Category: Photography

  • 7 Easy Ways to Protect Bird Populations

    white throated sparrow

    “Pan, who and what art thou?” he cried huskily.

    “I’m youth, I’m joy,” Peter answered at a venture,
    “I’m a little bird that has broken out of the egg.”

    ―J.M. Barrie, Peter Pan

    We love our birds here, and even those who were reluctant at first were won over by their cheerful, bullying ways. We’ve been careful to make sure we set out seed and suet during the many, many, many days of ridiculous weather and unusual cold this winter has thrown at us (and when I say we, I mostly mean Jeff, who is better at remembering things than I am these days).

    While setting out seed is helpful for our feathered friends, who are warm blooded and need the nutrients to keep warm during a time of year where their usual sources of food are not readily available, there are lots of other ways to offer a helping hand all year round.

     

    house wren in snow

    7 Easy Ways to Protect Bird Populations

     

    Keep Birds Safe from Cats

    A 2013 study estimated cats kill 1.3 to 4.0 billion birds every year, making them likely to be the biggest threat to bird mortality. Most of those are probably due to stray and feral felines, not well-fed housecats, but I know at least one of my cats has found the occasional bird an irresistible temptation.

    • Keep your cats indoors as much as possible. If you have a cat that just is miserable unless it can free-range a bit, a bell on a sparkly collar can help alert birds to his presence.
    • Situate feeders and birdhouses in places a cat can’t get to. Height isn’t quite enough; baby birds will be on the ground beneath while fledging so keep that in mind.
    • Make sure birdhouse tops are secure. Cats can climb better than you think and the last thing you want to see is it scooping its paw into the top of your birdhouse, helping herself to the baby bird feast inside. (Don’t ask how I know.)
    • Take strays to a no-kill shelter rather than just giving food. Donate to no-kill shelters so they can continue to house cats waiting adoption and offer low-cost neutering. And it goes without saying, spay and neuter your own cats.

     

    Birdproof your windows

    Window collisions are probably the second most dangerous threat to birds, killing 365-988 million in the US each year. Low-rise buildings (56%) and residences (44%) are much more of a problem than skyscrapers (only 1%). This one is a pretty easy fix:

    • Don’t put feeders directly outside a window.
    • If you have sliding glass doors or windows that you know are collision threats, invest in some specially-made window decals. They are fairly unobtrusive to our view, but when placed on the outside noticeable reflect UV light.
    • Or, a DIY tape pattern will work too, according to the American Bird Association. “Most birds will avoid windows with vertical stripes spaced four inches apart, or horizontal stripes spaced two inches apart.”

     

    Provide shelter

    Trees are bare in winter, so they’re not doing much to keep birds warm through long nights with bonechilling winds. So while shelter is definitely a year-round concern for birds, it’s especially nice to aid them during the cold months.

    • Leave a brush pile of fallen branches. An easy way to start a brush pile is to just hang onto your Christmas tree; bonus points if you hang some suet and birdseed “ornaments” on.
    • Hang birdhouses in areas that are shielded from high winds.
    • Clean out birdhouses at the end of nesting season. This will help new bird tenants stay healthy, and make it easier for them to move in.
    • Grow shrubs and other nest-friendly foliage.

     

    Don’t use pesticides

    Pesticides poison insects. Birds eat insects. Whether they’re affected directly (by being poisoned by the chemical itself) or indirectly (by ingesting poisoned insects, or by a depleted insect food supply), common sense suggests pesticides are not bird-friendly.

    • This one seems like a no-brainer to me. Skip the pesticides. Encourage more birds (and bats) in your area for natural pest control.

     

    Go native

    Cultivating plants native to your area means less maintenance for you, as they are already acclimated to your weather, soil, etc. It also means encouraging insects your neighborhood birds and wildlife have evolved to eat. By contrast, exotic plantings need lots of care and cultivate the foreign insects that traveled with them. This is how we get explosive, damaging insect populations like the stinkbug: they have no local natural predators.

     

    Yes, food and water

    As the world around us becomes increasingly more urban, birds have to fly farther to find the food and water they need to stay alive. It’s easy to create a habitat that can become a bird’s oasis. Just keep in mind that if you start, they will come to depend on you as a reliable source; don’t let them down.

