Re: PESO - an unusual visitor, and a correction

2007-10-04 Thread John Coyle
Thanks to all who commented, and I do have to acknowledge I mis-identified the 
animal!  It is, 
in fact, and as Dave Savage suggested, a (very) large possum just pretending to 
be a wallaby!
As advised by a friend who knows more about Aussie flora and fauna than anyone 
else I know

Actually missed a quite good photo-op yesterday - leaving my stepson's house, 
via his very steep 
and curving driveway, a carpet snake had stretched itself all the way across 
the concrete track, 
so it must have been at least five feet long.  Couldn't get the camera out from 
the boot, as the 
car would have sailed slowly but inevitably down the hill and crushed itself 
against the next 
tree and the snake on the way down.  Anyway, after a couple of minutes it 
decided to head off 
into the long grass, so all ended well.

John Coyle
Brisbane, Australia

- Original Message - 
From: "Rebekah" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Pentax-Discuss Mail List" 
Sent: Monday, October 01, 2007 12:45 AM
Subject: Re: PESO - an unusual visitor


> That thing is adorable - I bet they're a nuisance tho.  Nice grab!
>
> rg2
>
> On 9/30/07, Paul Stenquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Cool. I worked in Queensland farm country for three weeks and never
>> saw one. I was bummed:-).
>> Paul
>> On Sep 29, 2007, at 11:21 PM, John Coyle wrote:
>>
>> > No, we don't normally have kangaroos in the city streets in
>> > Australia, but this was taken in our
>> > garden just 300 meters from the city centre last night!
>> >
>> > http://tinyurl.com/24wnnd
>> >
>> > I decided to grab the nearest camera and lens, which happened to be
>> > the *ist-D fitted with the
>> > DA16-45, and shot with the RTF - which was also useful for spotting
>> > the animal in the dark when
>> > it was in it's focus-assist role!
>> >
>> > I cropped the shot to about 1/3rd it's original size, as the lens
>> > was really too wide - and the
>> > animal was too nervous to get any closer.  It fled before the
>> > second flash, which resulted in a
>> > nice picture of the path, plants and a tree-trunk, but no wallaby!
>> >
>> > Comments welcome.
>> >
>> >
>> > John Coyle
>> > Brisbane, Australia
>> >
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>
>
> -- 
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Re: PESO - an unusual visitor

2007-09-30 Thread Rebekah
That thing is adorable - I bet they're a nuisance tho.  Nice grab!

rg2

On 9/30/07, Paul Stenquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Cool. I worked in Queensland farm country for three weeks and never
> saw one. I was bummed:-).
> Paul
> On Sep 29, 2007, at 11:21 PM, John Coyle wrote:
>
> > No, we don't normally have kangaroos in the city streets in
> > Australia, but this was taken in our
> > garden just 300 meters from the city centre last night!
> >
> > http://tinyurl.com/24wnnd
> >
> > I decided to grab the nearest camera and lens, which happened to be
> > the *ist-D fitted with the
> > DA16-45, and shot with the RTF - which was also useful for spotting
> > the animal in the dark when
> > it was in it's focus-assist role!
> >
> > I cropped the shot to about 1/3rd it's original size, as the lens
> > was really too wide - and the
> > animal was too nervous to get any closer.  It fled before the
> > second flash, which resulted in a
> > nice picture of the path, plants and a tree-trunk, but no wallaby!
> >
> > Comments welcome.
> >
> >
> > John Coyle
> > Brisbane, Australia
> >
> > --
> > PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
> > PDML@pdml.net
> > http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
> > to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above
> > and follow the directions.
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Re: PESO - an unusual visitor

2007-09-30 Thread Paul Stenquist
Cool. I worked in Queensland farm country for three weeks and never  
saw one. I was bummed:-).
Paul
On Sep 29, 2007, at 11:21 PM, John Coyle wrote:

