I like to look back at the end of the year each year to see what I’ve accomplished photographically. I took over 27,000 photos in 2015! Most of them are never posted on my blog, so this year, rather than focusing on the photos I have already posted in my year-in-review post, I’m going to share some new ones you haven’t seen before in approximately chronological order. Let’s start with the spring…
Spring Aquatics
For whatever reason, I didn’t get nearly as many aquatics shots this year as I have in the past couple of years, but I did get some. I shared some of my favorite photos of the snails I spent a few happy weeks watching every evening earlier this year. Those were pouch (sometimes called bladder) snails. This is a ramshorn snail:
This snail’s shell was about half an inch across and it spent most of its time zooming around the aquarium scraping algae off things. A beautiful animal! I also love the way these look:
I’ve shared this photo with you already, but I love the way the woody stem reflects off the air bubble wrapped around this backswimmer’s back. Plus, this species has an iridescent blue face! I never knew that, one of many things I’ve discovered because I’ve taken a macro photo of an insect and noticed something when I reviewed my shots later. I love learning new things from photos!
Another favorite for the year (I shared this one before too):
That’s a creeping water bug. They’re fairly shy and like to hide under things, but they’ve got a powerful bite. I don’t pick these up.
Moving on to a little later in the year…
Teaching Teachers in April
One of the best parts of my job at the NC Museum of Natural Sciences is teaching teachers how to do citizen science projects so they can get their students involved. This year, a coworker and I put on a 3-day workshop and it was a ton of fun! We blacklighted both nights, and this rosy maple moth was one of the moths that showed up at the sheet:
My favorite insect of the weekend was a fishfly female and I did get some photos, but none of them were very good. I took her home to get some better shots of her in my whitebox, but she chewed her way out of the container and escaped into my house when I wasn’t looking just a few moments after I got home. Whoops! Sorry, I let a giant insect loose in the house, honey!
A GREAT Butterfly Year!
Last year, the butterfly population in my part of North Carolina seemed WAY down. Some of the very common species had a decent season and we had more monarchs than usual, but a lot of things were conspicuously absent in 2014. This year, the butterfly population absolutely exploded! There were so, so many butterflies and they lasted well into the fall. One of my favorites shots for the year was this pipevine swallowtail:
You barely even have to work to make a pipevine swallowtail look good – they’re simply gorgeous. I also came across two butterflies that aren’t uncommon, but I’d never seen before. This is a question mark:
And this is a viceroy:
Viceroys are obviously a part of the monarch-viceroy-queen butterfly mimicry complex. I found it fairly easy to tell them apart based on how they flew and their size, both of which seemed quite different from the monarchs, but they also have a diagonal black line across the hind wings that monarchs don’t have. If you get a good look at one, it’s simple to tell them apart.
This is not an especially great photo, but I am sharing it anyway:
This is my fall intern, Kylie. We spent a few weeks tagging monarchs during their migration and she was spectacularly unsuccessful at catching them at first. This photo commemorates the moment she released the first monarch she managed to catch and tag herself, a moment she was very proud of. She got really good at catching them by the end of the season! Kylie was an amazing intern and very eager to learn, so I felt the need to share this, even if it’s just a snapshot taken with an iPhone. It’s one of my favorite shots of the year.
Moving on to another group of insects that were also very abundant in 2015:
Obsessed with Dragonflies
I wrote a post back in January about my Christmas present from my husband last year, a Canon Powershot SX60 superzoom camera. I stand by that review of the camera and I still think it produces what I consider rather low quality photos – they’re just so grainy! However, the amazing zoom capabilities meant I could photograph birds and dragonflies from quite far away, which opened up a whole new world of photographic possibilities for me. I started carrying my camera around with me everywhere, and I’ll admit that I went a little nuts photographing dragonflies. However, how can you resist photographing something like this eastern pondhawk female (you may recognize this one – it doesn’t have a Santa hat here!):
Or this slaty skimmer:
Dragonflies are beautiful, but I miss a lot of shots with my DSLR and 300mm lens because I scare things off when I approach. With my superzoom, I can shoot a dragonfly from 20 feet away! The resulting photos may be less crisp than I’d like, but I was able to document a ton of behaviors and some new-to-the-field-station species. That made the graininess totally worth it for me.