    • Water can be hard to come by during times of freezing cold and times of draught. Do your best to keep bird baths clean and unfrozen. I highly suggest something like this Water Wiggler in bird baths; they keep the water moving and the mosquito population down.
    • Offer food in a variety of ways. Some birds like hanging feeders; some like to feed from the ground. Some forage for insects in dead wood and in leaf piles. Some love flowers and their seeds.
    • You get what you pay for in feeder seed. Cheaper bags of seed have lots of filler that will be wasted as birds root through it looking for the good stuff. We mostly stick with suet and black sunflower seed, which seems to be a crowd pleaser, and additional specialty feeders for the hummingbirds in the spring and summer.

     

    Educate.

    You care for what you know. It’s easy to let the sounds and creatures of nature fade into the background of our noisy, busy lives.

    • Take the time to point out different species of birds, their calls and identifiers, to those who don’t know them— especially kids. There’s lots of birds. It takes a discerning eye to realize there are fewer jays than we had as kids, an ear that is accustomed to the every day chatter of neighborhood birds to notice when something extraordinary has come to call.
    • Share these tips with neighbors and encourage them to create welcoming spaces for birds in their own backyards, so we can weave a tapestry of safe havens within our cities.

     

    titmouse and junco

     

    It’s a little bit of hassle that is totally worth it, to know you’re able to share in bird survival and bring them closer to your own world.

    What would life be like without birds? Not waking to crows cawing? Without seeing a flash of color dart from treetops? I don’t want to find out. Do you?

    What did I miss? Any other ways you support your local birds?

     

    *Disclosure: Product links are Amazon affiliate links, which means if you click through and make a purchase I will receive a small affiliate fee.*

     

  • Move in the Direction of Your Dreams.

    Move in the Direction of Your Dreams.

     

    Corn maze

     

    I learned this, at least, by my experiment;

    that if one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams,
    and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined,

    he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours.

    -Henry David Thoreau

     

    I went through a corn maze recently with the kids. We split up, boys and girls; my boys are hitting that age where most things are uncool when you do them with your mother.

    Cass was off like a flash. I had, in retrospect, not worn the most practical shoes for maze running (Sundays are my dress up day, meaning I’m not in workout gear), and I really had to work to keep pace with her, kept calling for her to wait as she whipped around a corner out of view, her hair flying behind her.

    No hesitation. At the end of each row, a quick turn to the right or the left, a desire to see how quickly she could exit the maze, a perfect confidence that she would get there. No time for uncertainty.

     

    corn

     

    When it became clear that we were retracing our steps (not so much going in circles as going in tetris shapes), there was no hemming and hawing, she just pulled off an ear of corn and started dropping kernels. Hansel and Gretel in a cornfield.

    It was pretty much a meaningless task— she clearly wasn’t the first to think of it as the path was already littered with kernels— but it kept her distracted and full of confidence. She was doing something.

    The boys had trotted more quickly through the maze, not even trying to get to the end before finding their way to the exit. No sightseeing, no fairy tale imaginings. They just sat and waited for us to be done.

    I think they missed out.

    As parents, we are always learning from our kids. That afternoon I learned that sometimes being lost is half the fun. It’s where the story is, anyway. The dreaming. The living.

     

    Also, the path is easier when you wear sensible shoes.

    (But perhaps not as memorable.)

     

     

  • Fostering a Love of Nature as a Family: The Adventure Aquarium

    Fostering a Love of Nature as a Family: The Adventure Aquarium

     

    Adventure Aquarium NJ

     

    I like a good story and I also like staring at the sea—

    do I have to choose between the two?

    ―David Byrne

     

    Nope, not here you don’t.

    Let me tell you a story…

    Once upon a time, long long ago, I went to the newly opened Camden Aquarium with my dad, my little brother and my uncle. I must have been 15, judging by the level of embarrassment I recall feeling from the events of the day. (Edited: yes, I just looked it up. 1992.)

    At that time, the Camden Aquarium featured native species, which was interesting on a zoological level but not so much on a visual level, especially for 8yo Robbie. We kids got bored pretty quickly— local fish aren’t much to look at, all browns and greys and fairly similar— and again, I was at that age where I was probably pretty vocal about how bored I was.

