Our last look - for now - from the South Carolina coast. All these shots are from the Magnolia Plantation near Charleston. Lovely day on their grounds. The gardens here have been a tourist destination since 1870! I shall ask Dennis what it was like back then. The gardens are also one of the countries best collection of camellias. The gator was an only about 5 feet but just a bit off the path.
Low Country Vignettes .3 /
Bridges of Magnolia Plantation outside of Charleston, SC.
Low Country Vignettes .2 /
On the pier for the ferry to Bull’s Island. The long pier and the attendant boat launch area also attracts fisherman and birds. This morning I was out with Dennis Mook of The Wandering Lensman blog. That is not Dennis in the photo but how your Costco gas attendant spends his day off!
Arrival
Departure
Low Country Vignettes /
The Low County is basically coastal South Carolina though it may include a part of Georgia. These are some shots from my week there a couple of weeks ago. First up is Fort Moultrie. It is a part of the Charleston defense system in place before the Civil War and while the National Historical Park is known as “Fort Sumter and Fort Moultrie” the latter is not very well known even though it was an active fort well before the Civil War and was manned until the end of WWII. This fort was used in the bombardment of Fort Sumter that opened the drama we know as the American Civil War.
Fort Sumter is mostly hidden behind the tree in the center of the photo but the cannon is one that was used in the opening days of the Civil War. This is a more tranquil scene with kites, bikers, beach walkers and dogs along the beach.
Tugs ply these harbor waters all day. Fort Sumter is visible on the horizon in the right of the photo.
THis 35 star flag was an authorized flag for two years 1863 and 1864 the new star representing West Virginia. The tower is q WWII observation and communication addition.
Sunday Scripture: Photo is from northern Arizona /
Birds of the Week .4 /
I have four and one bonus shot to share today. Little Blue Heron with a shrimp, Great White stalking in the swamp at Magnolia Plantation, SC, Bonaparte Gulls at Isle of Palms SC (non-breeding plumage and a Rusty Blackbird at Caw Caw reserve. Plus a Brown Pelican cause they are such fun to photograph, this one was in Alabama along the Gulf of America.
Birds of the Week .3 /
I was delighted to find this beautiful White-eyed Vireo at the Caw Caw Reserve County Park near Charleston, SC. I have often heard this song bird and occasionally got a quick glimpse of one in the forest canopy but on this day the brightly colored male was searching for lunch on a short tree 15 yards from me. Jill and I watched him for 4 or five minutes. I thought at first it was a fly-catcher but eventually got a good view of his white eye ring. Anyway, enjoy this beautiful little usually shy bird.
Four more birds tomorrow and one of them is only the second time I ever saw one!
Birds of the Week .2 /
This is a much more common bird than yesterday’s Common Black Hawk and I did not have to travel to south Texas to see it. You likely have a few Purple Finches around your house and feeder. But I saw this one at the Seven Islands Birding Park just east of Knoxville along the French Broad River. Somehow seeing a common bird in the “wild” instead of next to your porch is more satisfying and fun to photograph.
Birds of the Week /
This is a Common Black Hawk found in the Southwest US. This one was photographed in Big Bend National Park, Texas, about 50 yards from the Rio Grande. The nest was nearby but there were, according to the ranger, no eggs yet. This was the first CBH I had ever spotted.
Sunday Scripture: Photo is from the Magnolia House and Gardens in South Carolina /
iPhone .4 /
Our final look - for now - at the iPhone photos is the main reason I love the quality and access for photos — people. First, you never know when an opportunity appears for a great shot to remember a moment and it is important to have a camera in your pocket. 2. There are places where you can grab a shot that the camera just doesn’t fit, a restaurant or church for example. Finally, they are great because people are acclimated to the iPhone. You don’t get the “camera smile” when you quickly shoot your subject. And the memories are very special. Most of these photos would not exist if not for the.ease of the iPhone. And they are precious.
iPhone .3 /
Food is the number one thing I take photos of, please do not judge me, I am not sure why I do this. But it is almost irresistible. So, here are a few of the hundreds on my phone. Tomorrow the most valuable reason I love my iPhone camera.
iPhone .2 /
I found some photos that I would not have had or at least not likely to have had I only had my camera. Some people, of course, would not fail to have their camera at hand but occasionally I did not. Some places on the trip to Alaska fell into that category for several reasons, like a dip in a hot spring in the Yukon. And the old WWII vehicles that I did not expect on a walk to the campground office. I was going back to do more but that did not happen. An ice cream shop where you could buy a friend a scoop and a quick shot out the window of several railroad engines pained in old logos as well as a reflection shot in a parking lot. Here are a few…
iPhone /
The camera you always have with you or at least the one I always have with me is my iPhone. And the camera in that tiny package is pretty good, even very good. I read once that Apple has - not sure I recall the actual number, but something like 650 engineers who just work on the camera. While this blog is about pictures and not gear or testing gear or much of anything on the technical side of photography (you need to know something on the technical side to write about it, or at least if what you write is partially true:) Back to the phone in your camera, I use mine is a variety of ways: photos of food or friends in a restaurant, reference shots of a place I would like to take photos at a better time or in a better light, things I might what to research like a book or a bike or, well anything I might consider buying, for documents I may need, for instructions or for someone’s business card. I find that I often use the iPhone camera for hiking, picture of the name of the trail, the map of the trail and quick photos en route. They are great for a quick shot and post to social media as well. I do that a lot and I cannot pass up a funny sign! A newer use is for identification. You can take a photo of a plant, open it and tap the little button in the middle of the row below the photo and magically the name of the plant appears. It works with birds as well. I have some photos from the “real” camera of birds I was unsure of and took an iPhone photo of my screen in the processing program on my laptop and got the answer to “What bird is this?” Not so surprising I also use if for photos. So this week’s theme is iPhone photos. Here is part one of four and I will post about 6 each day.
These are photos from several years ago but are good illustrations of using the phone. On a boat with the Grands, on a ski lift, through a snowy windshield, a “no graduating geese” sign, a parking lot shot to recall the place or the food at your table
Sunday Scripture: Photo is from Alabama Hill in Central West California. /
Coast to Coast .4 /
The Gulf of …..
Coast to Coast .3 /
North Atlantic
Coast to Coast .2 /
Great Lakes
Coast to Coast .1 /
Oregon Coast
Black Turnstone
Don’t get too close to Portland