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<channel>
	<title>Cosmic Strings</title>
	<link>http://skylady.trippy.org</link>
	<description>Elinor Gates' Ramblings</description>
	<pubDate>Sun, 30 May 2010 04:35:59 +0000</pubDate>
	<generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=1.5</generator>
	<language>en</language>

		<item>
		<title>Mt. Hamilton Safari</title>
		<link>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=49</link>
		<comments>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=49#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 29 May 2010 20:35:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>skylady</dc:creator>
		
	<category>Wild Flowers</category>
	<category>Wildlife</category>
		<guid>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=49</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Today I took a drive from Mt. Hamilton to Patterson to see what sort of wildlife I could find along the way.
Final tally - 45 species of birds (including, redwinged, bicolored, and tricolored blackbirds; golden and bald eagles),
5 species of mammals (ground squirrel, tule elk, brush rabbit, black-tailed jackrabbit, and mule deer), 4 species of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[	<p>Today I took a drive from Mt. Hamilton to Patterson to see what sort of wildlife I could find along the way.<br />
Final tally - 45 species of birds (including, redwinged, bicolored, and tricolored blackbirds; golden and bald eagles),<br />
5 species of mammals (ground squirrel, tule elk, brush rabbit, black-tailed jackrabbit, and mule deer), 4 species of reptiles (western fence lizard, northern pacific rattlesnake, gopher snake, san joachim coachwhip), and lots of wildflowers (including the biggest bloom of clarkia breweri I&#8217;ve ever seen).  </p>
	<p>Now if only all days could be so fun and relaxing.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRSS>http://skylady.trippy.org/wp-commentsrss2.php?p=49</wfw:commentRSS>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Mt. Hamilton Birds</title>
		<link>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=48</link>
		<comments>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=48#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 May 2010 18:01:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>skylady</dc:creator>
		
	<category>Wildlife</category>
	<category>Photography</category>
		<guid>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=48</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Spring is here and I'm out with my camera taking photos of birds.  A few samples below.


Violet-Green Swallow


Rufous Hummingbird


Western Kingbird ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[	<p>Spring is here and I&#8217;m out with my camera taking photos of birds.  A few samples below.</p>
	<p><img src="miscPhotos/violetGreenSwallow.jpg" alt="Violet-Green Swallow" /><br />
Violet-Green Swallow</p>
	<p><img src="miscPhotos/rufousHummingbird.jpg" alt="Rufous Hummingbird"  /><br />
Rufous Hummingbird</p>
	<p><img src="miscPhotos/westernKingbird.jpg" alt="Western Kingbird"  /><br />
Western Kingbird
</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRSS>http://skylady.trippy.org/wp-commentsrss2.php?p=48</wfw:commentRSS>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>MPEG2 and iMovie &#8216;09</title>
		<link>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=47</link>
		<comments>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=47#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Dec 2009 22:15:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>skylady</dc:creator>
		
	<category>General</category>
		<guid>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=47</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Well, I had a little glitch with iMovie and my Sony Handycam movies.  I very happily had everything working 
nicely with sound for my MPEG2s in iMovie then perian updated itself and broke something, so that sounds for my movies stopped working.  Just uninstalling and reinstalling perian did nothing to help.  However, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[	<p>Well, I had a little glitch with iMovie and my Sony Handycam movies.  I very happily had everything working<br />
nicely with sound for my MPEG2s in iMovie then perian updated itself and broke something, so that sounds for my movies stopped working.  Just uninstalling and reinstalling perian did nothing to help.  However, reinstalling iMovie (actually iLife &#8216;09) fixed the problem.  Clearly perian is doing something to one of the sound libraries that messes up iMovie, though what I have no idea.   Anyway, I&#8217;ve stopped perian from automatically updating itself in the hopes that I won&#8217;t have this problem again.    Maybe this tip will help some other hapless Mac user with MPEG2 formatted movies&#8230;&#8230;
</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRSS>http://skylady.trippy.org/wp-commentsrss2.php?p=47</wfw:commentRSS>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>South Africa Vacation Photos</title>
		<link>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=46</link>
		<comments>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=46#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Dec 2009 11:24:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>skylady</dc:creator>
		
