Apr. 29th, 2010

senoritafish: (Jet - red)
After school a Friday or two ago, Angus announced he wanted to go see some sea lions - I'd mentioned I'd seen they were taking over the Fish Harbor dock in front of the Army Corp of Engineers trailers. I figured it would be a way to work in a few more waymarks as well.

IMG_5863

War is chaos. This is the WWII Pacific Submarine Memorial West. Turbine end of a torpedo, a great causer of chaos. 

Torpedo
Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station
Seal Beach CA
Canon EOS 1000D
16 April 2010

+8 )

26. chaos ☺
27. numbers ☺
25. calmness ☺
senoritafish: (Jet - red)
After school a Friday or two ago, Angus announced he wanted to go see some sea lions - I'd mentioned I'd seen they were taking over the Fish Harbor dock in front of the Army Corp of Engineers trailers. I figured it would be a way to work in a few more waymarks as well.

IMG_5863

War is chaos. This is the WWII Pacific Submarine Memorial West. Turbine end of a torpedo, a great causer of chaos. 

Torpedo
Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station
Seal Beach CA
Canon EOS 1000D
16 April 2010

+8 )

26. chaos ☺
27. numbers ☺
25. calmness ☺
senoritafish: (Heart fish)
0420000908

My work made me start carrying a work-issued cell phone (so I have to carry around two now :p ). It does have a slightly nicer camera than my own, and I pulled in out while collecting fish receipts. This is the wall outside the door to the reception area of one of the fish receivers we sample from. Left to right, an opah, Pacific pomfret, louvar, and the bill of a small swordfish on the right.

Fish Company
San Pedro CA
LG VX8350 phone camera
20 April 2010

90° to the left... )

28. wall ☺
29. ice ☺
senoritafish: (Heart fish)
0420000908

My work made me start carrying a work-issued cell phone (so I have to carry around two now :p ). It does have a slightly nicer camera than my own, and I pulled in out while collecting fish receipts. This is the wall outside the door to the reception area of one of the fish receivers we sample from. Left to right, an opah, Pacific pomfret, louvar, and the bill of a small swordfish on the right.

Fish Company
San Pedro CA
LG VX8350 phone camera
20 April 2010

90° to the left... )

28. wall ☺
29. ice ☺
senoritafish: (Burdz!)
Not only have I been constantly hearing cedar waxwings in the neighborhood lately, the kingbirds are back, although I haven't determined whether they're Westerns or Tropicals. I hear the waxwings more often than I see them, with their very high-pitched piping calls, while the kingbirds seem to be using the Moreton Bay fig in front of our house as a food source. It's dropping figs all over again, and several afternoons lately when I've parked after coming home from work, I watch the kingbirds flying in and out of tree. They flutter out of the leaves with a large object (well large compared to them) in their beaks, which they choke down while perched on the lightpost wires. It takes them some effort; I don't think the fig tree is infested with insects that big, and it looks about the diameter of one of my fingernails, i.e. about the size of a fig. Hmm, and I'd thought they ate mostly insects. I'm glad some wildlife is getting some use out of the tree.

I've also seen the Say's phoebe hanging around the office, well, the fence next to the strawberry field adjacent to the office. For a moment I thought it was another kingbird, but a little too small, and the top of its breast was grey, then orangeish farther down, not yellow.
senoritafish: (Burdz!)
Not only have I been constantly hearing cedar waxwings in the neighborhood lately, the kingbirds are back, although I haven't determined whether they're Westerns or Tropicals. I hear the waxwings more often than I see them, with their very high-pitched piping calls, while the kingbirds seem to be using the Moreton Bay fig in front of our house as a food source. It's dropping figs all over again, and several afternoons lately when I've parked after coming home from work, I watch the kingbirds flying in and out of tree. They flutter out of the leaves with a large object (well large compared to them) in their beaks, which they choke down while perched on the lightpost wires. It takes them some effort; I don't think the fig tree is infested with insects that big, and it looks about the diameter of one of my fingernails, i.e. about the size of a fig. Hmm, and I'd thought they ate mostly insects. I'm glad some wildlife is getting some use out of the tree.

I've also seen the Say's phoebe hanging around the office, well, the fence next to the strawberry field adjacent to the office. For a moment I thought it was another kingbird, but a little too small, and the top of its breast was grey, then orangeish farther down, not yellow.

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