Saturday, May 30, 2020

Bug on a Stem

A few years ago I had a lecture that I gave several times to various groups titled "Bird on a Stick". In it I discussed three stages of bird photography as I saw them.

The first stage was "UFO" or Unidentified Flying Object. At that level, the photographer knew she had witnessed a majestic bald eagle soaring overhead but she was having a hard time convincing anyone else based on her grainy, out of focus image of a black dot against a white sky.

Her frustration might lead her to take some classes, maybe upgrade her equipment and, most importantly, practice, practice, practice. That would lead to the second stage which I called "Bird on a Stick". In that stage, the photographer was making lovely, technically correct images of identifiable birds. She was now the star of her Facebook birding group and all her non-photographer friends were telling her how great her images were. But in her heart, she knew something was still missing.

So then she started studying the photographers whose images spoke to her. She began exploring the stories behind the images and learning more and more about her subjects. At that point she discovered the third stage which I like to think of as the "Tell Me More!" stage. At that level the photographer has ceased being a mere image recorder and has begun to truly communicate something about her subject to the audience. She has sparked a reaction in the viewer that makes them want to know more about the intriguing creature they see in front of them.

I believe those stages also exist in bug photography.

In the beginning, you may be trying to capture that beautiful butterfly in your garden. But bugs have very good eyes and you may quickly discover they really don't like having cameras shoved in their faces. And bugs are fast! Just as you get set up, ready to click the shutter, off they go, never to be seen again. Photographing butterflies and bees can quickly morph into trying to capture images of all sorts of bugs, many of which are probably unidentifiable unless you study entomology in your spare time.


My first shot of a flea beetle in my yard.

So you study up, do your research, watch some podcasts and Youtube videos. That leads to buying a decent macro lens and maybe even some lighting equipment. Now you can capture those great i.d. shots, the "Bug on a Stem" images that allow you to search in your new bug book to discover that the tiny creature you are looking at is a flea beetle, Disonycha latifrons, to be exact.
A beautiful flea beetle seen from above.

But something is still missing.
Flea beetle peeking around the corner of a leaf, watching the watcher. 

So now it is time to strive for those "Tell Me More!"shots. With bugs, these types of shots seem even more critical because it is not easy to get people to stop and look in wonder at the beauty before them.  The variety in insect appearances and behaviors is mind boggling and absolutely intriguing, if only we can spark that curiosity in people to look more closely and to ask for more of the story.

That is my goal. To make people look. To introduce the individual in all his wonder and glory. To be the storyteller.

Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Let's go "bugging"!

I believe the major reason people tend to be largely ignorant about the number and diversity of bugs in their midst is that they simply don't see them. Let's face it - bugs are small. If you would ask the average person to describe the bugs in their backyard on any given day in the summer, they would probably come back with a list of mosquitoes, flies, bees, butterflies...maybe a moth or a wasp. My guess is that there are dozens of bugs present but people just aren't aware they are there.

Golden-haired flower beetle
I think we should start a new pastime - Bugging! Lots of people go out into nature to look for birds. They are "birders" going "birding". Their goal may be to photograph the beautiful flying creatures or to check off a new species on a list they faithfully keep or simply to enjoy the color and complexity of each unique bird. Why can't we do the same thing with bugs?

Agapostemon Bee
One of my favorite activities for kids (or adults) is "bug bingo". Each participant gets a card with a mixture of names of common bugs: bee, butterfly, caterpillar, ant, etc. As you hike along a trail or explore an area, each participant tries to fill their card first by spotting the listed insect before anyone else. It is a fun event that is also educational. I think we should expand the idea and create checklists of bugs that can be found in a particular area and encourage anyone exploring to try to fill in their checklist with their sightings for the day.

Maybe if people were more used to looking for bugs in their midst, they would start to become aware of just how many there are and how beautiful each one is!


Metallic wood boring beetle

Monday, May 25, 2020

Change

It is hard to believe that it has been more than 2500 years since the Greek philosopher, Heraclitus, declared that "The only constant in life is change". Somehow the message seems just as valid today as it no doubt was during those ancient days.

A couple months ago I listened to a discussion on NPR in which the scientist being interviewed had conducted a study regarding the concept of personal change in individual lives. The simplified summary is that he asked a group of people at various stages in their lives two questions: 1) How much has your life changed in the last five years? and 2) How much do you expect your life to change in the next five years? Invariably the answers to the questions were 1) a lot and 2) not much. Somewhat unsurprisingly, the belief that everything would remain static into the future was more pronounced the older the subject being asked the question. Then he went back five years later and asked the same question of the same people, and again another five years after that and each time, the answers were exactly the same! That is "My life has changed a lot in the last five years but it is not going to change in the future." But of course, it did!

If someone had suggested to me twenty years ago that I would be spending the bulk of my days searching for, taking and editing photographs at this point in my life, I would have had a hard time believing it. If someone had told me three years ago that almost all the photos I would be taking would be of bugs, I would have said they were crazy! Yet that is where I find myself at this stage of my life - and loving it, I should add.
Close-up image of a dragonfly

Cabbage white butterfly

Bee fly
The great unknown for me as I go forward is whether or not I can find a way to use my images of tiny things to communicate an environmental message. Not only is there the bigger story of the importance of biodiversity in our world, there are the individual dramas of each unique creature with its unique purpose for existence. 

I look forward to telling their stories in much more detail!