    My dad’s solution was to start zooming from tank to tank with visible, uncontained excitement. “ROBIN! COME HERE! FISH!!”

    Next tank. “ROBBIE!! COME LOOK!! THERE ARE MORE FISH!!”

    Next tank had someone feeding the fish. “OH MY GOD!! THIS FISH LOOKS JUST LIKE A HUMAN HAND!!

     

    cleaning aquarium glass

     

    Recently I was fortunate enough to be invited with the kids to a media event at the Camden Adventure Aquarium. (The aquarium was Cass’s top pick for her birthday, so the invite was doubly special to us.)

    We arrived before the aquarium opened to the public, and some tanks were being cleaned, and I was so pleased to be able to holler to my kids, “LOOK! THIS FISH LOOKS JUST LIKE A MOP!!

    My 15yo was not fazed, he doesn’t seem to embarrass as easily as I did. The kids found me mildly amusing, but my antics were entirely unnecessary; no boredom to distract them from. Today’s Adventure Aquarium in Camden is absolutely beautiful: engrossing and entrancing for kids of all ages.

     

    Cass Adventure Aquarium Camden
    Jake Mav Aquarium

     How inappropriate to call this planet “Earth,” when it is clearly “Ocean.”

    ― Arthur C. Clarke

     

    The aquarium is outfitted with tanks big and small, filled with every kind and color of aquatic life you can dream of. The architecture is beautiful, awe inspiring, and we were constantly happening upon details worth photographing. TONS of photo opps of all kinds (I’m inflicting only my faves on you here, I took lots more). The place is really just a photographer’s paradise.

     

    Adventure Aquarium

    Camden Aquarium

    lionfish

    mirror_selfie

     

    Teaching children about the natural world should be treated as one of the most important events of their lives.

    -Thomas Berry

     

    We took our duties for the day very seriously 🙂 We had every intention of seeing everything there was to see.

     

    Adventure Aquarium

     

     We started with a baby alligator…

     

    baby alligator

     

    and went on to see Mighty Mike (not to be confused with Magic Mike).

     

    Mighty Mike

     

    Mighty Mike is this summer’s big attraction at the Adventure Aquarium, and he’s pretty darn big. Weighing in at about 800 pounds and nearly 14 feet from tip to tail, Mighty Mike is estimated to be about 50 years old. He was captured in Florida after being noted as a public nuisance, hanging out by a public dock; luckily his captor recognized he was a remarkable beast due to his size and age.

    Now Mike travels as an ambassador for the American Alligator, brought close to extinction 40 years ago and preserved thanks to research and conservation laws.

     

    mighty mike tattoos mighty_mike_tattoos

     Gratuitous Mighty Mike tattoo pics, because we think we’re funny

     

    After visiting with Mighty Mike we moved on to the penguins. Folks, I love me some penguins.

     

    penguins

     Stanley looked cool & detached, but then penguins often do.

     

    As if penguins weren’t enough, we got to meet Casanova, a baby penguin born in January 2013. Casanova is adorb and his (her?) playful zipping through the water had all the kids shrieking with laughter (ok, maybe me too).

    There will be a dramatic gender reveal for Casanova on July 17th. Place yer bets, ladies and gentlemen.

     

    baby penguin

    I happily visited with an old friend.

    aquarium turtle
    Cass learned that moray eels are just as weird and creepy in real life as they are in The Little Mermaid.
    moray eel

     

    I found new species of turtles to add to my favorites list. (Really was taken with the softshell burrowing into the sand. Lookit his little snout. The Mata Mata is a great camouflager and so ugly it’s endearing.)

     

    turtles
    Then a viewing of SpongeBob SquarePants 4-D: The Great Jelly Rescue. Dude, these movies have come a loooong way since I saw The House of Wax in barely-focused 3D. It was fun seeing the kids reach out to “grab” images that seemingly jumped from the screen to just in front of their faces. The sense of depth and motion is really cool. It’s pretty short, but I think well worth the added price.

    What makes it 4D? The added “dimension” of physical involvement. I won’t spoil the surprise, but my kids jumped a mile.

     

    Cass in 3D glasses

     

    There are several “petting zoo” pools where kids can get up close and personal with sharks, sting rays, starfish and more. This was probably Cass’s favorite part.