I also photographed a lot of small things very close up this year…
Adventures in Blacklighting
2015 was an awesome blacklighting year for me! I ended up blacklighting almost every night for three months this summer, starting with National Moth Week in July. About 40-50% of the insects I photographed were things I’d never seen in my yard before, so I was very excited. Some of my favorites of the several thousand blacklight/porch light shots I got this year included this dot-lined white moth:
SOOOOO fuzzy! I also loved this barklouse:
I don’t see a whole lot of them, so it’s always exciting when they decide to show up. A lot of aquatics show up at my lights too, like this white miller caddisfly:
I live about a quarter of a mile from a major river and there’s a small lake and a retention pond in my neighborhood. It’s very obvious there’s water nearby given the number of aquatic insects that show up at my lights almost every night.
Now I know this is an insect blog, but thanks to my superzoom camera, I got a lot of shots of other things as well…
Non-Insects
The whole reason I wanted the superzoom in the first place was because I was unhappy with the bird photos I took with my DSLR. The 300mm lens is lovely for some things, but not long enough to get good bird shots. I don’t have $10,000+ lying around to spend on an ultra long lens, so the superzoom was far cheaper way to get the shots I wanted. Again, the photos are grainy, but I figure getting a slightly grainy shot is better than not getting the shot at all! I took tons and tons of bird photos this year, and some of my favorites included this white-breasted nuthatch:
And this purple martin:
The nuthatches are one of my favorite birds, but they move around constantly. This is the best shot I’ve managed so far. The martins really caught my attention this year because my camera allowed me to see what they were bringing back to feed their babies. Purple martins eat a ton of dragonflies! I love this martin photo best, though, because of the position of the bird. She’s really looking down at another bird that landed on the gourd below it, but I would think she was being coy if I didn’t know better.
I also became obsessed with photographing frogs and turtles this year. My favorite herp photo this year:
It’s just a bullfrog, but I still can’t get over the fact that bullfrogs actually belong in North Carolina. They are horribly invasive in Arizona and there are major eradication efforts underway to try to control them. But here, they’re native, so I don’t have to feel guilty for liking them. I probably took 1000 or more bullfrog photos this year, but I also got shots of cricket frogs, Fowler’s toads, green and squirrel tree frogs, several turtle species, and a variety of snakes. I’m still terrified of snakes, but after the initial little fluttering of my heart when I see one, I pull out my camera and start snapping away. Cameras are remarkable for making me less fearful of things that I find scary!
Closing Thoughts
So I’ll admit: I don’t think most of the photos I took this year are as good as the ones I took last year. A lot of that has to do with the fact that over half of the photos I took in 2015 were taken with my superzoom and the quality of the images just isn’t that amazing. It also doesn’t take excellent macro shots, so I didn’t get nearly as many close up photos this year as I have in the past. Sigh… There’s nothing quite like the feeling of going a little backwards with your photo quality, but what can you do?
But even if not all of my photos this year were stellar, I feel like I documented nature very effectively. I came across so many new-to-me species this year! Because I lugged my behemoth of a superzoom around with me almost everywhere I went, I got photographic evidence of nearly all of them. I documented behaviors and cool things I saw and things that surprised me and things that amazed me and things I thought were stunningly beautiful. And ultimately, that’s why I take photos. I care about improving my skills quite a bit, but getting a shot of something so I remember it is far more important to me than getting a good shot of it. For example, this is the best shot of a groundhog I’ve gotten so far:
It is not a great photo. However, because I took this photo, I can remember the exact circumstances in which I came across this groundhog, how I had been driving the golf cart to the back gate at the field station to lock up for the evening and I saw two juvenile groundhogs on the trail between the red shed and the fan boats the state aquatic weed guy stores on the grounds. This groundhog’s sibling ran as soon as I came around the corner, but this one stood and stared at me for a few seconds before running off too. It’s not a great photo, but it has memories attached to it.
