Monday, July 10, 2006

Moonstuck...Movies?


A ring around the moon-Pirate Movie?


Dracula, definitely.


Werewolf...


A Rabbit making bean cakes...?
(Don't worry, it will be significant to topic later. By the way does anyone happen to know what this item was meant to do? I've a suspicion but that's all.)



For those who asked if I had the whole thing....

And from Ben Cacace, http://novahunter.blogspot.com -Nice image of the Moon! The brightest spot at the top of the image is the crater Aristarchus. Below & to the right of A. are 2 light patches side-by-side - the right is Copernicus and the left one is Kepler.

(I've greedily asked him for more lunar topography. D.B.)

Can you still see the image of the "Man in the Moon? Try it.

If you turn your head sideways-ish and look, you may be able to see "the Rabbit making bean cakes" which is what you would see instead of the Man in the Moon, if you grew up on Okinawa.


Many thanks to Robert for his followup sightings to our Saturday Divine Hawk notes.
http://bloomingdalevillage.blogspot.com

Sunday, July 09, 2006

Divine Hawks and The Moon, Saturday 10 July 2006


Photograph by D. B.

5:43pm As Sam and I walk up Cathedral Hill the park is very quiet. Well quiet as to bird sounds, for this is a popular place for Birthday Parties on a Saturday. There are high pitched excited voices and the scent of charcoal grills. We stop, we listen, we walk down the stairs, we check favorite perches, including The Spike. Nothing. It's warm and humid down in the bowl of the park, and having no luck, we decide to scan from above from an Overlook.

Up on the sidewalk we begin to hear a Catbird across the street. Possibly inside the locked parking lot? Soon we're back to the old viewing gallery for the nest, looking through the chain link fence. I look up...Bingo.


6:04pm There's a Red-tail. It's Dad sitting on the next finial over to the west from St. Andrew and the nest.

6:15pm Another RT is above Dad, curves in, and then just a few feet above his head swoops in and then takes off east for the park.

6:16pm His attention having been gotten, Dad takes off and follows the other RT, possibly Mom as the flying is excellent, into Morningside Park.


Photograph by Samantha Browne-Walters

6:19pm We've hustled over to the park, and we can hear a fledge begging. We scan the trees. Two young men sitting on the bench who don't speak English, excitedly point over and down. There she is, sitting in a Black Locust Tree. I get the scope on her and motion the young men over, shyly they shake their heads. I keep doing the "come here" finger thing until they do come over and when they do look, their faces are illuminated.

6:22pm The Fledge stops begging and looks around. Turns to the right. Preens a little. Then turns her back to us, decidedly looking in the opposite direction.

6:35pm We decide to go down into the park and see her from the front but also to check what she might be focusing on. Another hawk?
This turns out to be a mistake because as we've had to go north for a way down into the park and then go south, we miss her flying where ever it is she went. The Scolders are going at it near The Spike, a favorite perch for several days, though empty now, and the very thick copse of trees in which we're convinced they can sit and we can't see them.

6:46pm Sam catches a glimpse of a Red-tail flying south to north along the path inside the park. Try though we may, to follow and track her down, we are unsuccessful. The Robins and Catbirds have staked out two areas, one just to the north of Picnic Rock and the other the familiar group of trees just inside the park, directly across from the back of the Cathedral.

7:07pm Five Crows "calling" to each other fly diagonally across the Park from SE to NW. I like to think it's a pair and their three youngsters, though I've absolutely no reason beyond the three and two groupings. I'm very glad to see them, though I know they can mob young hawks. It's just their faces and voices have been almost totally missing from our green spaces since West Nile Virus hit the species so hard, and I've felt their lack without even really knowing it.

We keep searching. Sam who had two friends over to spend the night and therefore got little sleep is sitting on a rock looking like she might keel over at any second. She doesn't look happy. We follow every scold. Nothing. We try the "looking somewhere else" technique. We look at flowers, Robins, Catbirds, a black squirrel, we tromp around some more. Nothing helps. Sigh. We exit about 7:40pm.
(Unbeknownst to us, Robert Schmunk will arrive momentarily and a few more sightings will then ensue.)


Saturday's Moon
Photograph by D. B.

Saturday, July 08, 2006

Map-reading, Multi-tasking, and Robert's Fledge Report


Bird Park Roses Photograph by D.B.


(I'd suspected there might be some hard wiring going with map-reading and being able to do more than one thing at a time, and the article below rather supports that notion. D. B.)

Why women are worse at map-reading than men but more women can multi-task.
by ROBIN YAPP, Daily Mail

Men frequently despair at women's map-reading skills - or rather their lack of them.
Now scientists believe they have pinpointed the reason for these long-standing conflicts between the sexes.

Researchers say it is all down to differences in the reliance of the sexes on either grey matter or white matter in their brains to solve problems.

They found that in intelligence tests men use 6.5 times as much grey matter as women do - but women use far more white matter.

Different pathways
Grey matter is a category of brain tissue crucial to processing information and plays a vital role in aiding skills such as mathematics, mapreading and intellectual thought.

White matter connects the brain's processing centres and is central to emotional thinking, use of language and the ability to do more than one thing at once.

Professor Rex Jung, a co-author of the study at the University of New Mexico, said: "This may help explain why men tend to excel in tasks requiring more local processing-like mathematics and mapreading, while women tend to excel at integrating information from various brain regions, such as is required for language skills.

"These two very different pathways and activity centres, however, result in equivalent overall performance on broad measures of cognitive ability, such as those found on intelligence tests."

Previous studies have shown that women have weaker spatial awareness than men, making it harder for them to read maps.

Brain map

For the latest study, published in the online edition of the journal NeuroImage, researchers performed a series of scans on 26 female and 22 male volunteers using magnetic resonance imaging equipment.
Their brains were scanned while they carried out tests to assess their intelligence. Researchers then created a map of a single brain showing the varying levels of activity in the brains of men and women.

The researchers found that on average men used approximately 6.5 times as much of the brain's grey matter as women did in performing the test. But when it came to white matter, women used around nine times as much as men did.

The researchers also found that nearly 90 per cent of both grey matter and white matter utilised by women in the tests were located in the brain's frontal lobes, which are central to emotion. The grey matter driving male intellect is distributed evenly throughout the brain.

"These findings suggest that human evolution has created two different types of brains designed for equally intelligent behaviour," said Professor Richard Haier, lead author of the study.
.


My hawkwatching was curtailed today due to Steward obligations at the Hell's Kitchen Bird Park. A pocket bird sanctuary and migration stop for those birds who can't quite make it to Central Park on any given day, located on 39th St. between 9th and 10th Ave.


Photograph by today's only known Fledge Follower, Robert Schmunk.

http://bloomingdalevillage.blogspot.com/2006/07/hawkwatching-july-7.html