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#1
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http://www.troutnut.com
I just finished this site a few days ago as an original resource for fly fishermen to learn about stream science so they can tie better imitations and just generally understand the trout better. My photos are all from northwest Wisconsin, in tributaries to both Lake Superior and the Mississippi system, though many should be interesting and applicable elsewhere. The site includes over 1,000 large close-up photos of live stream insects, mostly mayfly nymphs but a bit of everything. It's also got a unique application to let you compare any image on my site side-by-side with any other at various levels of rotation, brightness, or zooming. That's all in the "naturals gallery" section he http://www.troutnut.com/naturals/index.html I've also got 50+ underwater photographs from trout streams, including some awesome photos of a dense school of wild brookies in a northern Wisconsin river in February and a huge school of minnows in the same river. I've also got some neat underwater photos of caddis larvae in their natural habitat. That's all in the "underwater photos" section he http://www.troutnut.com/underwater/index.html And I've got movies of ten different nymphs moving around showing their various swimming motions: http://www.troutnut.com/movies.html Hope you all like it! Jason Neuswanger, Trout Nut http://www.troutnut.com |
#3
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![]() "George Cleveland" wrote Again, fantastic stuff Jason. agreed, and some great bug shots too but, Jason, you must have some CSS ( most likely ) bug as Mozilla displays your heading, such as "Naturals Gallery" over and obscuring the first text on the page, such as ""below are my favorite pictures" just a heads up ... the class "bodytext" possibly? |
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"Larry L" wrote:
but, Jason, you must have some CSS ( most likely ) bug as Mozilla displays your heading, such as "Naturals Gallery" over and obscuring the first text on the page, such as ""below are my favorite pictures" just a heads up ... the class "bodytext" possibly? No sign of this problem with Internet Explorer, maybe it's a Mozilla feature? Chas remove fly fish to reply http://home.comcast.net/~chas.wade/w...ome.html-.html San Juan Pictures at: http://home.comcast.net/~chasepike/wsb/index.html |
#5
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On 2/29/04 12:53 AM, in article
, "Jason Neuswanger" wrote: Hope you all like it! Jason Neuswanger, Trout Nut http://www.troutnut.com That is one cool site, Jason. I killed an hour or three last week on it after someone here on ROFF pointed to it. The videos and the underwater brookie pictures are particularly fascinating, and had me scrambling for the atlas to find the Namekegon. It doesn't display correctly on Safari either, though. In particular the menu doesn't display at all. IE/Mac works fine. Cheers! Bill |
#6
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Chas Wade wrote:
"Larry L" wrote: but, Jason, you must have some CSS ( most likely ) bug as Mozilla displays your heading, such as "Naturals Gallery" over and obscuring the first text on the page, such as ""below are my favorite pictures" just a heads up ... the class "bodytext" possibly? No sign of this problem with Internet Explorer, maybe it's a Mozilla feature? Works fine in Opera 7.23. -- Don`t Worry, Be Happy Sandy -- E-Mail:- Website:- http://www.ftscotland.co.uk IRC:- Sandyb in #rabble uk3.arcnet.vapor.com Port:6667 #Rabble Channel Website:- http://www.ftscotland.co.uk/rabbled ICQ : 41266150 |
#7
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![]() "Chas Wade" wrote No sign of this problem with Internet Explorer, maybe it's a Mozilla feature? No it displays as intended in IE, and Opera and a 4th generation Netscape But current Netscape and Mozilla browsers have a problem with it. Differences in display between the current IE and current Netscape ( ozilla ) are almost always the result of CSS, ime. IE is the most common browser and it's easy to think that if it is ok in IE then any problems in other browsers is because those other browsers have a problem. Actually, current Mozilla is the most "standards compliant" brower available, and, thus is often considered a type of benchmark in the web design world. IE "covers up" many coding errors, especially in the area of CSS, that Mozilla actually displays properly ( as coded ) but seem "wrong" because IE wasn't bright enough to really do the job right. If MS ever fixes IE to match the standard, as opposed to trying the muscle the standard to fit IE :-) ... it won't display the page right either G In my opinion, ( and I'm not alone in this one :-) a page has to pass the "Mozilla test" before it's finished. Thankfully, the gap between what the various browsers is shrinking. Back in the 3rd and 4th generation browsers, pages that were great in one wouldn't even display usably in another . I still test the sites I maintain in everything back to 4th generation, and usually have to provide separate CSS code for those older versions ( still found on a larger number of machines than one would think ) Oh, and, imho Mozilla Firefox is many steps ahead of IE, as a browsing tool..... I suggest trying it out ... it's free for the download |
#8
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On Sun, 29 Feb 2004 23:41:46 GMT, "Larry L"
wrote: Oh, and, imho Mozilla Firefox is many steps ahead of IE, as a browsing tool..... I suggest trying it out ... it's free for the download I've been using it for a few weeks now and it is pretty good. Thunderbird isn't too bad of a newsreader, either, although I still mostly use Agent. -- Charlie... |
#9
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On 28 Feb 2004 21:53:29 -0800, (Jason Neuswanger)
wrote: http://www.troutnut.com I just finished this site a few days ago as an original resource for fly fishermen to learn about stream science so they can tie better imitations and just generally understand the trout better. My photos are all from northwest Wisconsin, in tributaries to both Lake Superior and the Mississippi system, though many should be interesting and applicable elsewhere. Superb site - you are to be congratulated. Any chance of getting a few shots of caddis pupae? Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
#10
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Thanks for the support note George. I have been posting about my site
in every appropriate place I can find, but hey, that's the way to get the word out. ![]() handful of petty territorial webmasters who don't want traffic leaving their sites. I absolutely despise spam, and although I've been using forums to publicize my site, you'll never find me posting anything without substantive new updates that should be interesting to read as well as hopefully pointing people to my site. Thanks for the browser compatibility reports. The problem with Mozilla/Safari is bigger than a CSS bug, I'm afraid. Some IE-only technology is central to some of the ways the site works behind the scenes. It's by far the most efficient way for me to do it, but I may look into a less efficient but more compatible solution soon. I know the Compareware application will remain IE-only. A lot of the most important functionality in that app is only possible with IE right now. As for scrambling for the atlas... hehe, the Namekagon is a neat river, but don't think the whole river looks like what's in my pictures. It's actually a very notoriously difficult river to fish because it's really hard to locate the fish predictably most times, and when you do I've heard they're often particularly selective. My pictures come from all the fish in a long stretch of stream stacked up at a thermal refuge mid-winter. So by all means if you want to come fish the Nam it's hard not to enjoy the experience--I just don't want to artificially inflate your expectations. ![]() Jason |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
New website with 1000+ photos & videos of wild trout & things they eat | Jason Neuswanger | General Discussion | 0 | February 29th, 2004 05:33 AM |