Saturday, October 07, 2023

Birding Tour Activities

Learning how birds and monarch butterflies are tracked

This bird has been caught in a net, weighed, banded with an identifying number, and is about to be let go.
Some birds are also be tagged with a device that will be tracked electronically by a network of antennas.
These devices, though extremely small, are powered by both solar power and a minuscule battery.
This research is conducted at the local branch of the Nature Conservancy.

A migrating monarch butterfly which had just been caught in a butterfly net to be tagged.

Measuring the wing size. The skilled tagger also feels the butterfly body to estimate its weight.
This project is sponsored by the New Jersey Audubon Society (link).

A tiny tag with an ID number is affixed to the wing. Perhaps this butterfly will reach its winter home in Mexico and one of the observers there will find its tag.

Near the tagging station was a bush filled with butterflies, including this already-tagged individual.

Walking Paths, Beaches, and Birds in Cape May










Birders are everywhere in Cape May!

Good Food


A blueberry waffle with maple syrup at Uncle Bill’s Pancake House.

Strawberry crepes with whipped cream, coffee, and orange juice.

Local clams in broth at Lucky Bones Restaurant.
Local seafood includes scallops and flounder, which we’ve also tried.

Burrata and tomato salad at Grana restaurant.

Cape May scallops with Brussels sprouts at Granta.

Blog post and photos © 2023 mae sander


Thursday, October 05, 2023

Birding Tour Day 3

On this morning’s walk we saw this lovely spider web.


We skipped a few hours of birding in the afternoon to sit on the beach. Beautiful!

A flight of black skimmers.

Photos © 2023 mae sander

Wednesday, October 04, 2023

A few more birds

 Today, continuing our tour, we enjoyed birding in several habitats. We walked through a large field with woodland nearby, we walked on the beach for a very short time, and we cruised around the Cape May harbor on a flat-bottomed sightseeing boat that specializes in bird watching. From the boat we saw a number of birds in the marshy area around the harbor as well as birds on the docks. Just a few photos —


Four Gulls and a Skimmer


Terns

Plovers

Pelican

Osprey

Oyster Catchers


Bittern

Saltmarsh Sparrow

Brown Thrasher

A young Red-headed Woodpecker.


All photos © 2023 mae sander

Tuesday, October 03, 2023

A Day Birding in Cape May

This is our bird guide for the trip to Cape May, New Jersey.
The Cape May lighthouse is in the background.
We will be here for several days, and hope to see lots of birds.

We started at 6:30 AM, before breakfast, which we ate as a picnic near this pond.

Song Sparrow

Brown Creeper

Catbird

White Ibis, a few of the many, many flying birds we saw. Many were raptors.



Monarchs and other butterflies are migrating, as well as birds.

The weathervane on the Wetlands Institute near Cape May.

Birding.


 Blog post and photos © 2023 mae sander



Monday, October 02, 2023

At the Baltimore Museum of Art

The living room of Claribel and Etta Cone whose art collections now belong to the  Baltimore Museum of Art. The room has been reconstructed to accompany the display of their art collections. It seems that when the sisters needed more space for their possessions, they would rent another apartment in the building where they lived in Baltimore.

This painting of bathers by Cezanne was purchased by Leo and Gertrude Stein in 1904. At about this time,
the Cone sisters visited the Steins, who were family friends from Baltimore (where they all lived).
The Cone sisters, under the influence of the Steins, learned to love the modern art that was emerging then.
They bought the painting from Gertrude Stein in 1926.

Pierre Bonnard, “Luncheon Table,” 1908.

Henri Matisse: “Interior, Flowers and Parakeets”
This painting was one of Etta Cone’s favorites, acquired in 1925.

Detail of the Matisse painting, showing the drinking cup.
Detail of Matisse’s “Still Life, Bouquet of Dahlias and White Book”
Another drink image to share with Elizabeth’s blog party!

 From the Cone collection: Picasso, “Woman with Bangs,” 1902.
The Cone sisters visited Picasso’s studio with Gertrude Stein 
in 1903.

In the room with the Cone collection: a sculpture by Rodin.

At the Baltimore Museum of Art last Saturday, we enjoyed seeing the collections of the Cone sisters, Claribel (1864-1929) and Etta (1870-1949). Paintings and sculpture by Matisse, Picasso, Cezanne, and many others make up this remarkable trove of early 20th century art, which now belongs to the museum along with their enormous collections of furniture, jewelry, bric-a-brac, textiles, and more. I enjoyed this description of the two sisters from one of the many placards on the walls of the exhibit:

A PASSION FOR COLLECTING

The Cone sisters were ardent collectors. When drawn to a compelling painting, drawing, or sculpture, they found it difficult to resist its pull. The same was true of small items of lesser consequence that filled their drawers to overflowing. If the sisters found one piece of jewelry or lace delightful, three pieces delighted them even more. So they "bought passionately and by the dozens" and never threw anything away. The sisters stored their purchases in heavy chests and hundreds of beautiful boxes made of carved wood, leather, silver, lacquer, and brocade.

Dr. Claribel clearly understood her compulsion to collect. When tempted to purchase Indian silks she wrote, "I am beginning the buying all over again…how the Saris wind themselves about my very heart. Throat would be better, for they strangle out all other impulses.... Now that I stop to reason about it, it is silly foolishness, this collecting of things. But it must have some solid foundation — some foundation deep in the hearts of people.... It is the craving for beauty that is such a vital function of the human soul...."

A small part of Claribel Cone’s jewelry collection, as displayed in the museum.

 

Blog post © 2023 mae sander




Sunday, October 01, 2023

Street Art in Baltimore


We spent just one day in Baltimore to visit with Miriam, who is now living here. She guided us around town, and we managed to see quite a few really enjoyable neighborhoods and interesting places, including her local farmers’ market, the Baltimore Museum of Art, the Rawlings Conservatory in Druid Hill Park, and a couple of very nice restaurants. As we walked and drove around the city, I saw an amazing number of really wonderful murals, street paintings, and other forms of street art. I got a few quick photos, which I’m sharing today. 












Quite a few food trucks around the farmers’ market are painted in fantastic styles.


In Miriam’s neighborhood, many row houses are painted in very vivid colors.
,,,


 Blog post and all photos © 2023.
Shared with Sami’s Monday Murals.