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Friday, April 26, 2024
By Mike Moats Photography

It's dandelion season and if you haven't killed the ones in your yard, you could pick them right there, or head to your local park, they will have some.

If you don't mind getting down on the ground you could shoot them on the stem, or if you want to make it easier, pick one and use a Plamp to hold it up in the air while you sit on a stool or like me on the edge of my porch. Much easier on the body.

 

 

You could place a background behind the seedhead, or I'm using the grass off in the distance for this shot. 

You can pick off some of the seeds and create different looks. 

Lots of different ways to shoot these.  Everything in focus with a high f/stop number or use a small f/stop number for softer look.

Be creative on ways to compose them, and maybe do some creative post processing.

Join my online Macro Photo Club and learn through over 280 instructional videos.  2,800 members from 29 countries.

https://www.tinylandscapes.com/macro-photo-club

Also Check out my workshops and zoom programs.

WORKSHOPS - Mike Moats - Award Winning Macro Photographer

 
Thursday, April 25, 2024
By Mike Moats Photography

There are a lot of reason why I like macro nature photography. We have tons of subjects to shoot close to home, subjects change through out the season, we control the light, you can get by with just one lens if you’re on a limited budget. Another advantage we have as macro photographers is that we can be more artistic. We can create abstracts with the subjects we shoot and also have the ability to create interesting artwork using the shallow depth of field. Sure landscape photographers can do some motion blurs and swirl the camera for a few interesting effects, but they can’t come close to the artistic options we have a macro photographers.

We can create interesting abstract like this one which is dew on top of a mushroom.

Or how about some cool abstracts in ice.

We can take simple subjects like this Dandelion and create artistic images with shallow depth of field.

How about some Monet

Create art with rain drops in a pine tree

We have unlimited opportunity to create great artwork with macro, so go be creative.

Join my Macro Photo Club online. Over 280 instructional videos. Over 2800 members. 
Info and to sign up. MACRO PHOTO CLUB - Mike Moats - Award Winning Macro Photographer (tinylandscapes.com)

 
Tuesday, April 23, 2024
By Mike Moats Photography

I liked to read about the stories of hikers that walk up to six months doing a thru hike of the Appalachian trail that goes from Georgia to Maine. Over 2,000 miles, that's pretty impressive.  

The one valuable tip I learned was about a clothing spray that would repel ticks. The hikers used this to help keep the ticks away. 

Even the volunteers that maintain the trails swear but this product for ticks.

It's a clothing spray called Permethrin.  

Each year before the spring happens, I spray my pants, socks and shoes and I have not had any issues with the ticks.

The clothing will last up to five washing and then you would have to reapply.  I just sprayed mine the other day getting ready to head into the woods.

If you have cats the spray is toxic when it's wet, but my cat had no issue once it dried on the clothing.

I buy mine on Amazon in a two pack.

 

Join my online Macro Photo Club and learn through over 280 instructional videos.  2,800 members from 29 countries.

https://www.tinylandscapes.com/macro-photo-club

Also Check out my workshops and zoom programs.

WORKSHOPS - Mike Moats - Award Winning Macro Photographer

 
Monday, April 22, 2024
By Mike Moats Photography

I don't like articles that have been written about me in photo sites, or magazines, as they always seemed to get all the info I gave the interviewer wrong, but this one I was very happy with.

https://photofocus.com/inspiration/the-world-up-close-a-conversation-with-mike-moats/?fbclid=IwAR2lzjoxjctDU-PbQHi5gW4kh8eDMgriV9uEg0Hc1t6NJtyd8eQEWaSTYn8

Join my online Macro Photo Club and learn through over 280 instructional videos.  2,800 members from 29 countries.

https://www.tinylandscapes.com/macro-photo-club

Also Check out my workshops and zoom programs.

