I've been seeing a few around lately, but it seems like today they were really starting to come out in force.
Most birds don't eat them because they're acidic.techno-ag said:
Lots of bird food.
Haha, not whiney, just find them quite annoying in the numbers they present themselves in.studioone said:
Buncha whiney people...
Its part of nature... Deal with it..
Not actually sure what useful purpose they serve, though, other than bird food...
Betcha you guys are the ones who squish every spider you see, and kill every snake you find...
I'm sure he's a digital shutterbug, D. Not old school.studioone said:
so do you know how to do a 1:1 ratio with a macro bellows attachment and a reversal ring?
studioone said:
so do you know how to do a 1:1 ratio with a macro bellows attachment and a reversal ring?
I never used a bellows, but I do remember Humble welding a couple of filter adapters together so I could attach a reversed lens to another on my old film camera. I wasn't into macro a lot back then, but did experiment some. And yes, I did have my own darkroom back in the day. I believe it was a Beseler enlarger, don't remember the model. My wife wasn't thrilled with me taking up one of the bathrooms.studioone said:
so do you know how to do a 1:1 ratio with a macro bellows attachment and a reversal ring?
Lol, I remember us using a Brownie camera as a kid!techno-ag said:I'm sure he's a digital shutterbug, D. Not old school.studioone said:
so do you know how to do a 1:1 ratio with a macro bellows attachment and a reversal ring?
Maybe this hognose I found in the backyard can eat all of the lovebugs I killed on Hwy 6 south of Navasota today.labmansid said:
I leave spiders and snakes alone, unless I'm photographing them. They eat nuisances like love-bugs, rats, and mosquitoes.