Reina

This is Reina, my neighbor’s son’s dog. She’d been enjoying a roll in the grass and emerged with this crumbly, fragile, messy stuff that falls from the trees at this time of year all over her.

Apparently these stringy brown things are called catkins or tassels. They are the male pollen structures produced by oak trees. They hang in the trees like tassels on the end of bike handlebars, releasing their pollen into the wind to fertilize the female flowers. After all the pollen is gone, they float to the ground, creating great mats of the stuff.

Taken with a Sony A6000 and 18-135mm f3.5-5.6 OSS.

Still another deer

Seen in a nearby woodland. There’s something I like about this picture. Maybe it’s the way that the deer in the middle ground is sandwiched between the bright vegetation in the foreground and the darker woodland in the background? Maybe it’s the way the deer is looking straight at me? It looks as if it’s seconds away from bolting. That wasn’t actually the case. The deer in our neighborhood are generally quite tame and will stand around for some time watching you unless you get too close to them.

Taken with a Sony A6000 and 18-135mm f3.5-5.6 OSS.

Lunch on the River Hudson in Ossining, NY

I hadn’t left the house for a couple of day and was feeling a bit bored, so I decided to grab a book and go and grab a bite to eat at a nearby riverfront restaurant: 3 Westerley. Above a view of the restaurant’s outside patio.


A couple by the river.


Hudson View.


Haverstraw Ferry Terminal.


Looking back from the ferry terminal towards the restaurant


Wooden piles in the Hudson.

Taken with a Fuji X-E3 and Fuji XC 16-50mm f3.5-5.6 OSS II

A New Visitor to the Meadow

Another visitor to the meadow. Towards the end of the day I like to sit on the balcony outside my bedroom, read and watch the sun go down. I was sitting there today when out of the corner of my eye I detected some movement. When I focused on what it was this is what I saw. For those reading this who might not know what this is, it’s a skunk. I’ve only ever seen one once, perched on a rock in the Rockefeller State Park Preserve. Until today I’ve never seen one near the house, although I know they’re around because my dog, Harley was sprayed a couple of years ago. Again for those who don’t know what they are they protect themselves by spraying an incredibly unpleasant smelling substance on anything that’s a threat. They can spray with incredible accuracy as far as 10 ft and the smell is so strong that it can be detected by the human nose up to 3.5 miles downwind. Anyone who has smelled it will know what I mean. Most predators around here (bear, badgers, coyotes, dogs, cats etc.) will stay well away from skunks. Apparently the only animal that regularly preys on skunks is the Great Horned Owl – I imagine that the aerial attack allows the owl to kill the skunk before the skunk is able to spray it.

Taken with a Sony A7IV and Tamron Di III VXD A056SF 70-180mm f2.8.