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Brad’s Day 210 of 366 - July 28, 2020
I don’t know what kind of strange fungi this is in my front yard, but it is very large and super cool looking. My new yard never ceases to amaze me with all of its fun surprises.
Summertime Mirage
The calendar still says it is spring but this mid-June view through my large telephoto lens at South Haven beach sure looks and feels like summer to me. It is a splendid day to be on the Lake Michigan shoreline photographing Week 24 of "Tuesdays with Todd and Brad Reed: A Michigan Tribute."
F6.3 at 1/1000, ISO 200, 300mm lens at 300mm
Brad’s Day 215 of 366 - August 2, 2020
While looking out my bathroom window tonight, I spotted this goldfinch on our butterfly bush. I grabbed my camera gear and quietly snuck around the side of my house to capture this image before the tiny, beautiful bird flew away.
Rachel’s Day 215 of 366 - August 2, 2020
I have tried to make a photograph of the grapes up in Bespop’s grape arbor for several years. Either I was too late, or the animals had already eaten them when I have tried before. This year, I was determined. I made almost daily visits to the arbor and finally decided the time was right.
Friends of the Lakeshore
Seagulls are beautiful birds. A lot of people don't like them and I have even heard people call them "flying rats." Personally, I love seagulls and I never get tired of watching them adapt to the weather throughout the year on the shores of Lake Michigan.
F5.6 at 1/2500, ISO 400, 600mm lens at 600mm
Brad Reed's Day 215 of 365
The Ludington Municipal Marina has recently expanded its capacity by converting its north edge into a day dock and seawall. One of the many benefits of the recent expansion is that the new wall has allowed the marina to better accommodate large boats. This week, the 80-foot Burger named Chateau Thierry was trying out the new dock.
F8.0 at 1/125, ISO 100, 18-50 mm lens at 27 mm
Brad Reed's Day 216 of 365
My dad and I decided to try a new adventure and see if we could get our little Boston Whaler from his house at Crosswinds on Lake Michigan to our cabin a few miles up the Pere Marquette River. After several attempts, we found a path that was deep enough. Along the way, we each were able to make a few good photographs.
F2.8 at 1/1250, ISO 1000, 300 mm lens with 1.4 extender at 450 mm
Brad’s Day 228 of 366 - August 15, 2020
Tonight, Julia, Ethan, Aiden, and I decided to play 9 holes of golf at Lakeside Links south of Ludington. As Aiden was about to tee off, I looked up and spotted these Canada geese flying in a large V-shaped formation. I grabbed my camera out of the back of the golf cart and went to work making this image.
Rachel’s Day 236 of 366 - August 23, 2020
Some of my favorite memories growing up were made in our apple orchard. The tire swing, baseball diamond, and the biggest dandelions were there. Let’s not forget the apples. We would eat them right off the tree, or make homemade apple sauce, pie, crisp, or butter. The apples that were too bruised I would pick up for my brother, Kevin, to put out for deer. This apple tree is in my yard, and we love it.
Rachel’s Day 241 of 366 - August 28, 2020
The flowers in my mom’s garden made a great brilliant backdrop to this water-droplet-filled leaf.
Rachel’s Day 246 of 366 - September 2, 2020
At last, Bespop’s grapes have ripened! I have great memories of picking these with him or drinking the homemade grape juice we made from them on a cold winter day.
Tiny Tot
About the size and weight of a ping pong ball, a newborn piping plover scurries along the Lake Michigan shoreline on its spindly legs. Naturalists helped the rare bird get its life started by erecting a protective cage over the nest its parents made on a highly trafficked area of West Michigan beach.
F4.5 at 1/1250, ISO 800, 500mm lens at 500mm
Plover Bling
With or without all the "bling" it is wearing, an adult piping plover is simply a beautiful creature. The bands help researchers keep track of the endangered bird, enabling them to know exactly which bird this is no matter where it travels. This plover and its mate are among less than 60 mating pairs currently identified along the Great Lakes.
F4.5 at 1/1250, ISO 800, 500mm lens at 500mm
Brad’s Day 256 of 366 - September 12, 2020
Another goldfinch was back in the same butterfly bush that I had photographed earlier in the year. This time instead of a green backdrop, I wanted my red house to be the backdrop. I knew the yellow bird would rocket out against the red siding.
Free Gull
I would like to be as wise about birds and as in sync with them as so many Native Americans have learned to be through generations of careful observation and the passing on of knowledge of their ways. This gull seems to me to be a free spirit as it passes right over my head at the Native American Pow Wow at the National Cherry Festival. I am sure some of the Indians who saw the bird found meaning in its appearance.
F10 at 1/500, ISO 400, 80-200mm lens at 200mm
Rachel’s Day 258 of 366 - September 14, 2020
These large mushrooms are always fun to spot in the summer. The kids found this one down our long lane at the farm.
Rachel’s Day 259 of 366 - September 15, 2020
I took a lunchtime break at the lakeshore. The seagulls were very active!
The North Shore
Over the last 15 years the number of new houses and cottages built on the north shore of Hamlin Lake has exploded. Most of the homes border Hamlin Lake on one side and the Manistee National Forest on the other.
F6.3 at 1/1250, ISO 400, 10-17mm lens at 17mm