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Solstice time of year

Monday, June 20th, 2011

Longest days of the year right now – I love the non-stop sunlight! I didn’t always, but nowadays it’s energizing – I’m more active, need less sleep, getting more done.

Last weekend folks in Anchorage’s downtown district had a twelve hour (noon to midnight) solstice festival. Not bad for such a small town - and some of the newer shops down there are downright respectable! (disclaimer: it has been many years since I’ve stepped foot down there – I’m no fan of crowds).

For me, this meant a chance to let my daughter play a bit, and to work on my street photography, such as it was. Not very successfull by anyone’s standards. Below: one of my favorites

Balloons on the solstice

Balloons on the solstice

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Nootka

Sunday, June 19th, 2011

Graffiti found on the side of a building in a downtown Anchorage park. Originally posted on my Downhill Stream of Conciousness tumblr blog.

Graffiti, downtown Anchorage

Graffiti, downtown Anchorage

Nothing special to this, it’s just something I want to reflect on. As graffiti-based art, I think it’s rather beautiful. But I don’t think I captured anything in the image other than “it was here & I saw it.” I didn’t even capture it in its environment.

What would you do with this?

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Relating to a sunrise

Monday, June 6th, 2011

Referring to yesterday’s posted image, how about a sunrise through a filthy window?

Dirty sunrise

Dirty sunrise

Originally posted on my Tumblr blog. You might want to check it out if you haven’t seen it in a while. I have been sporadically posting cell phone shots there.  In some cases (like the dirty sunrise posted here), I like them better than my higher-quality ones.

Even if they tend towards the hipster side.

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Early Morning

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011
Early Morning

Early Morning

It’s a rough time of the year, the approach to the solstice. Sleep comes slowly, and what little to be found is fitful.

It’s too bright out. It never really feels like bedtime. It seems like I should be out doing something.

The image above: taken at 5:30 in the morning.  The sun had risen about an hour earlier, but was still at a sharp angle.  You’re looking directly north, with the sun at NNE. I was awake at 3:30 that morning, and it was already starting to get light…

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Dancing Shoes #2

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

At last year’s rehearsal, I made an image out of these dancing shoes. It was one of my favorites for the year, enough so that I added them to my tenset for 2010.

This year I made another:

Dancing Shoes #2

Dancing Shoes #2

Seems I have a year-to-year theme going on.

 

Look closely & you’ll see a lack of detail.  Hand-held in extreme darkness with the 50mm f/1.4 lens…

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At the Car Wash

Monday, May 9th, 2011
Soapy Abstract

Soapy Abstract

We’re washing the grunge out of the house: we’ve rid ourselves of much of the rocks & pebbles that accumulate over the winter, and washed (finally) the winter’s grime off the cars.

At one stage in the car wash, you’re covered in this stuff. I still haven’t captured quite what I want, but it’s a start.

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Spot the Gecko

Saturday, May 7th, 2011

A study in contrast and dynamic range of light:

Spot the gecko

Spot the gecko

Taken in Kihei, Maui in March 2011.

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Meta-meta information on an image

Monday, May 2nd, 2011

Specifically this one:

Too cool for me

Dog in Shades/Too Cool for Me

Meta information is typically information about information.  In the case of a photograph, the meta information might be the location, the time of day, f/stop, shutter speed, weather conditions, etc.

A couple of days ago I was given an update from a relative of this dog (well, the owner), making it information about the location where the photo was taken – meta-meta-information. The news isn’t really good, I’m afraid: the owner sold the building, and the new owners apparently don’t allow pets.  So out goes the dog and his owner, it seems.

In a way, as someone who has lived in Alaska for some time and who has traveled around, I find this sad. Most places are so homogeneous that there’s nothing special to ‘em.  Lahaina is like Waikiki is like downtown Kona is like Cozumel is like the San Diego piers is like Catalina is like Long Beach is like any other beach in California is like… well, you get the picture.  And yeah, each location has its own flavor, language, and feel, but the similarities are striking.  Businesses strive for consistency, land owners strive for higher property values…

…So it’s rare to find something that really sticks in your mind. Ketchikan does that, if you’re a tourist, but only somewhat: it’s nice, rustic-ish yet homey in a Pacific NW sorta way. When the fish are running, you can catch ‘em right in the middle of town – that’s something you won’t forget anytime soon.  And these dogs (there is more than one): You just don’t forget ‘em.

Now Ketchikan is a little more forgettable.

Disclaimer: of course, all of this is predicated on the commenter being honest, but I have no reason to disbelieve the core of the information.

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Hawaiian Batfish

Saturday, April 16th, 2011

According to pretty much all of the divers I met on Maui, batfishes don’t technically exist in the Hawaiian waters.  Pauline Fiene at Mike Severns Diving led the dive where I took this image, and she commented that it might very well be an “aquarium release” – someone with a salt-water fishtank might have released it into the local waters.

Apparently they started showing up a few years ago (curse my memory, I want to say eight years ago or so?), schooling in relatively non-traveled areas.  Non-traveled by tourists, at least. They’re pretty territorial, however, and tend to stay in areas that are familiar to them.  This guy had been hanging around in the cabin of the St. Anthony (opens in Flickr, click through for the larger image!).  Locals weren’t believing the divemasters, even – at least, not until they saw video footage.

Non-native Hawaiian Batfish

Non-native Hawaiian Batfish

Regarding the photograph itself: I wish, oh I wish… well, I wish I had been a bit smarter.  Light was provided by the high power of the dive lights that Pauline carried. Image sharpness is decent, at least for underwater.  So how did I manage to clip the tail?

Every photo had minor defects, this being the one with the fewest.

Damn.

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Bitey Thing

Friday, April 8th, 2011

I tend to avoid diving on many charter boats.  It’s often not the fault of the dive operators, but the other divers: they’re always in a hurry, always rushing…

…and as a result, losing bottom time and using up air due to the exertion.  When it comes to diving, the longer you’re down below, the more you’ll see.  Inevitably it seems that it’s towards the end of dives that the unique things present themselves.  Take this guy, for example:

Juvenile Whitemouth Moray (maybe)

Juvenile Whitemouth Moray (maybe)

Image details: I believe that this guy is a stout moray. It’s pretty similar to a juvenile whitemouth moray, but it lacks the shock-white mouth.  ID’d in The Ultimate Guide to Hawaiian Reef Fishes.  Highly recommended book if you’re diving the islands!

We found this guy at the very end of a shore dive at Black Rock, near Ka’anapali, Maui. If hurried along, we’d have passed him – he was tucked in under the hard coral that you see here, well out of site from snorkelers.  In fact, I saw him when looking down & behind me.

Don’t rush.  Hurry and you’ll miss things, even above water.

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