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Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Posted
6:13 PM
by Angie Schultz
When You Get Caught Between the Moon and Comet Pan-STARRSLast night a friend and I took these pictures from Pukalani. We used my Canon SX130, but there was a certain amount of...collaboration. (Click to embiggen.) It's been cloudy here for days, ever since the comet moved north. It was cloudy when I got to work yesterday, and I figured we were out of luck, but the clouds dissipated around sunset, and there it was! Here is an "arty" shot, taken just before it set. Comets are fun! I'm going to try again tonight, maybe use my film camera. It won't be so easy to spot tonight, because the moon's not near. I know now that you have to wait until it's good and dark. Saturday, January 19, 2013
Posted
10:39 PM
by Angie Schultz
The Y FactorFrom tomorrow's Day by Day: Like women, cookie dough can be soft and sweet, but without the 'Y' factor of yeast, it'll never rise to any potential. The "Y factor" (as in the Y chromosome) is "male virtues". Problem is, cookie dough doesn't contain yeast. It rises via baking soda. Via Instapundit, who I expected to know better. Tuesday, December 25, 2012
Posted
8:05 PM
by Angie Schultz
Mele Kalikimaka!Couldn't sleep much last night -- damned reindeer clopping on the roof all night long. But that was OK, because it meant I was awake to see this: Niles and I wandered around in the yard -- I in my kerchief, he in his cap -- well, no, we were just in our jammies (*) -- taking pictures. Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night! (*) Though, strangely enough, I did get kerchiefs for Christmas. Monday, November 05, 2012
Posted
1:27 AM
by Angie Schultz
Pillow Fight!On Tuesday, we will decide which soft, squishy, spineless creature will lead our great nation for the next four years:I am talking about Obama or Romney, not the green thing with the teeth. It didn't acquire enough signatures to get on the ballot. Maybe next time. These are pillows/toys in one of those crane machines where you spend $40 in quarters obtaining a $5 doodad. I first saw them at Wal-Mart, but these were at the local grocery store. They have also been spotted at K-Mart. At the grocery store there were several Obamas but only one Romney. I have an even more disturbing picture of this, but it will have to wait for after the inauguration, because it predicts the future! (Not necessarily correctly.) Saturday, October 13, 2012
Posted
4:09 PM
by Angie Schultz
APOD!Here is a very nice picture:
Go see it in its full glory here. Main page here, for other pretties. I wonder if there's a way to make this into a Christmas ornament. Tuesday, June 05, 2012
Posted
6:00 AM
by Angie Schultz
There's a Little Black Spot on the Sun TodayTransit of Venus today. Here's a big pile of info. This post will be updated, if possible, with bad photos. UPDATE 23:08 UTC: Here's another NASA site, with what looks like more info. They're doing a live webcast from Mauna Kea, where it's clear. Clear on Haleakala too. Here's a link for pictures from there. It's not quite so live (that I can see). It was cloudy when I got up, then it started to clear, then it clouded up again. A few minutes ago the sun peeped out for about 30s. "Tag! You're it!" It does this to me all the time. Usually it's clear on the south coast, but it looks a bit cloudy right now. If I must I'll drive down there later. AFTER ACTION REPORT: OK! This post should be subtitled "The Triumph of the Will," because the pictures represent the triumph of obstinancy over equipment, skill, and Nature. Just after 3pm local time I decided that the clouds were not going to part anytime soon, and it was time for a road trip. It was sprinkling when I left. Drove down to the beach. When I opened the car door the wind nearly ripped my arm off. Well, this will be fun. But I managed to find a sheltered spot and got some decent pictures, considering. First, here is an illustration of my sophisticated astrophotographic technique: The expensive filter there was a solar viewer given out for free by the U. of Hawaii. No eyes were harmed in the making of these pictures, because the camera doesn't have a viewfinder, only the LCD display (I mutter about that a lot), so the only risk is to the camera's sensor. The chief difficulty with this technique is that I couldn't see what I was doing 90% of the time. The glare on the screen was brighter than the filtered image of the sun (as you can gather by the reflection there). It was only when the sun began to set that the angle was such that I could actually see what was going on. Of course, most of the time nothing was going on, due to clouds. Here's the photo I took down at the beach: Venus, a pimple on the face of the sun! We also see our friends the sunspots from yesterday. (Click for bigger images.) After a while I figured I'd done enough there, and it was time to come home. It takes me about 40 minutes to drive home, and it was hot and sunny the entire way. It was sunny when I got home. It was, however, cloudy by the time (about five minutes later!) I got the tripod set up again. The clouds didn't clear off again until the transit was nearly over:
The sun looks a bit mottled and bilious because this was shot through thin fog. Yes, Venus is the little notch in the sun's lower right. I had hoped to be able to show you several phases of the transit, but c'est l'astronomie. I was lucky to be able to see it at all. And, as the sun sinks slowly in the west, that concludes our broadcast day. Labels: Science Monday, June 04, 2012
Posted
10:00 PM
by Angie Schultz
Moon Missing, Sun SpottedSo last night I was puttering around before bed, when something caught my eye through the skylight. Oh! It's just the half moon. Well, that's all...wait...the moon is full. What's it doing half? Must be an eclipse. And, indeed it was. Funny, I hadn't heard about it. Must've been concentrating too hard on the transit of Venus tomorrow. Anyway I rushed out to see if I could get a pic. I had to prop the camera up against the porch railing, and hold it carefully in place, anchoring my left arm around a convenient spiderweb, but it turned out pretty well, considering:Turns out it's very scary outside at night. There were evil little rustlings, punctuated by tiny thuds, as if small yet vicious rodents were sneaking up on you. And then there were simply ghastly gnawing sounds, like the small vicious rodents nibbling the bones of previous unwary night photographers. But the former turned out to be the dropping of failed baby avocados, and the latter were the palm fronds rubbing one another. There was also the occasional hideous shriek, but those didn't bother me; that was just the deer. During the day today wasn't nearly as scary. As practice for tomorrow's festivities, I tried taking a picture of the sun through a solar viewer (that is, a piece of specially-made dark film, mounted in cardboard, that I very professionally held in front of the lens). But at least I used the tripod. I don't think it turned out badly: (I have just realized that the image names here say 20120603, but it was really 20120604) You can see sunspots! Barely. Here's a quick-n-dirty enhancement using an unsharp mask. Sunspots are labeled. Click for a larger image.
Yeah, yeah, I know -- kind of looks like a crayon drawing. But it's real! Compare with this image from the Solar Dynamics Observatory's Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager: That image came from here. I rotated it 90 degrees, scaled it down, and added the sunspot labels. Found those at spaceweather.com, but there wasn't a permanent link. Any errors are mine. So, really, that's pretty good for a cheap $200 camera. The gazillion-dollar solar satellite makes much prettier pictures, though. Friday, May 11, 2012
Posted
5:13 PM
by Angie Schultz
Foto Friday: Calmer Chamaeleon
You'll note this one has a dark red head; I'd never seen one with that coloration. Someone told me that they'd do that if you held onto them for a while, but I was not about to make that experiment. The first of these I saw blended in perfectly, because it was dead and flat and leathery, and I nearly stepped on it. I was at the tiny and remote Sun Yat Sen Park, and I saw this dead monster on the ground. It was kind of like finding a dead baby tyrannosaurus in the yard. You wonder if there are bigger ones lurking about. When I went down to get a closer look at this one, I found out he had a girlfriend:
The female lacks the horns of the male, and this one, at least, is a much different color from her mate. I couldn't get such a good shot of her. I was wondering if one day I'd find myself overrun by tiny baby monsters, but after a few weeks they disappeared. I hope a cat or an owl didn't get them. They are incredibly slow, slower than arthritic turtles or lazy snails. They can't outrun me, in other words, and that's pretty pathetic.
Here's one from last year. I saw him from the kitchen window, and ran out to get a pic. He started climbing the date palm, and in a half hour or so, he would've gotten clean away.
