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Time to back up my files again.

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My main computer - backing up all my files from summer (based on laptop). I have been busy this year taking photos.  From our visit in the New Year in Leduc with my son's family until we got back from our camping trip to Alberta, I have shot thousands of photographs.  And that is just what has happened in the last 9 months.  I started shooting digital images around the year 2000, and so I have 25 years of images.  Then there are the slides and photos scanned from before that. Backups are important.  Hard drives fail.  Sectors get errors.  Stuff breaks.  And then there are the harsher realities of life, accidents and theft.  Floods, hurricanes, tornados, earth quakes, fires - they all take their toll on equipment.  And if your memories and important images and documents are all in one very vulnerable place, you could lose it all.  Like I said, backups are important. And so, at least once a year, I back up my files.  I have two m...

Willow leaf sawfly gall - a bee-relative that grows inside a leaf.

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Inside this gall is the larva of the willow apple sawfly. "What gall!"  Or is that, What a gall!"  Or better yet, "What is a gall?"   A gall is a small tubercle or raised bump that forms on a plant's leaf or stem.  It is created by any one of a variety of gall-producing insects as a means to produce offspring.  The range is astonishing, there being about 1500 species of gall producing invertebrates in North America alone.  Many of them belong to the Hymenoptera, the group of insects that includes wasps, bees, and sawflies. The number of plants that play host to these gall-producers is also diverse, but typically specific to the particular species.  The above photo that I took is of one particular insect that uses willows in the subgenus Salix .  I photographed it in the southwest corner of Alberta near Waterton National Park.  It is likely the gall produced by the willow leaf gall sawfly  ( Euura pacifica , also known as  Ponta...

Yellow banded poison dart frog - can you pick one up?

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Dendrobates leucomelas,  a lso known as the bumble bee poison arrow frog. I have written numerous blogs on the poisonous skin of amphibians (cane toad, rough-skinned newt, etc).  The toxins contained in the skin itself or in cutaneous glands can be formidable.  Most of the time, the active chemicals are produced by the animals themselves and are only toxic when ingested.  Neither point is true for members of Dendrobatidae (poison dart frog group). The poisons of the Dendrobatidae are somewhat varied but are all alkaloids.  Alkaloids as a group are potent chemicals, many with familiar names such as nicotine, caffeine, cocaine, and strychnine.  They are all nasty chemicals that affect parts of the nervous system and can cause organ failure and death in sufficient doses.  Most alkaloids come from plants, such as members of the nightshades. Poison dart frogs do not create their own poisons.  They get them from the invertebrates they eat.  But the...

Links to my series on Macro Photography

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Click on the links below to take you to the blog.  More below. 1.  Which axis to shoot along:    https://blogsbyericsvendsen.blogspot.com/2025/08/macro-photography-part-1-which-access.html 2.  Using a macro lens:    https://blogsbyericsvendsen.blogspot.com/2025/08/macro-photography-part-2-macro-with.html 3.  Reversing a lens:    https://blogsbyericsvendsen.blogspot.com/2025/08/macro-photography-part-3-reversing-lens.html 4.  Reproduction ratios:    https://blogsbyericsvendsen.blogspot.com/2025/08/macro-photography-part-4-understanding.html 5.  Focus stacking:    https://blogsbyericsvendsen.blogspot.com/2025/08/macro-photography-part-5-focus.html 6.  Macro flashes:    https://blogsbyericsvendsen.blogspot.com/2025/08/macro-photography-part-6-macro-flash.html 7.  Camera settings for macro:    https://blogsbyericsvendsen.blogspot.com/2025/08/macro-photography-part-7-camera-settings....

Macro photography - Part 15: Macro flash and background - pay attention to the background.

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Blue tobacco hornworm - Left:  White background.  Right:  No background but with "halo" lighting. As reproduction ratios increases, depth of field decreases.  As you approach a 1:1 ratio, the depth of field becomes critical.  At f/4, a 1:1 reproduction ratio has less a depth of field less than 0.2 mm.  At f/16, that depth of field increases to about 0.6 mm.  At f/64, about 2.5 mm.  (note:  the apertures given are effective apertures and not actual). If you are stacking there is less of an issue as lower apertures means the background will be visible but highly blurred.  However, if you shoot at small apertures to maximize depth of field, the background will be pitch black for anything at distance.  This is assuming that you are not shooting with a very high ISO.  To keep from getting the black background, you have to make some changes. I love using white paper plates; they are bright white, stiff, and readily available....

Macro photography - Part 14: Passion. Why I love macro photography.

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Orchard Mason Bee approaching grape hyacinth.  Nikon D70, 105 mm, f/29, macro flash used. Insects have always been something that has fascinated me.  They are everywhere; it's hard to go a day without seeing them, with the possible exception of winter time.  As a child, I used to catch all sorts of invertebrates, both terrestrial and aquatic.  I read books on them and was filled with an insatiable curiosity.  Then, after graduating high school, I decided to follow my passion and did a degree in zoology. It was as a young adult that everything came together for me.  School cemented my great passion for living creatures.  I also joined a school newspaper as a photographer and my love affair with cameras grew exponentially.  This was in the early 80's when computing was still in its infancy; I found that I could work with codes and became handy at working with them.  The combined interests of creatures, cameras, and code was the exact elixir nee...

Macro photography - Part 13: Depth of field and reproduction ratios are strongly correlated.

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Rose weevil on wild rose flower.  Nikon 7200, 105 macro, f/45 @ 1/250 and ISO 200  We know that depth of field is affected by numerous factors including focal length, aperture, and point of focus (there are others as well, but these are the ones the photographer has direct control over in camera).  We also know that reproduction ratios correlate to depth of field in that the greater the magnification, the less depth of field there is.  What's cool though is that at any magnification, regardless of what lens is involved, and regardless of what accessories are used with it, depth of field is a constant for that magnification or reproduction ratio (given a constant aperture between all values). Let's look at three different macro lenses; a 60 mm, 105 mm, and 200 mm macro.  If each lens is focused on a subject giving the exact same field of view (same area at point of focus), the reproduction ratio for each lens would be the same.  The depth of field is also th...