    I really think this is such an important experience— the tactile experience, the forging a connection with nature; particularly with species that aren’t “cute” and traditionally invoke fear.

    Like everything else at the Adventure Aquarium, it helps us experience a sense of wonder. To help us see how bright and diverse and just wonderful the world is, and all who inhabit it.

     

    Petting Zoo- Aquarium

     

     

    A child’s world is fresh and new and beautiful, full or wonder and excitement. It is our misfortune that for most of us that clear-eyed vision, that true instinct for what is beautiful and awe-inspiring, is dimmed and even lost before we reach adulthood. If I had influence with the good fairy who is supposed to preside over the christening of all children, I should ask that her gift to each child in the world be a sense of wonder so indestructible that it would last throughout life, as an unfailing antidote against the boredom and disenchantment of later year… the alienation from the sources of our strength.

    ― Rachel Carson, The Sense of Wonder

     

    sense of wonder

     

    Which brings me to my next point. As someone who champions the conservation and humane treatment of nature and wildlife, I am often asked why I am ok with visiting zoos and aquariums. (I am not ok with the circus. That is a separate blog post.)

    It comes down to this:

    “Humans seldom value what they cannot name.”
    -Elaine Brooks

    Where else can we stand nose to nose with sharks, run our fingers along rays (as they swim right towards our hands, as if eager to be petted)?

    Where else can we experience the almost unimaginable variety that exists in our oceans?

    Where else can we marvel at how the five of us can sit alongside and still not be half the length of Mighty Mike?

    Where else can we run alongside a baby penguin and bubble laughter at how fast and excitedly he/she flies through the water?

    Many of the creatures that live in zoos and aquariums are themselves endangered, and their presence there helps preserve their numbers. But more importantly, this forging of a connection helps preserve the sense of wonder and value for the natural world in our children and ourselves.

    We learn. We learn to love. And hopefully we carry that love with us and care enough to make an ongoing effort to save their natural habitats, to preserve their existence.

    People ask: Why should I care about the ocean? Because the ocean is the cornerstone of earth’s life support system, it shapes climate and weather. It holds most of life on earth. 97% of earth’s water is there. It’s the blue heart of the planet— we should take care of our heart. It’s what makes life possible for us. We still have a really good chance to make things better than they are. They won’t get better unless we take the action and inspire others to do the same thing. No one is without power. Everybody has the capacity to do something.

    ― Sylvia A. Earle

     

    I’ve always been fascinated by marine life, briefly entertaining thoughts of a career conducting research as a marine biologist, before I was cursed with a really terrible biology teacher who killed my love for the subject. If you’ve been reading here awhile you know a documentary about Fiji rekindled my fascination, and I decided that my next huge life goal was to be able to dive the reefs in Fiji and see them before they’re gone. And then, to get in a shark cage, a lifetime yearning of mine.

    Of course, I had to learn to swim first… and I have. Jeff is currently taking lessons to become certified for scuba, and I’ll follow suit once I’m strong enough to have done a sprint tri out in open water.

    Anyway, I really enjoyed the little first person taste of the shark cage they have at the Adventure Aquarium— the “Cage Match.”

     

    Shark Cage simulator

     

     

    And I can’t help but think that THIS would be a sweet little stepping stone to hold me over until Fiji. Santa, are you paying attention?

     

    swim with sharks

     

     

    In conclusion:

    No matter where you are, if you haven’t been to your local aquarium lately: go. Take your kids. It’s a wonderful family experience on many levels. Be sure to follow up by researching all your favorite creatures and what you can do to help ensure their continued existence.

    If you’re in the Philly area, have you BEEN to the Adventure Aquarium lately? GO. SOON.

    Mighty Mike is only there until Labor Day. They’ve made it easier for you to make it to see him, with weekend hours extended through the summer until 7pm.

    The kids and I compiled a “Must See” Scavenger Hunt for the Adventure Aquarium if you go! You can print that out here. There’s also a bit of video for your ocular enjoyment 🙂

    Last time you went to an aquarium? Which one?

    What’s your favorite aquatic creature?

     

    Adventure Aquarium

     

    Disclosure: The kids and I were able to visit the Adventure Aquarium for free during a media event. We received no other compensation and all thoughts, opinions and nostalgic ramblings are entirely my own.