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1/200 f/4.0 100.0 mm ISO 100

Canon EOS 5D Mark II

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Keywords

lucky
Pseudacris regilla
Pacific Tree Frog
adorable
amphibian
frog
rare
cute
pond
spring
A-Z Project
Canon f2.8 100mm


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F is for Fabulous Froggy

F is for Fabulous Froggy
A couple of weeks ago I was creeping around by our front gate with my camera and listening to the amazingly loud voices of the frogs singing at our seasonal pond, which is about 20-30 feet away. If you have never heard a pond of frogs croaking in the spring, you would be very surprised to discover how noisy they are! For instance, our pond is about 600-700 feet (213-243m) from our house, or about 1/8 of a mile away. We can see it, but it's not close. When those frogs turn up the volume, WOW! You can hear them clearly from the house (though not from inside).

I didn't want to get too close to the pond because they can feel my footsteps, no matter how quiet I am, and suddenly they will become silent, which makes me so very sad. :( But eventually I couldn't resist, and my light steps (Godzilla stomps) signalled them all to be quiet. Awwww... :( I walked down to the edge of the pond, marvelling at its "to-the-brim" fullness, and smiled. With the strange weather patterns, Steve and I wondered if the pond would fill this year. Happily, it's been full for a few weeks now, and the rains keep coming, so if all goes well, the pond will have water in it until about June or maybe even July. It's an important breeding ground for our local frog species, so the longer there is water, the better chance there is for the tadpoles to transform into frogs.

The funny thing is that I NEVER see frogs in or around the pond. I always hunt for them, but they are perfectly camouflaged and also, they dive to the bottom of the pond or retreat into holes or under plants. So on this day, as I crouched quietly at the side of the pond, looking in vain for frogs, I almost fell over when I actually SAW one!! I looked and suddenly a little Pacific Tree Frog swam lazily up to the surface and floated there just long enough for me to take some pictures. Then, when I paused to adjust the settings on my camera, I looked through the eyepiece again, and...GONE! But see? I have PROOF!!! I finally SAW ONE!!! HOORAY!!! :D

Explored on ipernity on March 28, highest placement, #2.

, , , Jan Erik Andresen and 82 other people have particularly liked this photo


Comments
 Malik Raoulda
Malik Raoulda club
Finally you got .. Beautiful capture,
the frog is in his element at times
their croaking becomes almost symphonic.
Good weekend.
10 years ago.
 Jean
Jean
What a terrific moment to capture. It's so lively and full of life.
10 years ago.
 Dinesh
Dinesh club
Beautiful

Thoreau’s journal describes their call as “…a remarkable note with which to greet the new year, as if one’s teeth slid off with a grating sound in cracking a nut”.

“Their croaking is the most earthly sound now, … in the awakening of the year … a rustling of the scurf of the earth.” 5 2 1852
10 years ago.
 rob927
rob927
The Bullfrogs down in Louisiana were so loud you could hear them a mile away inside your house.
10 years ago.

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