Here's a close-up, taken the month before. Isn't he adorable? This one I also nearly stepped on, despite his not being dead and brown and leathery. I was minding my own business, wandering around the driveway, and almost put my foot down on him. Note that the famous chamaeleon camouflage does not extend to "concrete". I am disappoint.
This is the same individual as in the previous pic, I'm pretty sure. He has the same coloration on his left hind leg (you see that in other photos of the same set). He's not the man with the girlfriend, though, because his legs were differently colored. Unless they do that sort of thing.
Labels: April 2011, Foto Friday, Hawaii, May 2011, May 2012 Friday, March 09, 2012
Posted
8:09 PM
by Angie Schultz
Foto Friday: Possible PillarThis is last night's sunset. When I snapped it I thought it was a sun pillar. That would be a little unusual here, since those are caused by ice crystals in the atmosphere, and we don't get those a whole lot (though I have seen them). But now I think it's just the sunset reflecting off of virga. Virga is precipitation which evaporates before it hits the ground. Now here's some virga for you (from this site). It's the Attack of the Extraterrestrial Jellyfish. Lately our virga has not been evaporating, instead hitting the ground as simple rain. For the first week I was very glad, as we had not had enough rain this winter. But I'm about ready for it to end now. There's mildew everywhere. And besides, Kauai is washing away. Labels: Foto Friday, Hawaii, Mar 2012 Friday, February 03, 2012
Posted
12:57 AM
by Angie Schultz
Foto Friday: PinkerA rare sunrise here. This was taken one morning after work. Rather than going to bed like a sane person, I wandered all over the yard taking a picture every few seconds. "Wait! The light changed! Right? It's pinker now! Gotta snap another." Then when I was going through them, I found multiple identical frames, and had to decide which to keep. "Is that pinker? I think it's pinker. It's definitely pinker. But I don't care." With film, you kinda have to keep them all. Cuts down on the angst. Labels: Foto Friday, Hawaii, Jan 2012 Friday, December 30, 2011
Posted
11:59 PM
by Angie Schultz
Foto Friday: PhreshPhreshest Foto Friday ever. I took this today:
(Click to enlarge.) This was the last of five paragliders at sunset tonight. We've had two at a time, but never five. If you had been there, you would have heard me saying, "No! No! Get away from the antenna!" "Not the tree you fool!" "Too low, dammit!" "YOU'RE RUINING MY PICTURE!!" They paid no attention, mostly because they couldn't hear. This is a pretty good picture, considering it was a hand-held shot (I did have some barbed wire to rest my hand on) of a moving target. Labels: Dec 2011, Foto Friday, Hawaii Saturday, December 10, 2011
Posted
11:40 PM
by Angie Schultz
Foto Friday: Through a Cloud DumblyI am totally cheating with this FF, because the photo was actually taken early Saturday. But I don't care.