	<category>Wildlife</category>
	<category>Photography</category>
		<guid>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=46</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[As most of my friends know, I traveled to South Africa in November for a safari vacation focusing on birds and mammals.  I've managed to distill the 4000+ photos into various albums totaling about 500 photos highlighting the various plants, animals, and vistas from the trip.  Instead of posting the photos here (which [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[	<p>As most of my friends know, I traveled to South Africa in November for a safari vacation focusing on birds and mammals.  I&#8217;ve managed to distill the 4000+ photos into various albums totaling about 500 photos highlighting the various plants, animals, and vistas from the trip.  Instead of posting the photos here (which I had done for previous vacations), I&#8217;ve decided to give Google&#8217;s Picasa web site a try.  Luckily there is a handy app for iPhoto to upload the photos and comments so that putting them there is simple. To take a look at some photos, check out<br />
<a href="http://picasaweb.google.com/ElinorGates/">http://picasaweb.google.com/ElinorGates/</a>.  </p>
	<p>Most mammals I saw I got photos of, but there were a few seen at night or too quickly to train my camera on.<br />
The trip list for Mammals is:<br />
Chacma Baboon<br />
Peter&#8217;s Epauletted Fruit Bat<br />
Blesbok<br />
Buffalo<br />
Lesser Bushbaby<br />
Thick-tailed Bushbaby<br />
Bushbuck<br />
African Civet<br />
Common Duiker<br />
African Elephant<br />
Small-spotted Genet<br />
Southern Giraffe<br />
Scrub Hare<br />
Hippopotamus<br />
Spotted Hyena<br />
Impala<br />
Black-backed Jackal<br />
Side-striped Jackal<br />
Klipspringer<br />
Greater Kudu<br />
Leopard<br />
Lion<br />
Banded Mongoose<br />
Dwarf Mongoose<br />
Slender Mongoose<br />
White-tailed Mongoose<br />
Samango Monkey<br />
Vervet Monkey<br />
Nyala<br />
Oribi<br />
Common Reedbuck<br />
Grey Rhebok<br />
White Rhinoceros<br />
Tree Squirrel<br />
Suricate (Meerkat)<br />
Warthog<br />
Common Waterbuck<br />
Blue Wildebeast<br />
Burchell&#8217;s Zebra<br />
Fallow Deer<br />
Long-fingered Bat</p>
	<p>Other mammals seen, but not necessarily wild, were: Black Wildebeast, Sable Antelope, and Springbok.</p>
	<p>For my birding pals, here is a list of the species I saw (* denotes not a life bird). I have photos of about 200 of these species in the on-line album (doesn&#8217;t mean it is a good photo, however, many are just record shots).</p>
	<p>Great Crested Grebe<br />
Black-necked Grebe<br />
Little Grebe<br />
White-breasted Cormorant<br />
Reed Cormorant<br />
African Darter<br />
Grey Heron<br />
Black-headed Heron<br />
Goliath Heron<br />
Purple Heron<br />
Little Egret<br />
Yellow-billed Egret<br />
*Cattle Egret<br />
Green-backed Heron<br />
*Black-crowned Night-Heron<br />
Hamerkop<br />
White Stork<br />
Woolly-necked Stork<br />
Saddle-billed Stork<br />
Marabou Stork<br />
Yellow-billed Stork<br />
African Sacred Ibis<br />
Southern Bald Ibis<br />
Glossy Ibis<br />
Hadeda Ibis<br />
African Spoonbill<br />
*Greater Flamingo<br />
White-faced Duck<br />
White-backed Duck<br />
Egyptian Goose<br />
Yellow-billed Duck<br />
African Black Duck<br />
Cape Teal<br />
Red-billed Teal<br />
Cape Shoveler<br />
Southern Pochard<br />
Comb Duck<br />
Spur-winged Goose<br />
Maccoa Duck<br />
Hooded Vulture<br />
Cape Vulture<br />
White-backed Vulture<br />
White-headed Vulture<br />
Yellow-billed Kite<br />
Black-shouldered Kite (elanus caeruleus - different than  the Australian Black-shouldered Kite elanus axillaris, which I&#8217;ve also seen)<br />