> No, we don't normally have kangaroos in the city streets in  
> Australia, but this was taken in our
> garden just 300 meters from the city centre last night!
>
> http://tinyurl.com/24wnnd
>
> I decided to grab the nearest camera and lens, which happened to be  
> the *ist-D fitted with the
> DA16-45, and shot with the RTF - which was also useful for spotting  
> the animal in the dark when
> it was in it's focus-assist role!
>
> I cropped the shot to about 1/3rd it's original size, as the lens  
> was really too wide - and the
> animal was too nervous to get any closer.  It fled before the  
> second flash, which resulted in a
> nice picture of the path, plants and a tree-trunk, but no wallaby!
>
> Comments welcome.
>
>
> John Coyle
> Brisbane, Australia
>
> -- 
> PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
> PDML@pdml.net
> http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
> to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above  
> and follow the directions.


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Re: PESO - an unusual visitor

2007-09-29 Thread David Mann
On Sep 30, 2007, at 4:36 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> Interesting. Somehow I  thought Kangeroos were larger.

There are several different species of kangaroo so I guess there's  
some variation in size between them.

I was amazed at how large kookaburras are.

- Dave


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Re: PESO - an unusual visitor

2007-09-29 Thread David Savage
On 9/30/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> In a message dated 9/29/2007 8:30:47 P.M.  Pacific Daylight Time,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> No, we don't normally  have kangaroos in the city streets in Australia, but
> this was taken in our
> garden just 300 meters from the city centre last  night!
>
> http://tinyurl.com/24wnnd
>
> I decided to grab the nearest  camera and lens, which happened to be the
> *ist-D fitted with the
> DA16-45,  and shot with the RTF - which was also useful for spotting the
> animal in the  dark when
> it was in it's focus-assist role!
>
> I cropped the shot to  about 1/3rd it's original size, as the lens was really
> too wide - and the
> animal was too nervous to get any closer.  It fled before the second  flash,
> which resulted in a
> nice picture of the path, plants and a  tree-trunk, but no wallaby!
>
> Comments welcome.
>
> ===
> Interesting. Somehow I  thought Kangeroos were larger.

Kangaroos are (some species are bigger than others), wallabies though
are a bit smaller.

My cousin has a house that boarders a national park, and they quite
often get roos in their backyard grazing on the lawn & eating the
roses :-)

Cool shot John. (although if you hadn't said it was a wallabie, I
would have assumed it was a big possum :-)

Cheers,

Dave

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Re: PESO - an unusual visitor

2007-09-29 Thread Eactivist
In a message dated 9/29/2007 8:30:47 P.M.  Pacific Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
No, we don't normally  have kangaroos in the city streets in Australia, but 
this was taken in our  
garden just 300 meters from the city centre last  night!

http://tinyurl.com/24wnnd

I decided to grab the nearest  camera and lens, which happened to be the 
*ist-D fitted with the 
DA16-45,  and shot with the RTF - which was also useful for spotting the 
animal in the  dark when 
it was in it's focus-assist role!

I cropped the shot to  about 1/3rd it's original size, as the lens was really 
too wide - and the  
animal was too nervous to get any closer.  It fled before the second  flash, 
which resulted in a 
nice picture of the path, plants and a  tree-trunk, but no wallaby!

Comments welcome.


John  Coyle
Brisbane, Australia 

===
Interesting. Somehow I  thought Kangeroos were larger. 

Marnie aka Doe  

-
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PESO - an unusual visitor

2007-09-29 Thread John Coyle
No, we don't normally have kangaroos in the city streets in Australia, but this 
was taken in our 
garden just 300 meters from the city centre last night!

http://tinyurl.com/24wnnd

I decided to grab the nearest camera and lens, which happened to be the *ist-D 
fitted with the 
DA16-45, and shot with the RTF - which was also useful for spotting the animal 
in the dark when 
it was in it's focus-assist role!

I cropped the shot to about 1/3rd it's original size, as the lens was really 
too wide - and the 
animal was too nervous to get any closer.  It fled before the second flash, 
which resulted in a 
nice picture of the path, plants and a tree-trunk, but no wallaby!

Comments welcome.


John Coyle
Brisbane, Australia 

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