I think it's not too bad, considering it was a hand-held shot, taken with the camera propped up vertically against a pillar. I love my camera, but it does have one huge nuisancey feature: there's a delay of a couple seconds between pressing the button and opening the shutter. This makes shooting in low light conditions...challenging. Did I mention it was raining? The clouds would part, and I'd whip into position and zoom in. "All right, now! Now! Uh, where'd the moon go?" Back behind a cloud. (And it was really annoying that just a few degrees away, the cloud ended and Orion shone down as clear as crystal.) I noticed the red star above the moon when I took the pictures, and thought it was pretty odd that the star was so red. Then when I looked at all the images, I saw that it was moving with respect to the moon. ZOMG! Aliens! Either that or the red flashy light that allows the camera to focus bounced off a rain drop[*]. I tried to take a picture of Orion, and the red "star" was there, too. (And Orion was not. Too dark.) I like the aliens theory better. Here's a gallery of pictures from people who didn't have to prop their cameras up against a post and shoot through the rain. Well, la-di-da. [*] It bounces off the eyes of ginormous cane spiders, too. Creeeeepy Labels: Foto Friday, Hawaii, Science Friday, July 08, 2011
Posted
8:42 PM
by Angie Schultz
Foto Friday: Lanai LayersLovely layers lie over Lanai. Enjoy the neighbor's protea bushes and aerial, there at the bottom. Shoulda jumped in the car and drove down to the highway. Too lazy. There have been several delicious juicy blog controversies lately which I longed to comment on, but I have some vital TV-watching and video-game playing and OS-upgrading to do while Niles is here. This kind of thing always happens. Labels: Foto Friday, Hawaii, June 2011 Tuesday, July 05, 2011
Posted
3:07 PM
by Angie Schultz
Niles Is DisappointOn a recent gift-giving occasion, Niles bought what he hoped would be a very timely gift. I collect foreign currency (I only do it for the pictures), and I've been assembling a collection of Former Dictators. I have Saddam and Niyazov so far. As far as I can tell, neither Castro or Chavez has been egomaniac enough to put his kisser on the currency -- nor has even the Dear Leader, but his dad does appear on some notes. So anyway, Niles was sure he'd be a winner with this: Sadly, no. Even for Khaddaffy, that's a silly pose. Looks like he got drunk one day, put his laundry on his head and decided to do a Jack Benny impersonation. "That one! That's the portrait that goes on the money! Ha ha! I was flying that night. Make it so." Labels: Coins and Currency, Fools of Our Planet Friday, July 01, 2011
Posted
9:42 PM
by Angie Schultz
Foto Friday: Sailors, Take Warning!Glorious sunrise on June 16th. I got up, looked out the window, and...WHOA! Grabbed the camera and wandered around the yard in my jammies, snapping away and blundering into the odd spider web. I hoped the neighbors didn't think I was trying to photograph them in their jammies. Then I brushed off the webs and climbed back into bed. Labels: Foto Friday, Hawaii, June 2011 Friday, June 24, 2011
Posted
8:54 PM
by Angie Schultz
Foto Friday: The North Side of SunsetI will post a Foto Friday if it kills me!!
There, not much. Sunset over the north end of the island, rather than the (usual) south end. Labels: Foto Friday, Hawaii, June 2011 Sunday, June 05, 2011
Posted
4:31 PM
by Angie Schultz
Meanwhile, in Hawaii...Snow!
It snowed yesterday on Mauna Kea. Looks like they got an inch or two. This is from a CFHT webcam. Yesterday the summit road there was closed to the public due to hail, the message said, and there was reportedly hail on Haleakala on Friday. Mauna Kea gets snow pretty often (though it's rare in June), but hail?? Labels: Hawaii Friday, June 03, 2011
Posted
8:17 PM
by Angie Schultz
Foto Friday: Maalaea MorningHere's a rare morning shot. I took another picture a few minutes later, and about half the clouds had evaporated.
I'm usually in a hurry to get to bed in the morning, but if it looks as if a nice sunrise is in the offing, I'll keep checking the sky to see if anything interesting happens while I'm still up. Unfortunately I don't have a good eastern view from home. Labels: Foto Friday, Hawaii, May 2011 Friday, May 27, 2011
Posted
10:04 PM
by Angie Schultz
Foto Friday: Oh, Chute!On days I'm not working, I write in my diary on the deck at sunset. I keep my camera with me just in case anything interesting should happen. Yesterday I heard shouting, which is unusual in my neighborhood. Bleating, whinnying, mooing, barking, and cockadoodling -- those are not unusual. But shouting is. So I looked up to see this:
Labels: Foto Friday, Hawaii, May 2011 Friday, May 20, 2011
Posted
5:49 PM
by Angie Schultz
Foto Friday: Try Modeling These in Mashed Potatoes
DOO doo doo doo doooo! The mothership from Close Encounters is about to land. Again, sometimes a promising sunset just goes bust. This was such a one, except at the last minute the sun peeped through and gave a brooding look to the mountains. I especially like the different colors of dark in the clouds. Clicky for the larger image; Blogger reduces them, and in this case has degraded the resolution too much. Labels: Foto Friday, Hawaii, May 2011
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