Tawny Eagle<br />
Lesser Spotted Eagle<br />
Wahlberg&#8217;s Eagle<br />
Marital Eagle<br />
Brown Snake-Eagle<br />
Bateleur<br />
African Fish Eagle<br />
Steppe Buzzard<br />
Jackal Buzzard<br />
Little Sparrowhawk<br />
Black Sparrowhawk<br />
African Goshawk<br />
Dark Chanting Goshawk<br />
African Harrier-Hawk<br />
Lanner Falcon<br />
Eurasian Hobby<br />
Taita Falcon<br />
Amur Falcon<br />
Rock Kestrel<br />
Coqui Francolin<br />
Crested Francolin<br />
Shelley&#8217;s Francolin<br />
Red-winged Fracolin<br />
Natal Francolin<br />
Swainson&#8217;s Spurfowl<br />
*Helmeted Guineafowl<br />
Kurrichane Buttonquail<br />
Wattled Crane<br />
Blue Crane<br />
Black Crake<br />
Red-knobbed Coot<br />
African Finfoot<br />
Kori Bustard<br />
Denham&#8217;s Bustard<br />
Red-crested Korhaan<br />
Black-bellied Bustard<br />
African Jacana<br />
Greater Painted Snipe<br />
Three-banded Plover<br />
Crowned Lapwing<br />
Senegal Lapwing<br />
Blacksmith Lapwing<br />
White-crowned Lapwing<br />
African Wattled Lapwing<br />
Common Sandpiper<br />
Wood Sandpiper<br />
Marsh Sandpiper<br />
Common Greenshank<br />
Ruff<br />
African Snipe<br />
*Black-winged Stilt<br />
Water Thick-Knee<br />
Bronze-winged Courser<br />
Grey-headed Gull<br />
Whiskered Tern<br />
White-winged Tern<br />
Double-banded Sandgrouse<br />
*Rock Dove<br />
Speckled Pigeon<br />
African Olive-Pigeon<br />
Red-eyed Dove<br />
African Mourning Dove<br />
Cape Turtle-Dove<br />
Laughing Dove<br />
Namaqua Dove<br />
Emerald-spotted Wood-Dove<br />
African Green-Pigeon<br />
Brown-headed Parrot<br />
Krysna Turaco<br />
Purple-crested Turaco<br />
Grey Go-away-bird<br />
Red-chested Cuckoo<br />
Black Cuckoo (heard only, not seen)<br />
Great Spotted Cuckoo<br />
Levaillant&#8217;s Cuckoo<br />
Jacobin Cuckoo<br />
Klaas&#8217;s Cuckoo<br />
Diderick Cuckoo<br />
Burchell&#8217;s Coucal<br />
*Barn Owl<br />
African Scops-Owl<br />
Pearl-spotted Owlet<br />
Spotted Eagle-Owl<br />
Verreaux&#8217;s Eagle-Owl<br />
Square-tailed Nightjar<br />
White-rumped Swift<br />
Little Swift<br />
Alpine Swift<br />
African Palm Swift<br />
Speckled Mousebird<br />
Red-faced Mousebird<br />
Narina Trogon<br />
Pied Kingfisher<br />
Giant Kingfisher<br />
Malachite Kingfisher<br />
African Pygmy Kingfisher<br />
Woodland Kingfisher<br />
Brown-hooded Kingfisher<br />
Striped Kingfisher<br />
European Bee-eater<br />
White-fronted Bee-eater<br />
Little Bee-eater<br />
Lilac-breasted Roller<br />
Purple Roller<br />
African Hoopoe<br />
Green Wood-Hoopoe<br />
Common Scimitarbill<br />
African Grey Hornbill<br />
Red-billed Hornbill<br />
Southern Yellow-billed Hornbill<br />
Southern Ground-Hornbill<br />
Black-collared Barbet<br />
Yellow-fronted Tinkerbird<br />
Yellow-rumped Tinkerbird (heard only, not seen)<br />
Crested Barbet<br />
Golden-tailed Woodpecker<br />
Cardinal Woodpecker<br />
Bearded Woodpecker<br />
Rufous-naped Lark<br />
Flappet Lark<br />
Sabota Lark<br />
Eastern Long-billed Lark<br />
Red-capped Lark<br />
Chestnut-backed Sparrowlark<br />
*Barn Swallow<br />
White-throated Swallow<br />
Wire-tailed Swallow<br />
Red-breasted Swallow<br />
Mosque Swallow<br />
Greater Striped Swallow<br />
Lesser Striped Swallow<br />
South African Cliff-Swallow<br />
Rock Martin<br />
Common House Martin<br />
Banded Martin<br />
Black Cuckooshrike<br />
Fork-tailed Drongo<br />
Eurasian Golden Oriole<br />
Black-headed Oriole<br />
Cape Crow<br />
Pied Crow<br />
White-necked Raven<br />
Southern Black Tit<br />
Grey Penduline Tit<br />
Arrow-marked Babbler<br />
Dark-capped Bulbul<br />
