyone interested in getting to know NYC better to check out. (You can click on it to enlarge it for enhanced readability.)

    by Ken

    And when I say "a unique tour opportunity," I mean a unique tour opportunity. If you can't wait to find out about it, you can scroll down straightaway to "THE EXCITING OPPORTUNITY."

    In writing sketpically last night about the "miraculous" transformation of Times Square, which NEA Chariman Rocco Landesman (who as head of the Jujamcyn Broadway theater chain played an active role in that transformation) explained in his keynote speech at the Municipal Art Society's annual meeting this week he is promoting as a model for cities all over the country seeking major new development, I mentioned that I had joined the MAS for its walking tours. Tonight I want to talk about that a little more, and in the process clue you in to this exciting upcoming opportunity, which may not be quite once-in-a-lifetime but is so exciting, at least to me, that I want to try to spread the word to people who would jump at it if only they knew about it.

    (Again, if you want to skip the blather and get straight to "the exciting opportunity," feel free to scroll down to "THE EXCITING OPPORTUNITY." I won't take it personally. Well, that's not quite true. I suppose I take everything personally, but that amounts to the same thing.)

    I also mentioned last night that I had two MAS tours booked for this weekend, and by coincidence, for those who believe in coincidence more than I do, today's happened to offer which are surprisingly inexpensive, especially for members (typically the two-hour tours are $10 for members, $15 for nonmembers; longer ones -- including several of the new ones I signed up for yesterday -- are naturally more expensive, but not much), and surprisingly (at least to me) helpful in enabling you to look at even parts of the city you may have thought you knew pretty well and begin to see them through the eyes of someone who has better, smarter ways of looking at them.

    I suppose major cities have always had walking tours of a sort, but the kind of historical-mindedness that has made them flourish seems to me a phenomenon of recent decades. And for me the whole thing is brand-new. I don't know why I waited this long to avail myself of the opportunities; on any given weekend day there seem to be dozens of them around the five boroughs, and for that matter stretching into the whole metropolitan area. I guess I've done so much tramping around at least portions of the city over the decades I've lived here that I mistakenly imagined I didn't need that kind of "prompting." In fact, even with all that tramping, there are large swaths of the city that are pretty much terra incognata to me, and as I just said, I've learned as much touring parts of the city I thought I knew pretty well.

    Times Square, to pick a random example. Last night I described the sense of aloneness feeling that I was the only one at the annual meeting of the MAS who wasn't so absolutely certain that the miraculous rebirth of Times Square over the last couple of decades is miraculous but harbored the whisper of a doubt that it's even a good thing for the vitality of the city. I'm sure I was exaggerating. It felt that way, especially when that audience member challenged the two-person panel on the Times Square rebirth for failing to give enough credit to Disney. For some of us the mind-numbing blandness and mush of Disney is an all too apt symbol for, well, the mind-numbing blanndess and mush of the "revitalized" Times Square, which seems to exist to shake fistfuls of moolah out of folks who, in fairness, seem only too eager to spend it, on crappy blockbuster musical entertainments, wildly overpriced schlock merchandise, and wildly overpriced schlock food.

    It might be stressed that what Chairman Rocco, an honorable man who seems to genuinely believe in his vision of using the arts as the basis for economic redevelopment, understands by "arts" does seem to place a premium on crappy blockbuster musical entertainments. There actually are other visions of urban life, cultural life, and urban cultural life. The problem is that while there are a lot of people out there who might support their efforts, they're scattered and hard to find, whereas the audience for what Chairman Rocco understands by "arts" seems to be out there in abundance just waiting to be told what to do to be officially "entertained."

    My MAS tour today put me squarely in contact with the other end of the arts spectrum. It was a "tour" of the East Village block of East Fourth Street between the Bowery and Second Avenue which has become the city's second-only designated "cultural district" (and the only one in Manhattan; the other is in Brooklyn, around the Brooklyn Academy of Music, of which our guide for this tour, Lawrence Frommer, will be leading an MAS tour on June 4), a block on which numerous shoestring arts organizations had taken root, and by coincidence (again?) the block on which one of the city's most storied theater enterprises, the late Ellen Stewart's LaMama E.T.C., found its enduring home.

    It was a thrill to encounter the passion and energy of the director of FAB (Fourth Arts Block), the nonprofit organization founded in 2001 to give these for the East 4th Street Cultural District, who joined us on the tour, and also introduced us to some of the people working on that block. Tamara and her associates play all the angles, working with government and funding organizations as well as community businesses to help sustain and promote the life and activities of the district arts organizations, and indeed organizations outside the immediate district with which FAB networks. The kind of art they promote clearly isn't for the mass audience to which shows like Spider-Man: Get Off My Lawn are aimed, but they're essential to the vitality of city life, and indeed make the city a vastly more livable place.


    THE EXCITING OPPORTUNITY: AN ALL-DAY PILGRIMAGE
    ON THE NO. 1 TRAIN, NYC'S INTERNATIONAL LIFELINE

    What got me started on this whole walking-tour thing was a bunch of the New York Transit Museum's tours, including an especially illuminating one about the engine for economic development created by transit "nodes," places where multiple subway lines intersect, starting with Times Square, which is unlike anyplace else in the city, sitting as it does atop the Sixth Avenue IND, Broadway BMT, Seventh Avenue IRT, Eighth Avenue IND, IRT Flushing, and crosstown shuttle lines. The guide for that tour, Queens's borough historian, "urban geographer" Jack Eichenbaum, had an uncanny eye for pointing out the buildings and street life of the area reflect the history of the area's transit development, and then he did the same for Queens Plaza and Jackson Heights in Queens.

