Thursday, October 25, 2012

Sulphur Sensation


Along the route today on a wonderfully breezy and not too hot afternoon, I came upon a myriad of Cloudless Sulphurs flitting about the vibrant red flowers. Had to stop and compose several frames, this one the most pleasing to me as the female Sulphur comes in for a landing. The camera was the Canon S95, always at my side in a belt pouch, with the flash at one and a third under exposed and the exposure one and a half under exposed, on the program mode.
Posted by Picasa

October Evening


The daises by the mailbox are about to pan out. Only two remained tonight in bloom. I was able to compose one toward the sunset and adjust the flash down to the lowest setting in able not to over-expose. The background sky was under-exposed by two stops at the maximum setting the Canon S95 allows. I am able to achieve the afffect I am after much quicker with the Canon than the Nikon D5000 DSLR due to the simplified controls. In other words, its not always about the camera, but what you know about the camera you are using. The Nikon no doubt would have taken a higher resolution photograph, but the menu and settings are not second nature, or as easily manipulated as the Canon.
Posted by Picasa

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Pastor Russell's daughter Ashlynn

 
Posted by Picasa

Pin Points Poem


This poem was written while sitting in the backyard, pondering the trip we had just taken last week to West Virginia and over to Kentucky, 2000 miles of reliving past memories of places lived. There were so many places I wish we had the time to visit, and thus the circled spots. It would be grand to travel with no destination in mind, no time constraints, like the fellows on the old Route 66 show, from town to town, working their way across America.
Posted by Picasa

Monarch Caterpillar


A Monarch caterpillar came to eat the milkweed plant that I had transplanted from my fathers place in Williston. I thought that he had going into a cacoon stage but upon closer inspection, the milkweed was giving out little seed parachutes, of which I collected and planted. The caterpillar disappeared and I continue to search for him.
Posted by Picasa

Fall Fade

 
Posted by Picasa

Holding On


The daisies by the mailbox, at the end of the drive are rapidly fading and falling away. This one remained through the sunset before going the way of the others.
Posted by Picasa

Phaon Crescent


In Greek mythology, Phaon was an old man who ferried the goddess of love, Aphrodite, to her destination. In return for his services, she gave him youth and beauty.
I await her betowal.
Posted by Picasa

thirty-three egrets fly over a contrail

 
Posted by Picasa

Rough Rider


The trails were quite challenging today...a stop to chase a buckeye butterfly...
Posted by Picasa

Alligator Lake


Got off around 1PM from work today. Took the mountain bike out to Alligator Lake. Took the trail that has not been mowed due to the rain. Tough riding. Not too much seen by way of wildlife. Gathered several apple snail shells, the amber disc valve that covers the opening of the shell. Found a note on the car in the parking lot, we have your grandson, bawhahaha...I suppose Landon and Amber were at the playground. Wish I had noticed as it is going on two weeks since seeing Nathaniel.
Posted by Picasa