Sombre Greenbul<br />
Kurrichane Thrush<br />
Karoo Thrush<br />
Orange Ground-Thrush<br />
Groundscraper Thrush<br />
Cape Rock-Thrush<br />
Sentinel Rock-Thrush<br />
Mountain Wheatear<br />
Capped Wheatear<br />
Buff-streaked Chat<br />
Familiar Chat<br />
Mocking Cliff-Chat<br />
Ant-eating Chat<br />
African Stonechat<br />
Chorister Robin-Chat<br />
White-browed Robin-Chat<br />
Cape Robin-Chat<br />
White-throated Robin-Chat<br />
White-starred Robin<br />
White-browed Scrub-Robin<br />
Bearded Scrub-Robin<br />
Willow Warbler<br />
Yellow-throated Woodland-Warbler<br />
Bar-throated Apalis<br />
Yellow-breasted Apalis<br />
Long-billed Crombec<br />
Yellow-bellied Eremomela<br />
Burnt-necked Eremomela<br />
Green-backed Camaroptera<br />
Cape Grassbird<br />
Zitting Cisticola<br />
Wing-snapping Cisticola (heard only, not seen)<br />
Rattling Cisticola<br />
Levaillant&#8217;s Cisticola<br />
Croaking Cisticola<br />
Lazy Cisticola<br />
Neddicky<br />
Tawny-flanked Prinia<br />
Black-chested Prinia<br />
Drakensberg Prinia<br />
Spotted Flycatcher<br />
African Dusky Flycatcher<br />
Ashy Flycatcher<br />
Southern Black Flycatcher<br />
Pale Flycatcher<br />
Fiscal Flycatcher<br />
Cape Batis<br />
Chinspot Batis<br />
African Paradise-Flycatcher<br />
African Pied Wagtail<br />
Mountain Wagtail<br />
Cape Wagtail<br />
African Pipit<br />
Long-billed Pipit<br />
Yellow-breasted Pipit<br />
Cape Longclaw<br />
Yellow-throated Longclaw<br />
Lesser Grey Shrike<br />
Common Fiscal<br />
Red-backed Shrike<br />
Magpie Shrike<br />
Southern Boubou<br />
Black-backed Puffback<br />
Brubru<br />
Brown-crowned Tchagra<br />
Black-crowned Tchagra<br />
Bokmakierie<br />
Orange-breasted Bush-Shrike<br />
Grey-headed Bush-Shrike<br />
White-crested Helmet-Shrike<br />
Retz&#8217;s Helmet-Shrike<br />
*Common Myna<br />
Pied Starling<br />
Wattled Starling<br />
Violet-backed Starling<br />
Burchell&#8217;s Starling<br />
Cape Glossy Starling<br />
Greater Blue-eared Starling<br />
Red-winged Starling<br />
Red-billed Oxpecker<br />
Malachite Sunbird<br />
Marico Sunbird<br />
Southern Double-collared Sunbird<br />
Greater Double-collared Sunbird<br />
White-bellied Sunbird<br />
Scarlet-chested Sunbird<br />
Amethyst Sunbird<br />
Collared Sunbird<br />
Cape White-eye<br />
Red-billed Buffalo Weaver<br />
*House Sparrow<br />
Cape Sparrow<br />
Southern Grey-headed Sparrow<br />
Yellow-throated Petronia<br />
Thick-billed Weaver<br />
Spectacled Weaver<br />
Village Weaver<br />
Cape Weaver<br />
Southern Masked-Weaver<br />
Lesser Masked-Weaver<br />
Golden Weaver<br />
Red-headed Weaver<br />
Cuckoo Finch<br />
Red-billed Quelea<br />
Southern Red Bishop<br />
Yellow-crowned Bishop<br />
Yellow Bishop<br />
Fan-tailed Widowbird<br />
Red-collared Widowbird<br />
Long-tailed Widowbird<br />
Green-winged Pytilia<br />
Green Twinspot<br />
African Firefinch<br />
Blue Waxbill<br />
Common Waxbill<br />
Red-headed Finch<br />
Bronze Mannikin<br />
Pin-tailed Whydah<br />
Village Indigobird<br />
Yellow-fronted Canary<br />
Cape Canary<br />
Forest Canary<br />
Streaky-headed Seed-Eater<br />
Golden-breasted Bunting<br />
Cinnamon-breasted Bunting</p>
	<p>315 species seen, only 10 of which weren&#8217;t lifers.  Wow! What a trip!
</p>
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	</item>
		<item>
		<title>MPEG2 and iMovie</title>
		<link>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=45</link>
		<comments>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=45#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Oct 2009 10:22:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>skylady</dc:creator>
		
