Wednesday, October 31, 2007
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My name is Bill and I am a bird watcher.
Zeiss Victory FL 8x42, Swarovski EL 10x42
Leica Televid 85mm with 15–50x zoom eyepiece
Swarovski ATS 65mm with 20–60x zoom eyepiece
Bogen Manfrotto 055CX3 carbon fiber tripod, with Bogen 3130 Micro-fluid style pan head
More of Bill's GearPeterson Field Guide to the Birds of North America (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2008)
Sibley Guide to Birds of North America (Knopf 2014)
The New Birder’s Guide to Birds of Eastern North America (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2014)
More of Bill's GearMountainsmith Tour recycled materials lumbar pack Pajaro Grande field guide pack
LowePro Toploader 75W camera bag with harness belt
Outerwear: Arcteryx waterproof shell, Mountain Hardwear breathable rain jacket, Helly Hansen insulate rain jacket
Hat: Dorfman Pacific Company field hat
Shoes: Keen Newports, Arroyos & Arubas
Boots: Merrell Moab Ventilator Mid; MuckBoot Company Wetlands insulated rubber boots
Apple MacBook Pro laptop
Apple iPhone 6s with numerous birding apps,
Creative Travelsound i80 speaker MF5110
Motorola T6500 WalkieTalkies
Petzl Tikka headlamp
SuperLazr laserpointer
Canon EOS 30D Digital SLR camera with 300mm fixed IS lens (for bird photography)
iPhone 6s with PhoneSkope adapter for Leica spotting scope
More of Bill's Gear
4 comments:
Yikes. Great imagination! Happy Halloween!
Nice haiku ! This photo is interesting, where was it taken ? Is that clay ?
BOTB,
Just caught up on the last week's posts. Double freaking ossum-mundo! I was clenching my hands reading about the boat ride. What amazing birds, mammals, adventure, memories for a lifetime. This definitely fleshes out the exchange, "How was your trip?". "It was great!" (Insert pirate sounds here. Halloween haiku, a scream indeed. Happy Halloween.
sara:
Yes it's clay-heavy soil from a patch of coastal desert scrub in Peru, near the port town of Pucusana where we took the pelagic.
That was amazingly hard to walk on. You had to carefully place every step or you dropped down about two feet into the crevice.
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