Two Insects by the Skokie Lagoons



During the summer there are a lot of bugs by the Lagoon; mainly because 
it's a swampy climate. Two of the bugs that I photographed were milkweed
 bugs and bees. Milkweed bugs are fun to photograph because they're
 usually on milkweed plants, which have large leaves and flowers, but it's
 frustrating to get photos of bees because they refuse to stay still and may choose
 to attack the photographer.


When I originally took these photos I had set my camera to the 'Raw' setting,
 thinking that it meant high quality. When I uploaded the photos to my 
computer I discovered that my computer couldn't view 'Raw' images, and so
 I had about fifty photos that I wasn't able to look at. I researched 'Raw' and
 found out that it's a type of image format that's preferred for photoshopping
 because it retains more data than a 'jpg' does. So, I used photoshop to edit 
these photos and then convert them into 'jpg' so I could upload them to this blog. 

Winnetka
Taken in July 2011

Algae-Covered Waterway by the Skokie Lagoons



Over the summer I went to the dam on Willow Road a few times to
 take photos of plants and insects, and after crossing the dam one 
day I happened upon this little algae-covered waterway with a small
 path made by ducks running through it. 


I think it looks kind of peculiar.

Winnetka
Taken in July 2011

White Tailed Deer at Sunset


I spotted a few white tailed deer while looking for animals to photograph 
along Forest Way Drive next to the Skokie Lagoons. They were pretty 
suspicious of me but I stood still for a few minutes and they
 stopped paying attention and went back to grazing. After a while though 
they started getting suspicious again and looked as if they were about to charge, so I left.


It was almost dusk and I tried to utilize what remaining light there 
was, but the deer were in a densely wooded area and wouldn't tolerate me 
approaching them to get a better angle with the orange sky behind them. 
I tried using a flash and the resulting photo looks like something out of a 
National Geographic from the 90s (or at least I think it does).
 

Winnetka
Taken in January 2012

Bridge in Fort Sheridan



 In the beginning of November I biked to Fort Sheridan to photograph the nature
 preserve with my f/1.8 and got a lot of great shots of the prairie foliage.
 In the midst of the quaint scenic landscape is a small rusty bridge which 
stretches over a deep, ravine. 


I was a little hesitant to walk over it but it didn't collapse so I took a photo
 from the trail right in front of it and a little ways up the trail in the 
middle of a field, where you can see the forest to the left and 
the cliff/Lake on the horizon.

Fort Sheridan
Taken in November 2011

Winter Sunset on the Skokie Lagoons



A week ago I went to the Skokie Lagoon to photograph sunset, 
and tried to get some landscape shots of the trees next to the snow. 


The sunset gave the trees a red glow that contrasts the 
snow and gives the landscape a minimalist look to it.

Winnetka
Taken in January 2012

Lincoln Park Zoo in Winter

 About one year ago I went to the Lincoln Park Zoo to take photos of the animals.
 I didn't have any fancy equipment and was still only shooting in "Auto" mode.
 While walking around the zoo I didn't really have a set goal in mind for
 what I wanted to get photos, so I just got photos of whatever I happened to pass
 that looked interesting. 


The top photo is of a pond in the middle of the zoo with a bunch 
of different kinds of ducks and a few swans, and the bottom photo is of some
 sort of buffalo from Asia. The buffalo was trying to stay out of the sun and 
hid in the shade of its little shelter.

Chicago
Taken in December 2010

Stream in Harms Woods 2



When I biked over to Harms Woods a couple weeks ago looking for
 new things to photograph and not finding anything I ended up taking a
 few more shots of that small stream which flows down into the Chicago River.
 This was before it snowed and dropped 50 degrees.


I used a wider lens and utilized the pre-sunset light to be able to use a 
smaller aperture, which made the landscape much more detailed, which is nice
 for a day scene as opposed to a sunset scene which looks nicer with the 
background completely blurred out or with bokehs of the sun floating above
 the horizon. I also tried getting a good angle of the stream going through the woods:

Glenview
Taken in January 2012

Two Swans on the Skokie Lagoon 2


Same swans as I posted yesterday. I recently watched a documentary from
 the 80s on National Geographic Photographers and I noticed one of the 
photographers was using a flash when photographing animals at night so I 
tried it out on the swan(s) as the sun began to fall behind the trees and the
 swans were slowly floating closer to the shore. I was surprised that they weren't
 annoyed by the flash at all, and I have to say that though I am not a fan of 
using flash it works very well with close-up night nature photography. It makes 
the animals/plants more detailed and tangible looking.


