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RE: [Killietalk] Finding eggs
"The third essential tool is a well-trained brain." Wright how did you ever
find any eggs, being minus one third of the tools.? Sorry but just had to
say it I have been being good putting up with my in laws and needed Wright
to pick on. Everyone have a good fifth on the forth and drive sober.
Harbor freight has a Plastic magnifying thing that is on a necklace that is
great fro picking eggs on mops.
-----Original Message-----
From: killietalk-bounces+killiman=iquest_net at aka.org
[mailto:killietalk-bounces+killiman=iquest_net at aka.org]On Behalf Of
Wright Huntley
Sent: Saturday, July 02, 2005 2:45 PM
To: killietalk at aka_org
Subject: Re: [Killietalk] Finding eggs
*Richard Arline <pb1212bba at bellsouth_net> wrote:*
> Hello all,
>
> For those of us whose eyesight is not what it used to be, what do you
> use to search for eggs and where would be the best source of
> acquiring such implements?
>
> Richard Arline Hollywood FL
Magnification always helps, but low power is best. I have to wear
glasses, so reading glasses are out as they don't do diddly for bad
astgmatism. I like the loupes used by jewelers and machinists that clamp
to the bow of your regular glasses and allow about a 2 diopter lens to
swivel in front of your dominant eye, when you want a close-up look. Try
Edmund Scientific. Harbor Freight often carries cheap hoods that go over
regular glasses to give a 2 or 3X magnification. I find them tiring to
wear, compared to the clip-on loupes.
Illumination and the container are also important. Best of all is a
light table or slide-sorter, but I get almost the same effect with a
shallow white bowl and a high-intensity halogen reading lamp (50W min.
and 100 is better). By looking at the bowl from about 45 degrees above
it, and having the lamp directly across at about that angle, light
reflects off the bowl such that amber eggs light up as bits of peat are
dragged across the brightly lit center. Eggs, particularly older and
darker eggs, are much easier to see when the light shines through them
than when it is just reflected. Most get dull and hard to see through
the peat that gets attached to them in reflected light.
The third essential tool is a well-trained brain. Finding eggs gets far
easier after you have found a lot. Your "pattern recognizer" needs to be
muscled up by repetitive exercise. :-)
Wright
--
Wright Huntley - Rt. 001 Box K36, Bishop CA 93514 - whuntley at verizon_net
760 872-3995
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rather an irate, tireless minority, keen on setting brushfires of
freedom in the minds of men."
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