	<category>General</category>
		<guid>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=45</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I purchased a Sony HandyCam video camera not even considering that it might not play nice with my Mac.

As many people have discovered, iMovie, Quicktime, etc. on Macs don't read MPEG2 encoded video. After many hours of reading
posts on-line I have finally gotten iMovie to recognize the videos from my Sony HandyCam and import them [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[	<p>I purchased a Sony HandyCam video camera not even considering that it might not play nice with my Mac.</p>
	<p>As many people have discovered, iMovie, Quicktime, etc. on Macs don&#8217;t read MPEG2 encoded video. After many hours of reading<br />
posts on-line I have finally gotten iMovie to recognize the videos from my Sony HandyCam and import them directly from the<br />
camera.  I&#8217;m not sure what the magic piece of software is, but I installed the following (and I am using the Snow Leopard operating system):</p>
	<p>Perian (www.perian.org)<br />
Flip4Mac (www.telestream.net/flip4mac-wmv/overview.htm)<br />
Quicktime mpeg2 component (apple.com/quicktime/mpeg2 - this one costs $20) - Note, this you absolutely need, even if you don&#8217;t get any of the other pieces of software (I haven&#8217;t found a freeware program that suits, though VLC will play your mpeg2 movies, if that is all you need, and is free).<br />
Quicktime Pro ($29.99)</p>
	<p>Quicktime Pro will display the video, but does not play the sound (even though the a3 codec is part of the perian package and the sound should play. If works for some people,  but not for all. Don&#8217;t know why).</p>
	<p>I find MPEG Streamclip (http://www.squared5.com/svideo/mpeg-streamclip-mac.html) is also a great tool for converting MPEG2 to other formats. However, it needs the $20 quicktime mpeg2 component to work.  </p>
	<p>Of course it would be nice if iMovie and Quicktime just dealt with MPEG2 out of the box, but at least I managed to get it working so I can do what I want.  </p>
	<p>What still doesn&#8217;t work is importing the MPG2 files from disk to iMovie, as it doesn&#8217;t recognize them as a format it knows.  So all<br />
is not perfect, but at least I&#8217;m now content that I can look at and edit my videos in iMovie or Quicktime Pro.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Australia Bird List</title>
		<link>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=44</link>
		<comments>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=44#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Feb 2009 17:02:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>skylady</dc:creator>
		
