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| 2/6/26 palm cockatoo, Woodland Park Zoo |
On one of our couple days of “false spring” last week, I
took my fitness walk around Woodland Park Zoo. I told myself I’d make one brisk
circuit of the zoo grounds first without sketching, then go back to sketch, but
I couldn’t resist stopping when I got to the Conservation Aviary. One of my
favorite zoo exhibits, it’s home to several free-roaming and -flying birds that
are all, very sadly, endangered. It’s possible to observe the birds fairly
closely, and unlike tiny birds, these exotic beauties move relatively slowly,
so they are more easily sketchable.
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| Great argus |
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| Southern ground hornbill and Humboldt penguins |
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| More penguins |
Stepping back from the exhibit, I decided to catch a few human gestures, too (below). The young boy who repeatedly squatted to see the swimming penguins was fun to try to capture! (I often practice squatting during yoga and nearly daily as part of my fitness routine, and I envied how easy he made squatting look! I guess it is when you’re 3!)
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| Watching the penguins |
Paper notes: I knew that toothy Hahnemühle would be a bit too strong with super-soft Derwent Drawing pencils, but I tried it anyway. It wore down my pencils like sandpaper, and it was difficult to draw any fine details like eyes. Although I didn’t mind Stillman & Birn Beta’s milder tooth when I was making landscapes, I don’t care for Hahnemühle. I would have enjoyed smooth S&B Zeta much more, but I don’t like using wet media on that. I’d have to either decide which type of material to use that day and bring the appropriate sketchbook, or bring both sketchbooks everywhere, just in case. Arrggh! (More first world mixed-media problems.)
When I got to the quick human gestures at the end of my visit, I pulled out my current daily-carry Field Notes, which contains their typically smooth, all-purpose paper. That turned out to be quite lovely with a Drawing pencil, which went down as fast and smooth as a marker.

























