Flock Friday for February 7

This week, some pictures of the chickens and ducks with a bit more snow, the fish a bit more active, and a bit of a dust bath.

Here are the three big koi swimming slowly about. They’re still very sluggish, since it’s still cold, but I haven’t seen much of them for a while:

Fish

The ducks are curious about the koi:

Ducks and fish

A duck in the rain:

Duck in rain

From the pond deck, the ducks swimming over to see me:

Ducks

Ducks

Ducks

Two chickens in a nesting box:

Two chickens in nesting box

Chickens in snow:

Chickens in snow

Chickens in snow

Chickens in snow

Ducks with snowy pond banks:

Ducks

Ducks with snow

Ducks with snow

I really like this shot from the hidden path:

Ducks with snow

A chicken having a dust bath:

Chickens having dust bath

Here’s a GIF version of the dust bath:

GIF of chickens having dust bath

Cat update for week ending February 1

This week I thought that rather than a single animated GIF of all photos like last week, I’d do separate GIFs of interesting events. Though I must confess, I got a bit carried away playing with this new toy… I ended up capturing 337 photos, and made 14 GIFs. But don’t worry, I won’t be posting all of those. I’m sure I’ll scale that back for next time, but enjoy it this week.

So today I’ll share a few still photos, plus a bunch of animated editions.  I’ll indicate which are GIFs, so if you have a slow connection, you’ll know which are still loading their animations.

Let’s start with some still pictures; Porcini jumping onto awning:

Porcini jumping onto awning

Porcini, twin, Paladout:

Porcini, twin, Paladout

A long-distance photo of a twin inside the house, Pumpkin rolling around on the deck:

Twin inside house, Pumpkin on deck

Here’s a closer view of the oh-so-dainty Pumpkin:

Pumpkin

And now an animated GIF that includes those shots and more, showing the cats out front, and Pumpkin arriving and rolling around on the deck. This GIF is at one frame per second, since there are multiple camera angles; I also made the GIF at 2 FPS, but that was harder to follow, so I won’t include it:

Cat GIF

Bella tracking something in the breezeway, watched by Poppy; probably a moth or bat:

Bella tracking something

A GIF edition, with the arrival of Pumpkin:

Breezeway GIF

Pumpkin near the bird feeders while I was refilling them (that metal plate is the inspection hatch on our septic tank):

Pumpkin near the bird feeders

A brief GIF of various Pumpkin pics from Sunday:

Cabins GIF

Porcini in front of the cat house:

Porcini

GIF of Poppy and Bella snuggling in the breezeway cabin:

Breezeway GIF

A GIF of Pumpkin arriving at the feeder when it dispenses some food every 15 minutes in the morning:

Feeder GIF

A twin under the awning on our main deck, sheltering amongst the tarp-covered stacked furniture:

Twin under awning

Poppy face:

Poppy face

Snuggles:

Snuggles

Another breezeway GIF:

Breezeway GIF

GIF of Pumpkin and a twin at the cabin:

Cabins GIF

Another day, another breakfast GIF, this time with several ferals getting some food… until Pumpkin arrives:

Feeder GIF

I so enjoy the snuggles:

Snuggles

Twin pose:

Twin

Here’s a longer GIF featuring Pumpkin rolling around on the deck, plus another couple of cats nearby:

Cat GIF

Making GIFs like this is a fairly laborious process; this one involved capturing 106 stills, which have their dates assigned and watermark applied by the excellent Retrobatch utility, then they are resized and stitched together as a GIF by another Retrobatch workflow.

A much easier way to capture GIFs is using a recent purchase: the Camect cam server. It is a hardware box that wirelessly connects to the cameras (I have it connecting to nine of my cams) and records their footage on an internal hard disk. It also lets me watch all nine of the connected cameras at once in a window on my old iMac, live and recorded footage, even syncing all cameras to the same timestamp.

Anyway, one of its many features is the ability to save recaps of a time range as movies or GIFs. Here’s an example, using a similar time range to the above one:

Cat GIF

It doesn’t give me as fine a control of the particular frames, and the frame rate, but it only takes a few clicks.

Cats on the awning:

Cats on awning

A GIF of a twin arriving to sniff at Pumpkin, and retreating. Perhaps wondering if he’s still alive? (Wait for the delayed reaction, too.) I’m actually including two editions of the same sequence; here’s it at 1 frame per second (real time):

Cabins at 1 FPS

And the GIF again at 2 FPS (double-time):

Cabins GIF at 2 FPS

Which do you prefer? For a single camera angle like this, I think 2 FPS works better.

Finally, a twin in front of the cat house:

Twin

I hope you enjoyed this experiment with GIFs. Let me know in the comments!

Flock Friday for January 31

This week, a peek inside the chicken coops at night, and an animated GIF of the ducks.

The chickens are so strange; they have a couple of nice roosts in the new coop, but a bunch of them are crowded on the small roosts above the nesting boxes to sleep, with only one on the main roosts. Maybe they like the view out the window, but more likely they just like to be as high as possible:

Chickens sleeping in new coop

For completeness, the rest of the chickens sleeping in the old coop:

Chickens sleeping in old coop

The ducks on the pond:

Ducks

Bert:

Bert

Gert:

Gert

An animated GIF of the ducks rummaging under water, at 2 frames per second (i.e. 2x speed):

GIF of ducks at 2 FPS

The same GIF of 1-second captures at 1 FPS, i.e. real-time:

GIF of ducks at 1 FPS

(I think the 2x one is better, but figured I’d include both.)