	<category>Wildlife</category>
		<guid>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=44</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[For those of my friends who are birders, here is the list of birds I saw in Australia in January.  Almost all the birds on the list were lifers for me.  Birds that were not lifers are marked with an *.

Orange-footed Scrubfowl
Australian Brush-turkey
Australian Pelican
Darter
Little Black Cormorant
Magpie Goose
Pacific Black Duck
Hardhead
Australian Wood Duck
Green Pygmy-goose
Buff-banded Rail
White-browed [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[	<p>For those of my friends who are birders, here is the list of birds I saw in Australia in January.  Almost all the birds on the list were lifers for me.  Birds that were not lifers are marked with an *.</p>
	<p>Orange-footed Scrubfowl<br />
Australian Brush-turkey<br />
Australian Pelican<br />
Darter<br />
Little Black Cormorant<br />
Magpie Goose<br />
Pacific Black Duck<br />
Hardhead<br />
Australian Wood Duck<br />
Green Pygmy-goose<br />
Buff-banded Rail<br />
White-browed Crake<br />
Bush-hen<br />
Purple Swamphen<br />
Dusky Moorhen<br />
Great-billed Heron<br />
Great Egret*<br />
Striated Heron<br />
Black Bittern<br />
Australian White Ibis<br />
Australian Bustard<br />
Bar-tailed Godwit<br />
Great Knot<br />
Curlew Sandpiper<br />
Masked Lapwing<br />
Black-winged Stilt<br />
Silver Gull<br />
Black-shouldered Kite<br />
Osprey*<br />
Black Kite<br />
Whistling Kite<br />
White-bellied Sea-Eagle<br />
Grey Goshawk<br />
Brown Falcon<br />
Australian Hobby<br />
Nankeen Kestrel<br />
Pied Imperial Pigeon<br />
White-headed Pigeon<br />
Rock Dove*<br />
Brown Cookoo-Dove<br />
Peaceful Dove<br />
Bar-shouldered Dove<br />
Emerald Dove<br />
Crested Pigeon<br />
Yellow-tailed Black-Cockatoo<br />
Galah<br />
Sulphur-crested Cockatoo<br />
Rainbow Lorikeet<br />
Scaly-breasted Lorikeet<br />
Australian King-Parrot<br />
Red-winged Parrot<br />
Crimson Rosella<br />
Pale-headed Rosella<br />
Channel-billed Cuckoo<br />
Pheasant Coucal<br />
White-rumped Swiftlet<br />
Azure Kingfisher<br />
Little Kingfisher<br />
Laughing Kookaburra<br />
Blue-winged Kookaburra<br />
Dollarbird<br />
Forest Kingfisher<br />
Buff-breasted Paradise-Kingfisher<br />
Noisy Pitta<br />
White-throated Treecreeper<br />
Superb Fairy-wren<br />
Variegated Fairy-wren<br />
Red-backed Fairy-wren<br />
Atherton Scrubwren<br />
Large-billed Scrubwren<br />
White-throated Gerygone<br />
Brown Gerygone<br />
Large-billed Gerygone<br />
Brown Thornbill<br />
Red Wattlebird<br />
Helmeted Friarbird<br />
Little Friarbird<br />
Blue-faced Honeyeater<br />
Macleay&#8217;s Honeyeater<br />
Noise Miner<br />
Yellow-spotted Honeyeater<br />
Graceful Honeyeater<br />
Bridled Honeyeater<br />
Yellow-faced Honeyeater<br />
Yellow Honeyeater<br />
White-throated Honeyeater<br />
White-cheeked Honeyeater<br />
New Holland Honeyeater<br />
Brown Honeyeater<br />
Brown-backed Honeyeater<br />
Eastern Spinebill<br />
Dusky Honeyeater<br />
Grey-crowned Babbler<br />
Eastern Yellow Robin<br />
Grey Whistler<br />
Rufous Whistler<br />
Rufous Fantail<br />
Willie Wagtail<br />
Leaden Flycatcher<br />
Shining Flycatcher<br />
Spectacled Monarch<br />
Magpie-lark<br />
Spangled Drongo<br />
Yellow Oriole<br />
Australasian Figbird<br />
Great Bowerbird<br />
White-bellied Cuckoo-shrike<br />
Varied Triller<br />
White-breasted Woodswallow<br />
Black Butcherbird<br />
Pied Butcherbird<br />
Australian Magpie<br />
Pied Currawong<br />
Australian Raven<br />
Welcome Swallow<br />
House Sparrow*<br />
Red-browed Finch<br />
Chestnut-breasted Mannikin<br />
Olive-backed (Yellow-bellied) Sunbird<br />
Mistletoebird<br />
Metallic Starling<br />
Common Myna*</p>
	<p>122 total species, only 5 I had seen elsewhere.  My life list for birds is now much longer!
</p>
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			<wfw:commentRSS>http://skylady.trippy.org/wp-commentsrss2.php?p=44</wfw:commentRSS>
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		<item>
		<title>Snow and Falling Trees</title>
		<link>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=43</link>
		<comments>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=43#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Feb 2009 11:44:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>skylady</dc:creator>
		
	<category>General</category>
	<category>Lick Observatory</category>
		<guid>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=43</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It has been snowing for days here on Mt. Hamilton.  Today, the ice, snow, and wind was too much for one of the black locust trees around my house and it fell.  Unfortunately, my car was in the way.  

