Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Birds and Blooms! (Wait a minute...isn't that the name of a Magazine?)

One of the most wonderful things about Spring's arrival
is
seeing the dead woods come alive with leaves and wildflowers
and
the migration of birds to the north after the long, cold winter.

Today, I have a collection of both in photographs
from a Spring trip out into the woods.

Enjoy!















































I am pretty sure this bird is a
Yellow-Bellied Sapsucker.

Am I right?:








































Doesn't Spring just blow you away?

It is just an amazing time of year.

*********************************************************************
thankyou readers for correcting my original post from: "Birds and Blossoms" to "Birds and Blooms"...you guys are so smart!!!  xoo

Sunday, June 19, 2011

More Outside U.P. Discoveries!

We have been seeing more Partridge
this Spring than ever before...
which is a great sign
that winter
was gentle on a lot of the animals up north this year.



He didn't let me get very close with my lens before he flew away on me!:






It was so great to see things budding and bees pollenating!:















And, the Rose-Breasted Grosbeaks came back!:














When driving on a road past a river this Spring,
I spotted this heart-wrenching sign:
It sure reminds each and every one of us to remember to "Seize the Day!"
and how very, very short life is.







I love me a group of tree mushrooms against a bright blue Spring sky!:









And on textured birch bark:









We HEARD this bird before we saw it and then photographed it.
I don't know what it was.
Can someone tell me??:








Here is another view of it:

I know it wasn't an Evening Grosbeak,
and I know it wasn't a Goldfinch....



We haven't had one at our feeders, ever:


So, just leave me a comment to educate me on what the bird's name is?

I know my Blogger friends are so much more knowledgeable about bird species than I am....
Thanks!!!

Friday, June 17, 2011

Woodchuck!! (Or Groundhog?)...

We were riding in the woods
and I was looking to the right of the road (for Moose!)
and
my husband said he saw something right ahead of the truck
run across the road.

He wasn't sure what it was...
It was small.

Like a muskrat, but he wasn't sure.

But he was sure of ONE thing.

He was sure it was still RIGHT THERE on the side of the road!

So, out I hopped from the truck and  looked right over in the grass ahead.

And,
THIS is what I saw:
(do you see him??)


No???


Here, I will show you him a little closer:
 

He was so funny.

There were no leaves on the trees so he was hiding
right out in the open.

Only, HE thought he was hiding behind the bushes.






Just look at his cute little rodent face!!:








Perhaps a trip to the dentist could fix that overbite.  Just sayin':







But, his cuteness was getting to me.  I had to get in the truck before I took him home with me:



I heard him snicker, as we drove out of sight...
Those bushes hid me good,
I did it right!:

So, we got home and I said to my hubby:
"That was such a cute woodchuck we saw."
and
HE says:
"You mean the GROUNDHOG?"

And, I say:
"No it was a woodchuck".

And he says: "Aren't they the same critter?"

And, I say:
"Let's Google it and check Wikipedia"....
(If Sarah Palin can do it, so can I)....

Guess what??
It IS the same animal.

Just in case you were wondering....

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Outside in the U.P. !!

Sometimes you can be in the middle of the woods,
and come across electric lines and a train!:






My thrill of the day: A Baltimore Oriole! Right in our back yard!:









This beauty was right in the middle of the woods on an abandoned railroad track!:









Do you see him?:







Our little Chipping Sparrow with a Mohawk!:



























I chased this little guy all over the woods because he had a beautiful light blue color when his wings were wide open...but only caught photos of him with closed wings!:






A HUGE mushroom on a tree the size of a platter!:






And, another mushroom on the tree next door, almost as big!:

If you can't think of what kind of photos to shoot,
just
walk outside.

Mother Nature will point them out to you.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Michele Bachmann


