Sunday, November 18, 2007

Rayetta's Butterflies - Electropictoiding Tiny Landscapes

Suppose you, a concerned land owner and responsible party, wish to know what the tiny illegals are up to on your property. That's right. Those trespassers are out there, day and night. Are they up to no good? You don't know.

Are you curious, not just opinionated? If you are just opinionated, then your best option for dealing with the tiny illegals is a good generic nerve gas. If properly applied, that should take care of them.

However, if you are curious, then you may be interested in the Lovely Druidess Rayetta's methodology for Electropictoiding Tiny Landscapes. Electropictoiding Tiny Landscapes has twain mutually inclusive goals. Goal one: a tiny illegal subject is identifiable and located more or less in the center of the electropictoid. Goal twain: A sizable chunk of the tiny illegal's habitat is identifiable around and about the tiny illegal. That does it. Once you have an Electropictoid Tiny Landscape, you may infer from the Electropictoid Tiny Landscape documentation what that tiny illegal trespasser is up to.

For Electropictoiding Tiny Landscapes at the CB, I rely on the discontinued Olympus 40-150mm kit lens. This lens lacks macro capabilities, plus, the person taking the electropictoid, me, needs to be at least two yards from the illegal trespasser subject. If I get any closer, the lens won't focus. However, at fl 150mm, this lens often captures an identifiable image of the trespassing tiny perpetrator, plus a sizable chunk of the landscape that tiny trespasser is exploiting.

Here's an example Electropictoid Tiny Landscape. The tiny illegal trespasser is a common mestra. The landscape is mostly Aster subulatus.

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