The top photo was one of the last photos I took of the swans, and the 
bottom photo is one of the first. The swans were paddling in an area of 
the Lagoon that wasn't exposed to the sunset yet, but I really like the 
bleak colors and the blur effect my telephoto gave the landscape. The juxtaposition 
between the looming crooked trees and the upright dignified swan is interesting.

Winnetka
Taken in January 2011

Two Swans on the Skokie Lagoon at Sunset



It was very bizarre to see swans on the Skokie Lagoon. While I was 
photographing the sunset yesterday these two swans were slowly paddling 
towards the other end of the Lagoon, and they reached the sheet of ice at 
about the same time as sunset. I walked towards them slowly so they eventually 
grew used to me and didn't  fly away, and even floated right up to me on the shore later on.


To get the orange to be as vibrant as it is in the photo, I used a low 
aperture to get the colors to be more saturated and a slow shutter speed to
 make the reflection of the sun brighter. I used my telephoto lens, so there
 isn't much detail in the ice behind the swans which makes it look like a sky/horizon. 
Here's a wider photo that better illustrates the setting of the previous photo:

Winnetka
Taken in January 2012

Flock of Waterfowl over the Skokie Lagoon



I've noticed that ducks are genuinely intolerant of humans. Usually they float away
 anytime I walk up to them- as opposed to geese, which stand their ground and
 hiss menacingly, or herons, which just find a higher place perch. Half of the ducks 
on the Lagoon today weren't your typical mallards and I can't seem to find out what they are.


I drove to the Skokie Lagoon earlier today at sunset and 
as I approached the Lagoon the ducks saw me and immediately flew away.
 I pointed my telephoto lens up into the flock and got a photo of them 
all flying together by using a panning technique and a low aperture/high shutter speed. 
 I also got a landscape shot of the Lagoon as they were circling it a few times:


Winnetka
Taken in January 2012

Crow Island Woods Autumn Colors



Crow Island Woods is really scenic. It's small, but it's fun for 
nature hikes and the plants are very picturesque.


I had just gotten my 50mm f/1.8 and I was looking for something to
 try it out on, and I guess the low aperture saturated the leaves and left 
enough shadow to give these photos a distinct artistic look.

Winnetka
Taken in October 2011

Fallen Trees in Harms Woods



 Forests around the Chicago River contain a lot of things that would normally be 
blocked out by dense lower canopy and are noticeable only in fall and winter. 
Among these are trees that have fallen over.  


I biked to Harms Woods and hiked through the mud to an area with a
 bunch of fallen trees. That's pretty much all there was. Some moss, fungi, a
 squirrel, and fallen trees. I hoped to find something interesting but overall everything
 was mundane. The tree in the bottom photo was pretty grotesque.

Glenview
Taken in January 2012


Over the summer I tried taking an alternative route home after biking to
 Mundelein and ended up in Hawthorn Woods, which is fields, a few farms, 
and several planned communities. 


This one field I passed by looked so expansive that I 
decided to photograph it.

Hawthorn Woods
Taken in July 2011

Artwork in Long Grove 2



After looking through my old photographs of the artwork in Long Grove
 I decided to spend a Saturday driving up there and seeing if there
 was anything new. It was all pretty much the same but I was able 
to get a few good pics of some abstract lawn ornaments and
 paintings, as well as some windmills/chimes. 


I used my f/1.8 with each of these.

Long Grove
Taken in November 2011 

Cardinals



 On New Years Eve I went on a trek through the forest by the Skokie Lagoons 
in search of birds that haven't migrated yet and happened upon some seagulls,
 mallards, and cardinals. Cardinals are the only ones that stay around all winter,
 and I was surprised to see the other birds but I guess the weather still isn't cold 
enough for them to leave.


The forest was very dense and it was nearly impossible to find an angle
 where branches weren't in the way, but my telephoto lens and a wide
 aperture were a big help and I was able to walk away with several quality
 shots. On the top is a male cardinal which I spent a half hour chasing
 through the woods by following its chirping, and the bottom photo is of a
 female cardinal who was kind enough to stop and pose while I found a good angle.

Glencoe
Taken in December 2011