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CAZADORA DE ONDAS
Todos los días son buenos para cazar, pero ella prefiere salir los días fríos de enero, donde los campos parecen más estáticos. Lo primero que hace al levantarse es mirarse al espejo, dispone su rifle contra su reflejo y se asegura estar libre de interferencias.
Alejandra estaba convencida que aquella mañana seria especial, la temperatura ambiente era de 3º C, lo que pronosticaba una buena recepción.
Cogió su jaula, grabadora, receptor, rifle y salió de caza. No le hizo falta irse lejos, el jardín y alrededores de su casa eran suficientes. Andaba sigilosa cartografiando el lugar, la intensidad de las frecuencias le iba revelando los lugares de mayor concentración de ondas, se topó con algún grupo de sísmicas, muchas VLF y hasta una VHF.
Pero estaba buscando algo más y todo apuntaba alto, al cielo. Así que subió hasta la azotea de la casa y su alegría y sorpresa fue encontrar que los cantos que escuchaba sonaban con fuerza, con cierta reverberación como si salieran de una caverna.
Dio no solo con la onda más grande sino con un reclamo mucho mejor que el suyo, era una RF enorme.
Se trataba de una onda posada como un buitre que le miraba diciendo: _¡carne fresca! Se encontraba en lo alto de la antena parabólica y tras un juego de miradas, Alejandra alzó su rifle y disparó. Los silbidos llegaron a sus tímpanos hasta producir un cortocircuito sonoro y todo quedó en una sutil frecuencia que se desvaneció hasta el silencio más desconcertante.
Alejandra Bueno.
Hunting Vixen!...I was watching this fox for a while.I imagine it must be quite hard to find food if you are mainly a rural fox.This vixen was shy and wary and it seems like it has a lot of mange on its rear.
Common Seal with some flatfish (probably), West Cork.. Photographed from the rocks above the water, Pentax K-5 + Sigma 50-200 DG OS HSM at 180mm, f/6.3, 1/400 sec, ISO 500.
I was hoping to find this critter with prey, but there are so many wasps hunting in the same area that everything was skittish.
Tech specs: Canon 40D (F13, 1/250, ISO 100) + a Canon MPE-65mm macro lens (@1.5x) + a diffused MT-24EX (manual mode 1/32).
This morning I spent some time out hunting morels for our weekend meal. Tomorrow we're having venison roast with morels and port wine. If I forage up a salad we'll have an almost 100% wild meal!
We went statue-hunting in Dayton, finding all these cool statues that were downtown... it's like Pokemon, but without the balls or animals or... well, nothing like Pokemon.
I'm on a hunting trip this weekend north of Del Rio, Tx. We are seeing pretty much everything but what I can shoot at. This group of jake turkeys came in on us this evening and all I could do was watch.
Turkey scouting / squirrel hunting.
- Squirrel and crow call
- Papermate profile pen, map, license
- Nalgene flask with water
- Marking ribbon, 10' cord,
- Mini compass / thermometer
- Magellan GPS, Sony camera,
- Filson hat, wool gloves
- Lip balm and eye drops
- Oakley sunglasses and Zeiss binoculars
- Remington and Kent shotgun shells #6 and #3 in custom Cordura pouch
- Duluth Shell bag small
- NEF Pardner shotgun 20ga
- 2 trashbags
I love this one! A SEO hunts the fields and mires of north east Northumberland. Taken with my Nikon D70.
Managed to find five or six sharpish photos amongst a number of others that came out blurry. Not sure if it was my excitement that caused this or the fact that the Mink's fur was quite wet in many of the photos : ) Always a real treat to see one of these beautiful animals, and it's fun to watch these rather curious - and vicious! - creatures. This is the second time I've seen one in a local park, close enough to see it properly. Seen others maybe two or three times but from a huge distance. I never realized, until perhaps a couple of years ago, that we had Mink here.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_mink
"Mink are ferocious predators that are about the size of a housecat and chocolate-brown in color. Their long, thin bodies, short legs, small eyes and ears, and sleek fur make them just the right size to fit in many holes, crevices and burrows to pursue prey. They may eat ground squirrels, rats, snakes and even birds. Mink are also semi-aquatic and their webbed feet allow them to capture frogs, clams and even fish .... They are generally shy creatures but can be very bold if their curiosity is piqued. Those who are fortunate to observe a mink’s behavior should use caution. The animals have scent glands under the skin and when they get excited or stressed, musk is released. The obnoxious odor can be just as repulsive as a skunk’s." A different website, for Alberta, states that Mink eat ducks, fish, Muskrat and other small birds and rodents.
www.wildlifedepartment.com/wildlifemgmt/species/mink.htm
Flickr is acting very slow again today - have also had two or three white, blank pages. The problem that some of us are having is apparently being worked on.
Father and daughter duck hunting on Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife and Fish Refuge.
Photo by Tim Miller/USFWS.
Searching for laser dots - just have to shine it once and he spends the next five minutes hunting around erverywhere for them...
This is the same coyote that I found hunting along the main road at Cherry Creek State Park this morning. The light was great and it was very close, so I was using my full-frame body with the 70-200mm f/4L IS lens.
Available at Getty Images:
www.gettyimages.com/detail/124483810/Flickr-Open
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