    The subway lines crossing those Queens nodes in both cases include the IRT Flushing line, the No. 1 train, which is one of the city's most fascinating lifelines, a veritable international lifeline. And on April 30 Jack is offering what he describes as his "signature tour."

    THE WORLD OF THE #7 TRAIN
    10am-5:30pm, SATURDAY, APRIL 30

    This series of six walks and connecting rides along North Queens? transportation corridor is my signature tour. We focus on what the #7 train has done to and for surrounding neighborhoods since it began service in 1914. Walks take place in Long Island City, Sunnyside, Flushing, Corona, Woodside and Jackson Heights and lunch is in Flushing?s Asiatown. Tour fee is $39 and you need to preregister by check to Jack Eichenbaum, 36-20 Bowne St. #6C, Flushing, NY 11354 (include name, phone and email address) The full day?s program and other info is available by email jaconet@aol.com The tour is limited to 25 people. Don?t get left out!


    I got my check in the mail the day I saw the announcement. This promises to be a memorable occasion, and I know Jack still has openings. Frankly, I want to make sure he's got enough people registered to make it a "go." So I want to be sure all the people who would want to know about it do know about it. Spread the word!

    And Jack's got a bunch of other tours coming up, both for the MAS (he has one next Sunday, April 10: "Conforming to the Grid: West Side," the sequel to an earlier "East Side" version, which I unfortunately couldn't get to; these tours are in commemoration of the 200th anniversary of the adoption of the street-grid plan that charted out the future development of Manhattan) and on his own (including weekend afternoons devoted to Long Island City and a fascinating-looking series of Wednesday-evening tours under the rubric "Changing Cultures of Queens: A Walking Anthology"). If you're in the area, do yourself a favor and check out the "Public Tour Schedule" on his website.


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  • We Love Maps

    Since starting this company I totally have a thing for maps. Just check out The Jessica Journal and the Fernanda Journal if you don?t believe me! So I was incredibly excited to see the amazing artwork of Jason LaFerrera on Design Sponge today.
    I especially love this gold finch print since the gold finch is the state bird of Iowa, my  home state. And because I really love the color yellow right now!

    Jason also designed this Japanese Crane print which sells for $50 in his Etsy store. All of the proceeds from the sale of this print will go to the Red Cross for Japanese earthquake and tsunami relief efforts. Love it!


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  • Mt Rainier Hiking ? Skyline Trail to Myrtle Falls

    rainier hike 3 skyline trail east
    Welcome back! If you?re just joining the fun (and wondering where the birds are), we?re at the end of a five-part series on Mount Rainier, a spectacular volcano just south of Seattle, Washington. Believe me, it?s well-worth a weekend trip! Today I?m leading us on one final hike: a pleasant little stroll along Skyline Trail over toward Myrtle Falls. How?s this for a view as you walk?

    rainier hike 3 skyline waterfall long
    Start at the Paradise Inn and Visitor Center parking lot. Head to the right on Skyline Trail through the evergreens, and after a only a half mile, you come to this great view of Myrtle Falls. I love that little wooden bridge there in the middle?what a perfect spot right between two bits of gorgeous scenery!

    It was hard to get the lighting in this picture just right with such a bright background and a heavily-shadowed foreground, so here?s one of just the falls below?

    rainier hike 3 waterfall only long
    Myrtle Falls is quite lovely itself, but a picture of a waterfall really doesn?t do it justice. You have to hear it also to fully appreciate it?

    Doesn?t that sound make all the difference? Love it!

    rainier hike 3 meadow from bridge long
    And here?s the view from that bridge?you just need to sit here a while to fully take it in? Wow!

    Well, I hope you?ve enjoyed spending the past few weeks up on Mount Rainier. You really do need to get yourself out here one weekend when the weather looks good?you won?t regret it. I?m already thinking about when I can go back with my family! Remember, if you?ve missed any of the previous posts in the series, you can find them all on the ?Mount Rainier? tab under ?categories? over there on the right. Next week it?s back to birds and boys!  Dave

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    Comments

    Thanks ever so much for sharing this beautiful part of God?s creation. I would love to see it in person some day.
    Blessings, Ruth

    Very nice scenery.

    SPECTACULAR!!!! I loved hearing the falls, thanks for doing the video of it.
    It is gorgeous there and I hope to get to see it in person some day.

    Hi Dave,
    A wonderful post again and I loved the movie! Well the shots are gorgeous too!

    Oh my goodness?I don?t know how I missed these posts! What a drop dead gorgeous place! I thought it rained there all the time That one picture of the mountain from the bridge is just out of this world beautiful ? you need to put a Bible verse on a double matte and frame it ? WOW! I am jealous and sure wish I could go there someday! I loved ALL of your photography, Dave ? just wonderful stuff!

    Dave, thank you for sharing your photos and video of Mt. Ranier! I really enjoyed hearing the waterfall sound on the video!

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