Surprise
I'm a sucker for the moon
Maybe we were channeling some 1970s film
The times, they are a-changin.
Third-quarter Noon Moon
Dock
King Billy butterfly
The blackberries offering themselves to the bees
Skipper doing his Narcissus thing
Four-spot friend to all humankind
Chuckleypear fungus
Tricolored bumblebee
The unbidden
Yellow birds are all yellow-hammers
Not much wind
Underside of a miller
Tended
Bluet damselfly
Bloomed for her birthday
Just dropping behind a neighbour's house
Chickadee in the chuckleypears
Sunflower looking up
Fred's ashes back to the sea
Nearly first quarter
Pink
Cedar waxwing
Lemonade stand
Bernlaws, sternlaws and post-prandial fire
Not-wasp "wasp"
Hoisted
The apple swells
So, THAT is why. . .
Bluejay, nutted, unfazed by the dahlia
Rain ending
Day Moon over neighbours' trees
Freshly opened but facing away
A dahlia, I think
Young bird in the apple
Wine gift
They were there
Clintonia
Rhododendron Number Two
Junco nest
Starling
Currants gone gaudy
1/25 • f/2.8 • 150.0 mm • ISO 2000 •
OLYMPUS IMAGING CORP. E-M1
OLYMPUS M.40-150mm F2.8
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Antares
A half-hour ago I would not have been able to tell you anything about Antares other than that it is a star.
But a half-hour ago I saw a red star fairly close to the Moon and wondered what it was. So I looked it up and found out that it is Antares.
I also found out it is so-called because of its reddish colour, a competitor in the sky for Mars (a.k.a. Ares, right? You following? There may be a test).
In my picture none of the reddishness is visible. You'll have to take my word for it. Or get out on A-deck and see for yourself.
If you can zoom in you'll see two or three other stars, even one closer to the moon than Mr Chase-Mars. I don't know their names.
But a half-hour ago I saw a red star fairly close to the Moon and wondered what it was. So I looked it up and found out that it is Antares.
I also found out it is so-called because of its reddish colour, a competitor in the sky for Mars (a.k.a. Ares, right? You following? There may be a test).
In my picture none of the reddishness is visible. You'll have to take my word for it. Or get out on A-deck and see for yourself.
If you can zoom in you'll see two or three other stars, even one closer to the moon than Mr Chase-Mars. I don't know their names.
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