The pain of Pedantry

The city I live in, Hikari, was into last year home to Yamamoto Akira, a master of chōkin metal chasing and what is known as a Living National Treadure. He passed away just over a year ago, and the city has finally managed to put together an exhibition of his work.

It’s incredible to see. Vessels of metal or lacquerware etched and inlaid with intricate designs both abstract and representative. Each one not only representing hours of painstaking with, but a lifetime of dedication to the art.

Beautiful.

The exhibit opened today and I stopped by unaware that it was the day for the media and various dignitaries to get a guided tour. I hung around the periphery, avoiding the camera and enjoying the beauty my own way.

Then, I overheard the guide talk about a piece I had yet to see, a small vessel inlaid with a “kingfisher.” She described how Yamamoto had wanted to create an image of the rare bird but couldn’t find one to use as a reference, so consulted with the head of the local birdwatcher’s association to track one down.

I was intrigued and confused. Intrigued because I love kingfishers. Confused because they’re not at all rare and it would take maybe a day to find one reliably.

When the crowd moved on, I made my way to view the piece. It was, as I feared, not a common kingfisher, kawasemi in Japanese, but a crested kingfisher, or yamasemi.

The piece was named wrong.

Kawasemi, common kingfisher
Yamasemi, crested kingfisher (crest lowered)
A large black and white bird with a crest and long beak perches at the tip of a bare bamboo branch. It looks out to the left.
Yamasemi (crest raised)
Yamamoto Akira’s piece, ‘Kawasemi’

And that one little discrepancy damaged my enjoyment of the event. Which is silly, because it’s probably just some tiny miscommunication that has no bearing on the beauty or mastery of there piece. But man, it really bothers me. Because it’s a lovely depiction of a yamasemi, but kawasemi it ain’t.

Winter Waterside Birds

A bit of a foot problem has cut down my walking range quite a bit, but I still managed to get out to the river yesterday afternoon to see the ducks flocking in. Mallards, Teal, Pintails, the gang’s all here. I also spotted a blue rock thrush for the first time this season, and my constant companion the kingfisher also made an appearance.

A blue rock thrush, its back blue mottled with gray and black, perches on a concrete embankment. It is looking over its shoulder toward the left side of the frame.
Blue rock thrush making sure I get its good side.
A kingfisher perches on a diagonal leaning reed, looking down.
Kingfisher on the prowl
A very felegant looking northern pintail duck swimming across a rippling river surface. It has a brilliant white breast, brown head, and a grayish body with delicate wavy patterns. Its tail is long and sticks up at an angle.
Northern Pintail, the most elegant of ducks.

Birders birding

I’ve been venturing out to the river on my bike on various morning and evening trips the past couple of weeks to see if I can spot any kingfishers, but mostly to no avail.

I decided to try the middle of the afternoon today for a change, and from a good 100 meters away I figured I had made the right choice. Can anyone guess how I knew?

A small crowd of five photographers with varying massive lenses pointed down over a river.
Hunters

Yes, all those people and all that camera gear could only mean one thing: there was a kingfisher lurking.

We all took… Jeez, probably a couple hundred pictures each (burst shot on a digital camera really burns through a memory card), but hey, what else is several thousand dollars worth of camera and lens for?

A common kingfisher perched on a reed and illuminated in a beam of sunlight.
Hunted

Once our prey disappeared into the reeds, we all scattered without so much as a “See you.” Ah, such is life. Nice afternoon, though.