I don't think much damage was done to my car (probably some dents [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[	<p>It has been snowing for days here on Mt. Hamilton.  Today, the ice, snow, and wind was too much for one of the black locust trees around my house and it fell.  Unfortunately, my car was in the way.<br />
<img src="http://skylady.trippy.org/miscPhotos/treeOnCar.jpg" alt="Tree fell on my car." /><br />
I don&#8217;t think much damage was done to my car (probably some dents and scratches), but I won&#8217;t know until I can get help removing the tree.  Since the snow probably won&#8217;t get plowed on Mt. Hamilton Rd. until this afternoon, I&#8217;m pretty much stuck at home (unless I ski to work&#8230;). Luckily, I don&#8217;t have to be anywhere today (I hope I&#8217;ll be able to get out tomorrow!).
</p>
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			<wfw:commentRSS>http://skylady.trippy.org/wp-commentsrss2.php?p=43</wfw:commentRSS>
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		<title>Australia Jan 2009</title>
		<link>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=42</link>
		<comments>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=42#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Feb 2009 00:27:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>skylady</dc:creator>
		
	<category>Wildlife</category>
	<category>Photography</category>
		<guid>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=42</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I took a great vacation to Eastern Australia, visiting Sydney and the Blue Mountains, then North to Cairns and Daintree.  The weather was hot, though otherwise very nice, with only occasional rain in the 
Daintree rainforest.  I've put a photo album of some of my best and interesting photos showing lots of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[	<p>I took a great vacation to Eastern Australia, visiting Sydney and the Blue Mountains, then North to Cairns and Daintree.  The weather was hot, though otherwise very nice, with only occasional rain in the<br />
Daintree rainforest.  I&#8217;ve put a photo album of some of my best and interesting photos showing lots of the things I saw.  I like nature and photographing wildlife seems to be my focus when traveling.  In Australia you don&#8217;t usually see many mammals as they are mostly nocturnal. Same seems to be true for the amphibians.  Thus, my photos are mostly of insects, arachnids, and birds as they are what you see most<br />
during the day.  Click on Australia2009 at right in the Travel links to see the photos.
</p>
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			<wfw:commentRSS>http://skylady.trippy.org/wp-commentsrss2.php?p=42</wfw:commentRSS>
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		<item>
		<title>Mount Hamilton Wildflowers</title>
		<link>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=41</link>
		<comments>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=41#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 30 Mar 2008 23:18:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>skylady</dc:creator>
		
	<category>Wild Flowers</category>
	<category>Lick Observatory</category>
	<category>Photography</category>
		<guid>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=41</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Spring has sprung again and wildflowers are starting to show up in all their splendor.  This has motivated me to not only go out looking for new flowers in the area, but also to organize the photos I have.  Thus, I'm updating my web guide to Mt. Hamilton Widlflowers.  I've learned a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[	<p>Spring has sprung again and wildflowers are starting to show up in all their splendor.  This has motivated me to not only go out looking for new flowers in the area, but also to organize the photos I have.  Thus, I&#8217;m updating my web guide to <a href="http://skylady.trippy.org/Wildflowers/Wildflowers.html">Mt. Hamilton Widlflowers</a>.  I&#8217;ve learned a lot over the past couple of years and found many more flowers as well as getting more photos.
</p>
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			<wfw:commentRSS>http://skylady.trippy.org/wp-commentsrss2.php?p=41</wfw:commentRSS>
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		<item>
		<title>Antarctica III</title>
		<link>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=40</link>
		<comments>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=40#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Feb 2008 21:42:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>skylady</dc:creator>
		
