It's going to be a short posting today. I need to make time to create my bread dough. Tomorrow's highs are forecast to be in the mid-50s and rain is in the forecast, too. Lake Superior may get some 25 foot waves. I'm glad our visits were a couple of weeks ago. This week's weather means its time for home-made bread and soup or stew even if it is early September. (Gordon Lightfoot never sang about the gales of September, did he?) If you're a regular reader, you know that, as a recovering planner, I believe that no amount of planning can replace dumb luck. That's what I had yesterday, when I managed to take this photo of a Ruby Meadowhawk.
Ruby Meadowhawk (Sympetrum rubicundulum) on deck railing
Photo by J. Harrington
When I manage to get a decent photo something like the one above, I have to go back to square one on whether the problems I often encounter are due to the equipment or the operator. My experience with computers is that the problem is most often, but not always, operator error. I think I'm seeing a similar pattern with cameras and lenses. Maybe I won't ask Santa for a $10,000 lens for Christmas to cure all my problems. Imagine if I got one and still had focus and depth of field issues. I also want to be sure to avoid being the kind of photographer Wendell Berry describes. It's an easy trap to fall into.
*check the lyrics in the chorus of Joni Mitchell's The Circle Game
The Vacation
Once there was a man who filmed his vacation.He went flying down the river in his boatwith his video camera to his eye, makinga moving picture of the moving riverupon which his sleek boat moved swiftlytoward the end of his vacation. He showedhis vacation to his camera, which pictured it,preserving it forever: the river, the trees,the sky, the light, the bow of his rushing boatbehind which he stood with his camerapreserving his vacation even as he was having itso that after he had had it he would stillhave it. It would be there. With a flickof a switch, there it would be. But hewould not be in it. He would never be in it.
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Thanks for visiting. Come again when you can.
Please be kind to each other while you can.
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