Cat update for week ending January 25

This week, something different: all of the pictures!  No, don’t run away, it’s not that bad.  I had 129 pictures to choose from this week, with too many good ones… so I thought I’d create an animated GIF of all of them. Having done that, I was able to filter them down to 20 to post as pictures, skipping many that I would otherwise have wanted to include.

Check out the GIF below to see the others, but first, the static pictures.

Starting with a super graceful Pumpkin soaking up the rays; nobody can relax like him (and another position in the GIF):

Graceful Pumpkin

Bella in the breezeway cabin, visited by Porcini:

Breezeway

Porcini staring at something, Poppy on the back door step, and someone else eating inside:

Three cats

I rearranged Pansy’s nest in the back of the shop, and moved the cam over there so I could see her. She likes to hang out on the chairs:

Pansy in the back of the shop

And has a hollowed out cushion to sleep in:

Pansy in the back of the shop

There’s a heating pad on the old dog bed in the foreground, but I haven’t seen her use it. I might try putting it under her cushion. It doesn’t get quite as cold in the back of the shop, though, as the walls are somewhat insulated (but also has non-insulated portions), and there’s a wall heater that comes on when it’s really cold.

Bella has been using the new breezeway cabin pretty much every night:

Bella in the breezeway

Pumpkin peeking at me while I refill the bird feeders. He is there most mornings, and has stopped running away when I approach; he knows I’m not a threat:

Pumpkin

I moved the mobile cam a bit closer to the cat house, which gives a nice view of it and the area in front. Here’s Paladout approaching:

Paladout

And Pumpkin:

Pumpkin

Pumpkin again, watching me walking past from under the cedar:

Pumpkin

Three cats:

Three cats

Pumpkin arrived while two others (Poppy and Porcini, I believe) were eating. They each looked up at him, then kept on eating. Oh, it’s you:

Pumpkin and others

Poppy slept in the breezeway cabin for a couple of hours, too:

Poppy in the breezeway

Unfortunately, Pumpkin found the new cabin… and sprayed it to claim it as his. He just has to have all the shelters:

Pumpkin in the breezeway

Pumpkin and a twin facing off:

Pumpkin and a twin

Pumpkin slowly edged around to get to the feeder, then decided to wander off instead:

Pumpkin and a twin

Pumpkin didn’t put off the others from the breezeway, though.  Later, Poppy was in the cabin again, and Porcini was wanting to join her, when Jenn approached to get in the car, which is parked at the end of the breezeway. So they both ran away:

Run away!

Run away!

A cat on top of the house, another inside, as a third approaches:

Three cats

Two cats on the roof, one on the deck. The flat tops of the facade makes great perches for cats:

Three cats

It’s showtime! See more pictures related to the above ones, and others that I didn’t include, in this animated GIF of 129 captured cat pictures from this week (about a minute in duration at two frames per second; it might take a moment to load if you have a slow connection):

129 cat pics, animated

Please let me know in the comments if you enjoyed this; I could easily do it in the future, thanks to a Retrobatch workflow that takes a collection of photos, resizes them, and converts them to a GIF.

Afternoon meal in cat feeder

I enjoyed making the cat shelter GIF yesterday, so thought I’d make a time-lapse GIF for the cat feeder, too.  Both were generated by individually capturing a bunch of photos from the cam viewer, carefully timing them to be evenly spaced, then running them through Retrobatch, an excellent image conversion app for macOS, to read in the files, scale them, combine them into an animated GIF, and write that out.

For the cat shelter one I captured 106 images at 5 minute intervals; for this one I captured 57 images at 30 second intervals.

This was from yesterday afternoon; I noticed they’d eaten all the food, so I dispensed more, and three cats arrived to chow down:

GIF of cat feeder

Cat update for week ending June 15

Thanks for the nice comments on yesterday’s new feature, Flock Friday. Check it out if you missed it. I enjoy doing these weekly cat posts, so it’ll be good to show pictures of the various birds more regularly, too.

On to the the cats. You know I can’t resist a cute snuggle or three:

Snuggling cats

Snuggling cats

Snuggling cats

A sequence of images of an encounter between the alien orange cat and Poppy (aka mamacat):

Orange cat & Poppy encounter

Poppy expressed her disdain of the orange cat:

Orange cat & Poppy encounter

The orange cat took the hint, and wandered off, but Poppy wasn’t satisfied, and followed after:

Orange cat & Poppy encounter

Poppy swiped at the orange cat… then hid under the cat house until he left:

Orange cat & Poppy encounter

Four cats:

Four cats

Poppy and Porcini watching birds:

Cats watching birds

The twins:

Twin cats

Four cats (can you see all of them?):

Four cats

Poppy & Porcini again:

Poppy & Porcini

The orange cat again, but interestingly one of our ferals walked by, without seeming too concerned; maybe they are getting used to each other, slowly:

Orange cat & another

When we had really hot weather recently, I turned off the heat lamp and opened the vent in the duck house. Then in the evening, around sunset, I went back out to the duck house to turn the lamp back on, and mostly close the vent. On both evenings I did that, cats followed me back to the front door. Here are three cats on the front steps:

Three cats on the front steps

I’m not entirely sure what they were thinking… perhaps remembering when I used to do rounds and give them wet food on the steps, before I built the cat house. That’s been a while, though. Or just happened to be around, since soon before sunset is when they usually turn up to the cat house for dinner.

Similarly, on another day, a cat watched from kitchen garden as Jenn headed towards the greenhouse:

Cat in kitchen garden

It does encourage me when they show signs of being comfortable around us (so long as we keep a distance).

Finally, a fun (but low-quality) GIF of a cat reversing course:

Reversing course GIF