Wednesday, December 31, 2008

The Newport Aquarium In a Leap Second

You got extra time tonight. They are going to reset the Atomic Clocks around the world! They will be adding a leap second to all the time in the world. The Isotopes that run the clocks have all agreed to stop their decay for one second between 12:00 midnight 2008 and 12:00 morning 2009. There will be a one second stutter. Time enough to savor this posting about the stuff I liked and photographed at the Newport, Oregon aquarium.





































































































Thursday, December 11, 2008

Tales of the Drive About:Seven : EAGLES and HAWKS

The highway between Klamath, Oregon and Bend, Oregon is in most places a tunnel of trees. Trees in the bazillion numb my senses, so that I was alert enough to see the bird off to the side of the road sitting on a spire of a tree, was a miracle. We are used to seeing red-tailed hawks on telephone poles and fence posts along the roads of Oklahoma. This bird was some what larger than that.



Yep it was an eagle. Sitting there, ignoring the traffic, was an eagle. So I turned around and drove back to take pictures. Second miracle, the bird was still there.



Car's honked as I diligently tried to get close enough. The Eagle stayed put.



Thirty some shots latter, I decided to let him be. So I left him on the spire beside the road and went on my way.



A week or so later I was driving down a highway in Eastern Nevada. The land was covered with 8 to 10 foot scrub. The 15 feet tall abandoned telegraph poles were the highest perch anywhere in the vast flat expanse we were traveling though. Sure enough there were eagles perched on the poles. So I tried to get several pictures. Some photos came out.



A few hundred miles further on we entered Utah and some farms lands.



Down the road in front of a farmers house I notice two large birds in the cottonwood trees in his front yard. One was a Bald Eagle.




The other was a very large hawk, I think.




He (she?) was antsy, and left soon after I started taking pictures.





The hawk left. But the eagle stayed.





And the Eagle stayed, and stayed and stayed.





So finally I left. Imagine, having a Bald Eagle just hanging around in your front yard.

So I need the help of those who know. I recognize the mature Bald Eagle of course, but are the other two eagles show immature Bald Eagles or Golden Eagles or what? Also, that's an awfully big hawk. What kind is it? It is in the SW corner of Utah.
Thanks for the help.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Drive About Stories: Six : Six Words

By Carol Memmott, USA TODAY
Could you sum up your life in six words?
Writers took the pithy challenge in Not Quite What I Was Planning: Six-Word Memoirs by Writers Famous and Obscure from Smith Magazine, edited by Rachel Fershleiser and Larry Smith (Harper Perennial, $12, paperback original).

This online publication's request for quick memoirs (sixwordmemoir.com) garnered 15,000 submissions; 800 made the book.

Here's what some of the more famous contributors wrote:

"Well, I thought it was funny." Stephen Colbert

"Me see world! Me write stories!" Elizabeth Gilbert

"Secret of life: Marry an Italian." Nora Ephron

"Fearlessness is the mother of reinvention." Arianna Huffington
"Relatively famous parents, very low self-esteem." Molly Jong-Fast

"Revenge is living well without you." Joyce Carol Oates

"Born bald. Grew hair. Bald again." A.J. Jacobs

"Fifteen years since last professional haircut." Dave Eggers

"Mushrooms. Clowns. Wands. Five. Wig. Thatched." Amy Sedaris

And now for my own:

"I lived well, I lived unseen."

Those who know me well will recognize those six words as a form of my life's philosophy.

So my fellow readers and bloggers what are your six words of a life summation?