WORKSHOPS - Mike Moats - Award Winning Macro Photographer

 
Monday, April 22, 2024
By Mike Moats Photography

Summer is coming and that means if you are heading into the woods, you will run into mosquitoes and Ticks. Check out the info about the repellent Deet.

If DEET is so effective a mosquito repellant, why wouldn’t you want to apply 100 percent DEET? Because it is likely to be more expensive, and depending upon how long you need protection, 4 percent DEET may be all you need. Research has shown that a higher concentration of DEET does not improve its repellent properties, but does provide longer-lasting protection. A concentration of 20 percent provides almost four hours of protection.

 

DEET Facts

DEET is N,N-diethyl-meta-toluamide, which repels mosquitoes and ticks including the ticks that cause Lyme disease. It was developed by the U.S. Army in 1946 before being released for public use in 1957. Currently, DEET is available in concentrations between 4 percet and 100 percent, in more than 140 products in lotion, spray, liquid and impregnated forms (like wristbands).

On the downside, users complain that DEET in higher concentrations is known to be greasy, smell bad and corrode synthetic fabrics.

 

Research on DEET Concentrations

Researchers in 2002 undertook an experiment comparing the effectiveness of several commercially available insect repellents against mosquito bites. M.S. Fradin and J.F. Day tested the repellents on 15 volunteers who placed their arms into a test cage containing 10 young female mosquitoes. The researchers recorded the time before the first mosquito bite.

They concluded that “DEET-based products provided complete protection for the longest duration. Higher concentrations of DEET provided longer-lasting protection. A formulation containing 23.8 percent DEET had a mean complete-protection time of 301.5 minutes.

The New England Journal of Medicine published the article “Comparative Efficacy of Insect Repellents against Mosquito Bites” in its July 4, 2002 edition.

 

Complete Protection Time Increases with Concentration

The researchers tested 16 products in total, six of which contained DEET. The concentrations and mean duration of protection are as follows:

23.8 percent: 301.5 minutes (just over five hours) 20 percent: 234.4 minutes (just under four hours) 6.65 percent: 112.4 minutes (almost two hours) 4.75 percent: 88.4 minutes (just under an hour and a half)

As the researchers observed, “The alcohol-based product containing 23.8 percent DEET protected significantly longer than the controlled-release formulation containing 20 percent DEET.” Two wristbands impregnated with a concentration of 9.5 percent DEET provided effectively no protection.

 

Criticisms

One physician complained in a letter to the NEJM that “Drs. Fradin and Day failed to include in their study a repellent with a DEET concentration greater than 23.8 percent.” This particular writer was a resident of “bush” Alaska who swore by 95 percent concentrations of DEET.

The researchers answered that most DEET products (at the time) contained 40 percent DEET or less, though a few were available at 95 percent. They claimed that “DEET's duration of action tends to plateau at concentrations higher than 50 percent, so relatively little additional benefit is afforded by 95 percent DEET.” That 50 percent plateau is widely reported, though the source of that information is uncertain.

 

Information, Misinformation and Anecdotal Evidence

Every source seems to tell a different story about DEET’s effectiveness. The Travel Medicine Alliance, an Australian alliance of medical doctors, advises that while the duration of protection is related to the concentration of DEET, “At a concentration of 50 percent, this effect plateaus. 30 percent DEET is the lowest effective dose.” So they agree with Fradin and Day about the plateau, but seem off the mark about the lowest effective dose.

The South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control claims that “The efficacy of DEET plateaus at a concentration of 30 percent, the maximum concentration currently recommended for infants older than 2 months, children and adults.” (See Reference 5.) This contradicts EPA recommendations which are that DEET is approved for use on children with no age restriction, and that there is no restriction on the percentage of DEET for use on children.

Anecdotally, Program Coordinator Andrew Yasso of the American Alpine Institute (an organization of mountain climbers) observed that “Most companies say 100 percent DEET will last around 10 hours, and I think that's about right, but it doesn't matter because you will know when its effectiveness stops (it's rather dramatic).”