And with that, I am signing off for 2015. See you in 2016! If you’d like to see my collection of 50 best photos of the year, which includes all but a few of the photos I’ve shared here, you can see them on Flickr. There are a lot more birds in that collection, plus some plants and a really awesome endangered salamander species I got to see this year.
Have a happy new year, everyone!
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Unless otherwise stated, all text, images, and video are copyright © C. L. Goforth
These are so good—Nice captures of the butterflies… I can’t recall seeing a Viceroy
photoed in that pose before… cool…
I really like the green tree froggies, too… They are so expressive and just plain fun to watch..
*A Green Piece* – https://vimeo.com/119835909 …
Checked out your Flickr—Even more good stuff… I wanna come hang-out with you… haha
Happy New Year
John
Well, if you’re ever in Raleigh, let me know! I would be more than happy to take you out into the field where I work and show you some cool things. The biodiversity is pretty amazing!
I’m in Greenville, and would love to go out in the field sometime. :)
Oooh, ooh! I want to go back to River Park North this summer. GREAT dragonflies there! Wanna go with me when I do? Plus, there’s the swamp there, which makes it even more awesome. And you’re always welcome to come to Raleigh! I work at the field station on Saturdays and it’s a great day to stop by if you want to go out and look around with me.
Sure! Let me know when you’ll be coming to town, and I’ll save the date on my schedule.
Will do! Probably won’t be until at least May, but I’ll keep you posted.
The Dot-lined white moth needs to be a stuffed animal. That is beautiful and so fuzzy!
Agreed!! I want to make so many flies and moths into plushies. Someday I’ll actually do it.
I hope you do. I have a list of people to buy them for.
:) Will let you know if/when I get some made!
Hello,
As you have the same situation as I do, in part, having heavy DSLR and purchased same Canon (big zoom), I thought I’d ask if you have read about putting the camera in P mode when shooting macro? I read it somewhere and it did help me, not always but more often than when the camera decides for me. Obviously you realize by now I don’t spend a lot of time learning manual settings. Like you, I’m in the field for documentation and spending time learning how to be a proper photographer just hasn’t found itself with me as yet. That said, my DSLR in manual focus is the only way I use it.
Stanley, Ohio naturalist of the old-school (I go off-trail!)
I have not tried putting the camera into P mode for macros – will give it a try! Thanks for the suggestion! I normally use the custom mode as I like to set things my way, but I am not totally sold on my way being the best way for this particular camera.
Love that you go off-trail! That’s the best way to see unusual things I think. :)
FYI: There’s a neat video from the BBC showing how a dragonfly’s vision has a very fast response time (~30ms):
http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20160102-dragonflies-see-the-world-in-slow-motion
Great photos. Loved the dot-lined white moth with the 1980s-style “big hair”.
Thank you.
Ha ha! 80’s style big hair – what a great analogy. Gonna have to remember that one. :)
I loved your photos…so what if they’re not as good as National Geographic’s? I, too, love to take nature photos. My Sony a-series DSLR (with a 200 lens) takes pretty good photos of birds at my feeders, about 15-20′ away. But my little Ricoh CX takes excellent macro pics, and I bought it used for less than $100.
Bottom line for me is this: do my photos make me happy? Do yours make you happy? If so, don’t sweat it that you’re not Ansel Adams, neither am I. But I enjoy taking and looking at my pics.
I wholeheartedly agree with you! I take my photos to make myself happy and to remember the things I see. The memory is more important to me than the image quality. It’s of course best if you can get a good shot with a good memory attached, but I’ll always take a blurry photo with personal meaning over a shot that I can’t remember anything about later.