Michele Bachmann stole the spotlight Monday night in New Hampshire, using the second GOP presidential debate of the season to announce that she is indeed running for president.
The Minnesota congresswoman and leader of the House Tea Party Caucus had telegraphed a campaign for weeks, but she made it official in her opening statement – triggering the early headline of the evening. Ms. Bachmann then delivered a strong debate performance, articulating her conservative views, demonstrating her status as an activist member of the House, and introducing herself to voters.
The most eye-popping point on Bachmann’s résumé: She and her husband have been foster parents to 23 children, in addition to raising five children of their own. She pointed this out twice Monday night.
“Bachmann ... pleased with her performance, with reason,” University of Virginia politics-watcher Larry Sabato tweeted at the end of the debate.
The second winner of the evening was Mitt Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts. The early front-runner for the Republican nomination could have faced “incoming” from other contenders, particularly over his Massachusetts health-care reform – a model for President Obama’s reform – and his changed views on abortion. But the six other candidates on stage took a pass.
Instead, former President Reagan’s 11th Commandment – “Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican” – got a good workout. And Mr. Romney was allowed to look calmly in command and to repeat his explanation for why “Romneycare” was a legitimate initiative at the state level but not an appropriate model for the entire country.
“Ours was a state plan, a state solution, and if people don't like it in our state, they can change it,” Romney said. “That's the nature of why states are the right place for this type of responsibility. And that's why I introduced a plan to repeal Obamacare and replace it with a state-centric program.”
One big question of the evening was whether former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty would go after Romney on health care. On “Fox News Sunday” the day before, he had coined the term “Obamneycare,” a ready-made sound bite to fling again at the front-runner, this time to his face. But Mr. Pawlenty backed away, despite the efforts of moderator John King of CNN to spark a fight. “Minnesota nice” prevailed again, as it had in the first debate on May 5.
The early line from pundits was that Pawlenty missed a golden opportunity to go after Romney and begin to build a profile as a fighter. After all, many asked, if he is not willing to take on the front-runner, how would he behave toward Mr. Obama in the general election?
An alternate view is that Pawlenty remains largely unknown to most voters, and that he chose to take the biggest opportunity to date to introduce himself to the public in a positive light. There are at least seven months to go before the first nominating contests, and Pawlenty still has time. The bad news for the Minnesotan is that he didn’t distinguish himself in other ways during the two-hour event. Romney even beat him in dropping a reference to the Boston Bruins – noting they were up 4-0 in Game Six of the Stanley Cup finals, winning a big cheer from the New Hampshire crowd.
Another loser of the evening was businessman Herman Cain. He won big during the first debate, speaking bluntly and plainly as the only nonpolitician in the field, and he has seen his poll numbers rise steadily since then. But Mr. Cain, former CEO of Godfather’s Pizza, got tangled up in his explanation of a previous statement of why he would not be “comfortable” having a Muslim in his administration.
“I would not be comfortable because you have peaceful Muslims and then you have militant Muslims, those that are trying to kill us,” Cain said. “And so, when I said I wouldn't be comfortable, I was thinking about the ones that are trying to kill us.”
When pressed by Mr. King on whether he would have a “loyalty test” for a Muslim seeking to serve in a Cain administration, he said: “I would ask certain questions, John. And it's not a litmus test. It is simply trying to make sure that we have people committed to the Constitution first in order for them to work effectively in the administration.”
Romney was handed the followup, and steered clear of the “loyalty test” issue. “I think we recognize that the people of all faiths are welcome in this country,” he said. “Our nation was founded on a principle of religious tolerance. That's in fact why some of the early patriots came to this country and we treat people with respect regardless of their religious persuasion.”
Romney did not mention his own faith – Mormonism – but his answer reflected his view that his religious beliefs should not be a factor as voters judge his fitness for the presidency. Some voters, especially evangelicals, say they’re not comfortable with the idea of a Mormon president, an issue that could hurt Romney in the primaries.
Another question heading into the New Hampshire debate was how former House Speaker Newt Gingrich would perform. Most of his senior staff resigned last week over his unorthodox strategy, which is light on in-person campaigning and heavy on social media and debates.
Mr. Gingrich probably did himself no favors. When asked about his recent assertion that the GOP plan for Medicare, authored by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, was “right-wing social engineering” – a comment he later backed away from – he offered this:
“If you're dealing with something as big as Medicare and you can't have a conversation with the country where the country thinks what you're doing is the right thing, you better slow down,” Gingrich said. “Remember, we all got mad at Obama because he ran over us when we said don't do it. Well, the Republicans ought to follow the same ground rule. If you can't convince the American people it's a good idea, maybe it's not a good idea.”
The Ryan plan would turn Medicare into a voucher system, ending it as a fee-for-service entitlement. Public opinion on the idea is negative, and Democrats have used it as a blunt instrument to attack Republicans. But Gingrich’s critique has injected a discordant note within the GOP, and his continuing defense of it Monday night reignited that issue.
In the end, though, the night belonged to Bachmann and Romney. As a sitting member of Congress, Bachmann could speak in the present tense about her actions to fight the Obama agenda.
“I was the very first member of Congress to introduce the full-scale repeal of Obamacare,” she said.
It’s way too soon to say whether the GOP nomination race will boil down to Bachmann versus Romney. But there’s certainly a path to that outcome. Bachmann, who is originally from Iowa, could be a strong contender in the Iowa caucuses, where social conservatives often win the day. Caucus-goers could hesitate over the fact that she’s only a member of the House – not a typical launch pad for winning the presidency.
Bachmann has many miles to go as a full-fledged candidate for voters to determine her viability. But she speaks the tea party and social conservative language fluently, and thus she’s a force to watch.

