On 3/18/2019 6:35 PM, Michael Gordon via olympus wrote:
First can always tell it's a b'fly with bulbs at end of antenna. MC's often
first critter of interest to me in New England -- they overwinter and can feed
on tree sap as no flowers yet available.
The link I posted says they are our longest lived flutterbys, so that makes sense. Might live forever, with the mild
winters here. :-)
Sometimes people report Eastern commas can be seen on warm spells at end of
winter. I have not seen any yet.
Have seen some wonderful stacked b'fly shots but have not managed more than a
couple attempts.
Not sure I've made any full stacks that worked, the possibility depends on what their perching behavior is. I have done
a few 2 or 3 exposure stacks. This Mourning Cloak is actually one, with part of the far wing from a second exposure.
This is another. <https://photos.app.goo.gl/GCq8vAQwt6C6JpcW7>
Then again, the next frame is a single shot with pretty good detail.
Winter blues, Mike
Poor bunkie. :-( I'd say come on out; sitting in the sun in the yard weather has come, but we're off in 13 days for
three weeks. Then Seattle for a week, then the Santa Cruz Mtns. for four days - pant, pant, then to Utah with you guys.
I may need a vacation from vacations . . . ;-)
Morning Sleeping Moose
--
What if the Hokey Pokey *IS* what it's all about?
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