	<category>Wildlife</category>
	<category>Photography</category>
		<guid>http://skylady.trippy.org/?p=40</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The morning of Feb 9th, the Lyubov Orlova arrived at Almirante Brown research station.  We went ashore (waking up the research crew - oops!) and there weren't so many penguins here as at other locations.  I was in the first group ashore and followed Emily, one of the staff, up to the top [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[	<p>The morning of Feb 9th, the Lyubov Orlova arrived at <a href="http://skylady.trippy.org/Argentina-Antarctica/AlmiranteBrown/AlmiranteBrown.html">Almirante Brown research station</a>.  We went ashore (waking up the research crew - oops!) and there weren&#8217;t so many penguins here as at other locations.  I was in the first group ashore and followed Emily, one of the staff, up to the top of the glacier to admire the views. Akos, the expedition ornithologist, found a safe route to the top of the rocky tor and I quickly climbed up after him. Fabulous views in every direction! The nearby glacier was fairly active and created nice cracks and booms and I saw a small avalanche high on the mountain, but very little ice was actually calving from the glacier into the bay.   When the glacier was quiet, everything else was still and I heard a whale spouting far below in <a href="http://skylady.trippy.org/Argentina-Antarctica/ParadiseBay/ParadiseBay.html">Paradise Bay</a>.   I pointed it out to Emily and she identified it as a minke whale.   There were also some fledgling blue-eyed shags that had just gone in the water for the first time and were quite sure what they were doing, which was very fun to watch.</p>
	<p>Of course, our time on shore didn&#8217;t last forever and had to head back down off the glacier.     It was a steep climb up and most people decided to slide down the hill.   I thought I&#8217;d walk down, but part way down decided to slide down myself. Great fun - I should have started at the top! Even though I had to leave the station the very calm water of Paradise Bay allowed us to take zodiac rides around the ice bergs and the colony of nesting blue-eyed shags.  There was also a relaxed leopard seal lounging on one of the icebergs, so we got a very good look at one of the top predators of the antarctic.  </p>
	<p>Next stop was <a href="http://skylady.trippy.org/Argentina-Antarctica/DallmanBay/DallmanBay.html">Dallman Bay</a> and the <a href="http://skylady.trippy.org/Argentina-Antarctica/MelchiorIslands/MelchiorIslands.html">Melchior Islands</a>.   Dallman Bay is a prime place to do whale watching and we weren&#8217;t disappointed.  Humpback whales were in the area (I saw one breach - always an amazing sight!) but the main reason we were there was to take zodiac tours around the Melchior Islands.  Sadly we did not go ashore here (little did I know that morning that Almirante Brown would be the last time I would set foot on Antarctica), but seeing the scenery, including some caves underneath the glaciers, and the antics of the numerous fur seals was wonderful.   After the zodiac tours, we started our sail north across the Drake Passage while watching the Sun set over the mountains and glaciers of Antarctica.  This beautiful site was a fitting end to a visit to the most remote continent.</p>
	<p>This time the <a href="http://skylady.trippy.org/Argentina-Antarctica/DrakePassage2/DrakePassage2.html"> Drake Passage</a> was calmer, but still not the &#8220;Drake Lake&#8221;.  Luckily, everyone had their sea legs and motion sickness medicines and everyone enjoyed the lectures and meals on the way back.  Of course I spent lots of time on the deck watching for pelagic birds.  I didn&#8217;t see anything I hadn&#8217;t seen before, but the size and grace of the albatrosses is amazing and watching them sail over the waves is mesmerizing.   </p>
	<p>As we headed north the air started getting warmer and we crossed the Antarctic Convergence which is the meeting of the cold southern waters with the warmer northern waters.  The most surprising moment of the Drake Passage was on the afternoon of Feb 11th when we were still a long way from land - a female Kestrel was following the boat.  Even better, she landed on the railing of the Lyubov Orlova very near me.  I got some fabulous photos of her and I&#8217;m wondering how she ended up so far from shore.  Before dinner there was a final cocktail party with the expedition staff and crew of the ship where we all celebrated a fabulous trip.</p>
	<p>A little before sunset we caught  first sight of Argentina and soon entered the Beagle Channel.  By sunrise we were approaching the dock at <a href="http://skylady.trippy.org/Argentina-Antarctica/Ushuaia2/Ushuaia2.html">Ushuaia<br />
</a>, all of us up early to leave the ship and head along our separate ways.  As luck would have it, I shared flights to Buenos Aires and on to Dallas, Texas with my new friends Wanda and Joe, making the long flights and layovers more pleasant.</p>
	<p>I was home on Feb 13th and looking forward to seeing my brother (who even with a horrible cold, still picked me up at the San Francisco airport) and sharing my adventure with him and my friends here in California and elsewhere.
</p>
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