Monthly Archives: April 2008

Enter The Dragon, originally uploaded by Meremail.

This little Dragon Fly came to visit today, and did a pose for me.

Interesting bits from Wikipedia -

Dragonflies typically eat mosquitoes, midges, and other small insects like flies, bees, and butterflies. They are therefore valued as predators, since they help control populations of harmful insects. Dragonflies are usually found around lakes, ponds, streams and wetlands because their larvae, known as “nymphs”, are aquatic. Dragonflies do not normally bite or sting humans, though they will bite in order to escape, if grasped by the abdomen.

They capture their prey by clasping them in legs studded with spikes. Prey can not escape by diving away because dragonflies always attack from below.

The dragonfly’s marvellous ability to dart sideways, upwards, hover, and instantly change direction, is due to impressive design features. The creature has two sets of many-veined, long, rigid wings which beat alternately. (When one set is up, the other is down.) This gives it excellent aerodynamic efficiency, and the independent operation of each wing provides precise flight control. The wings beat 1,600 or more times a minute.

Not surprisingly, the muscles which operate a dragonfly’s wings comprise about one-quarter of its total weight. These powerful synchronized wings can propel the insect at speeds estimated at 50 kilometres an hour (30 miles per hour) or more, sometimes for long distances. Dragonflies have been known to migrate more than 300 kilometres across water.

Watch the Snake, originally uploaded by Meremail.

I was working in our Sydney office for 3 days which is located in a site called World Square.

It is an enormous collection of high rise buildings for offices, apartments and a hotel and retails shops, all interconnected via a plaza on different levels. The whole complex covers a complete city block.

The red coloured sculpture is a large snake like metallic piece that is quite impressive to see, and has a wonderful colour.

This view is looking through to adjacent apartments that are still being constructed in the adjacent city block.

I overexposed the shots so that I reduced the shadows on the east side of the buildings as I had a low westerly sun. Then when I edited them the sky was, of course, way over exposed and I couldn’t use it as it was.
So I did a single exposure tone mapping in Photomatix to improve the highlights, but still thought it looked like a nuclear bomb had exploded in the western suburbs, so I added a pink-red blush with a gradient filter to the sky so that it looked more like a nuclear blast.

I really liked the overall effect of the colours of the buildings, as it has a slightly surreal image to it, and interestingly one of the comments rightly asked is it a model city. I am sometimes called a model citizen, but it isn’t a model city.

So always look at turning a blemish into a feature.