Flag Day


If you're not sure of the significance of June 14, you're not alone. Flag Day tends to fly under the radar.
The holiday commemorates the adoption of the U.S. flag by the Second Continental Congress on June 14, 1777, uniting the newborn nation under one symbol.
While the 1777 Congress specified 13 stripes and 13 stars on a field of blue, it didn’t dictate an exact pattern for the new flag’s star-spangled corner. As a result, there’s some variety among the flag designs of the Revolutionary War era. Historians say Betsy Ross’ circle of stars is probably one of the oldest.
Americans have been celebrating the flag on June 14 since the 1800s, but it wasn’t until 1916 that a President, Woodrow Wilson, proclaimed the day of recognition. Congress officially established June 14 as Flag Day in 1949.
Coming as it does midway between the patriotic holidays of Memorial Day and the Fourth of July, Flag Day is often overlooked. It doesn’t help that it’s not one of the 10 federal holidays – so nobody has off work.
Only in Pennsylvania, home of Betsy Ross, is June 14 a state holiday.
But plenty of groups will be honoring the flag today in recognition of the holiday. Rich Corcoran ofAmerican Legion Post 232 in Barnegat said the veterans’ group and local boy scouts take time each Flag Day to retire the flag and raise a new one in its place.
Tonight's ceremony begins at 7 p.m. at the post, 499 Route 9, after which the old flag will be respectfully burned – the proper way to dispose of an American flag no longer in use.
“Most people don’t know about it,” he said of the holiday. “I think we need to get the word out.”
Lowering your own flag tonight, but can't remember from your school days how to properly fold Old Glory? USFlag.orghas instructions:
  1. Begin by holding the flag waist-high with another person so that its surface is parallel to the ground.
  2. Fold the lower half of the stripe section lengthwise over the field of stars, holding the bottom and top edges securely.
  3. Fold the flag again lengthwise with the blue field on the outside.
  4. Make a triangular fold by bringing the striped corner of the folded edge to meet the open (top) edge of the flag.
  5. Turn the outer (end) point inward, parallel to the open edge, to form a second triangle.
  6. The triangular folding is continued until the entire length of the flag is folded in this manner.
  7. When the flag is completely folded, only a triangular blue field of stars should be visible.

Lunar Eclipse June 2011


The longest and darkest total lunar eclipse of the century will occur on Wednesday, giving sky enthusiasts all over the country an opportunity to witness the event.
An unusually long lunar eclipse with the Moon immersed deeply inside the umbral (darker) shadow of the Earth will occur Nehru Planetarium Director N Rathnasree said.
“The total phase of this lunar eclipse will last 100 minutes. The last eclipse to exceed this duration was in July 2000,” she said.
The next such eclipse will only take place in 2141.
The total lunar eclipse will begin at 00:52:30 IST and end at 02:32:42 IST. The partial eclipse will begin at 23:52:56 IST and end at 03:32:15 IST.
The eclipse will be visible completely in Africa and Central Asia. It will be visible rising over South America, Western Africa and Europe, and seen setting over Eastern Asia, and Australia, C B Devgun from Science Popularisation Association of Communicators and Educators (SPACE) said.
The magnitude of the one of the relatively rare total lunar eclipse will be 1.70 magnitude, N Sri Raghunandan Kumar of Planetary Society of India said.
The next lunar eclipse to be viewed in India will be in December this year.
Also, a star named 51 Ophiuchi will be occulted during the eclipse.
Sky enthusiasts can witness the whole sequence of the occultation in the zodiacal constellation of Ophiuchus.
At 11:29 PM, the Moon will occult (hide) behind the star 51 Ophiuchi. The star will reappear after 90 minutes at 01:01 AM of June 16, Kumar said.