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Sunday, 16 August 2015
Friday, 14 August 2015
Coppersmith barbet: Megalaima haemacephala
Coppersmith barbet Megalaima haemacephala |
There are reasons
for the lull in fresh posting to the blog: besides work grabbing
priority, disaster struck me yet again. Way back, on a long tour of Rajasthan
with family, I lost data from 32Gb SD card. I learnt my
lesson, reduced my ignorance about such tech matters, and went ahead and
purchased two large capacity external hard disk drives of reputed brands for
backing up my data. I went ahead and backed up my data, distributing it between
the two as per relevance and relationship to the theme assigned for each
external drive. For the past couple of years, my smugness at
my elevation to a reduced level of ignorance knew no bounds and I merrily
went ahead storing and processing photos, and expanding my database tables
without further reducing my ignorance about data storage do's and don'ts any
further. Smugness got hit. By a simple straight punch, but with
catastrophic effects - my birding and wildlife TB drive was accidentally
disconnected by a careless movement of my arm, and BAM!, my drive went
dead. Reputation of a company wasn't a shield after all. Neither was it a
panacea for laziness in knowing more about how to store AND protect data. I
didn't create "back-up images" or obtain further security through a
"cloud". My docketed albums are gone. Along with my reports,
databases, reference materials etc. Yet again, I'm wiser after. Now, I have to
peck through my SD cards to restore portions of my data. Those deleted or
overwritten (thanks to unaware smugness) are efforts up in the sky and clouds
or space beyond now. I tried some things through internet tutorials but
in vain. The spirit has taken hard kicks in its backside.
Returning to he
Coppersmith barbet in hand, let me state that this is my first decent
quality photograph of the species. Invariably, they have either been
beyond my reach, swifter than my reflexes, or simply well-hidden behind
interfering leaves, twigs and branches which is their wont. They seek high
perches on old trees to broadcast themselves in the manner of a coppersmith
hammering the element to mould something out of it. Here was this specimen cavorting all over a bare trunk of a dead tree at eye-level too! It was a lucky day indeed.
I shall edit later to add
the Taxonomy and other details after I rebuild a data storage and
retrieval mechanism to house a new database which I will have to build from
scratch.
To shake my enthusiasm
out of its current dejection, a birding trip is in order to start with.
The longish grieving at the start was necessary also.
©2015
Prashant V Tenjarla All Rights Reserved
Photographed
at Keoladeo Ghana (Keoladeo National Park), Bharatpur, Rajasthan, India on
29.7.2015 using Nikon D7200 and Tamron 150-600mm system.
Exif
data: f/6.3/600mm; ISO 100. Image has subsequently been cropped and exposure
adjusted.