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Brad’s Day 315 of 366 - November 10, 2020
If you are ever driving on Old US-31 south of Ludington, check out the giant tree near the corner of Conrad Road and Old US-31. I have always enjoyed looking at this tree and tonight I am finally making an image of it that I am proud of. With great clouds, it sure is a lot easier to make strong images.
Brad’s Day 316 of 366 - November 11, 2020
I had never really noticed this old barn and silo just off the road of US-31 between Scottville and Manistee. The bright red bush in front of the barn is what I first noticed while driving down the highway. I turned around and got out and then I waited about fifteen minutes for the clouds to move into the correct spots to make a stronger image. I wanted the clouds to mimic the shape of the barn.
Todd Reed's Day 310 of 365
Shadow sits statuesquely looking out the window of our son Willie's home, hoping to catch sight of a bird. Cats are beautiful creatures that maintain their wild animal instincts no matter how tame they have become.
F5.0 at 1/200, ISO 800, 80-200 mm lens at 145 mm
Rachel’s Day 317 of 366 - November 12, 2020
Three years ago, we had an orphan heifer calf. The kids helped bottle-feed her. She was named after my daughter, Kasey. To differentiate between the two, we call her Kasey Calf. This year was her first-year calving. She had a little heifer today. The kids decided to name it Pumpkin.
Torch Lake Mallard
This was a very curious little female mallard duck enjoying today's sunshine on Torch Lake. She kept swimming right up to me as if she were looking for a friend to play with. I think people must feed her treats because she seemed annoyed that I didn't give her any of my protein bar.
F7.1 at 1/250, ISO 100, 18-50mm lens at 50mm
Rachel’s Day 319 of 366 - November 14, 2020
Growing up on the farm, we only had wood heat. Two wood stoves, and a wood kitchen range heated the entire home. In our home, we too use wood as our main source of heat. There are enough dead or downed trees on the farm that we do not need to buy any, it just takes time and sweat to cut, split, haul, and stack it. The warmth it gives us on freezing Michigan winter days makes it all worth it!
Brad Reed's Day 312 of 365
Ami Maglothin called me today to provide a photo tip that a great blue heron was hanging out in the marina across the street from Whitehall Industries on Madison Street. I headed there right away and found the heron hard at work fishing for food. Thanks for the great tip, Ami!
F5.6 at 1/2500, ISO 400, 600 mm lens at 600 mm
Brad’s Day 320 of 366 - November 15, 2020
It was a calm morning today in the deer hunting woods. Not many deer were moving, and we had a lot of rain on and off. I was glad to be sitting in a waterproof tower and not in my open-air pit blind today. For a few minutes we had a break in the clouds and a tiny bit of sunlight appeared. I used my iPhone to make this image out of our apple orchard tower.
Hanging Out
This is only the second porcupine that I have had the pleasure of photographing. My dad and I spotted this awesome animal on a dead end road near Torch Lake. I look forward to my next photo encounter with a beautiful porcupine.
F2.8 at 1/500, ISO 3200, 300mm lens at 300mm
Rachel’s Day 320 of 366 - November 15, 2020
After a chilly and windy opening day of rifle season, David and I were headed in for a warm dinner. The foggy atmosphere surrounding the field was a perfect black-and-white setting.
Brad’s Day 321 of 366 - November 16, 2020
I switched deer hunting towers for the second night of the season. Tonight, I sat in my brother’s blind and the rain turned to a beautiful, sticky snow. Within a half hour, I watched this scene turn from brown and kind of ugly, to a winter wonderland. The deer loved the snow too because they finally started moving after the snow fell.
Brad’s Day 322 of 366 - November 17, 2020
For the third night of deer season, I moved back into the apple orchard tower. It was another slow night of hunting, but the magic light appeared, and I was ready with my iPhone.
Todd Reed's Day 321 of 365
I find cardinals and blue spruce trees both to be among the most beautiful living things. At this moment I am hoping the flighty cardinal stays still long enough for me to pull the trigger on this shot from my blind. Click.
F2.8 at 1/400, ISO 800, 300 mm lens at 300 mm
Sweet Spot
I am about to get back in the truck after taking a picture near Alpena, Michigan when a bumblebee flies past me and lands on a knapweed flower. Bumblebees have fascinated me since childhood. Their colorful, fuzzy bodies and buzzing sound make them my favorite Michigan insect.
F9 at 1/500, ISO 400, 105mm lens at 105mm
Unique View of the Queen
My dad and I have both photographed Queen Anne's Lace several times this year for the Tuesdays Project, but today I tried to do it in a more unique way. I used my 105mm macro lens and got extremely close to one section of a dew-covered Queen Anne's Lace. I love how macro photography can make the ordinary look extraordinary.
F14 at 1/500, ISO 800, 105mm lens at 105mm
Rachel’s Day 330 of 366 - November 25, 2020
I did the last few work projects, and then hit the stores for Thanksgiving groceries. I helped my mom get the farmhouse ready for dinner tomorrow before I went home. The house is especially quiet without the kids here. Lately, I can feel the depression trying to pull me in. I had decided earlier in the day that I was done with the 366 Project. I am not happy with the photos lately; 40 minutes before today was out, I forced myself to make an image.
Crane Migration
Four large sandhill cranes made their way across M32 in Northeast Michigan this morning. I was glad my dad could stop the Suburban fast enough for me to get out my giant telephoto lens and tripod in time to capture these magnificent creatures in flight.
F5.6 at 1/2000, ISO 800, 600mm lens at 840mm
Brad’s Day 335 of 366 - November 30, 2020
As I was driving on Old US-31 through the Pere Marquette River Flats, I spotted this mature bald eagle. I pulled over and knew if I waited long enough, the bird would eventually fly away. I wanted to capture that moment just as it took flight. The five-minute wait was worth it.
Rachel’s Day 336 of 366 - December 1, 2020
The sunshine is a welcome sight today! I love long casting shadows.