Sunset on the Beach, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
It’s hard to believe it was just a month ago that we spent the Labor Day weekend at the beach in Hilton Head. I wish I was still there.
Kathy spent a nice quiet weekend at home this weekend, so I had a chance to process a few more of my selects from our weekend.
Sunrise on the Beach, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
I upgraded part of my computer setup this past week. My aging iMac was starting to show it’s impending obsolescence, and I had a newer MacBook Pro sitting here being used for little more than running our banking program and the occasional web surfing session. So I picked up a new monitor, keyboard and mouse and decided to give the laptop a try. I’m not seeing quite the performance improvement I was hoping for, but it is noticeably faster in most things.
Sunrise on the Beach, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
The biggest improvement is with the monitor! While the screen on the iMac was quite nice when it was new, there has been a pretty big leap in monitor quality over the past few years, as evidenced by the improvement in the new one, a 24″ ASUS ProArt PA249. Pretty nice stuff, no yellow bars like I was seeing on the old monitor. And no more high-gloss mirror-like Apple screen. Yay!
Sunrise on the Beach, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
As soon as I save a few more pennies I’m planning to build a new machine, so the purchase of a few peripherals gets me an interim performance bump until I can go the rest of the way. I was just about there until a fire at one of the factories that makes memory added about $300 to the price of the items on my NewEgg wish list. Hopefully in another month or two those prices will recover and I’ll be ready to forge ahead, just in time to outfit the office in our new place. We hope to be in by the end of November. Hopefully November 2013. It’s been a long process!
Sunrise on the Beach, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
I’m still working on Nova Scotia photos too, so there will be more of those coming as well.
Sunrise on the Beach, Hilton Head Island, South CarolinaSunset on the Beach, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
This Guy Needs More Bumper Stickers, Baddeck, Nova Scotia
I like to photograph interesting signs and weird stuff. Here are a few more from Nova Scotia.
I would change “golfing” to photographing, but that’s just me.Facilities. Burncoat Head Park on the Bay of Fundy, Nova ScotiaHall’s Harbour, Nova ScotiaLunenburg, Nova ScotiaMake An Offer – Lunenburg, Nova ScotiaClosed 7:30-ish, Lunenburg, Nova Scotia$10 Charge, Lunenburg, Nova ScotiaRetired trawler “Cape Sable” on display at the Fisheries MuseumKnock, Knock…. Mahone Bay, Nova ScotiaCanada…BEER. Mahone Bay, Nova ScotiaDr. Weirdbeard, Mahone Bay, Nova ScotiaNot one, but TWO, Mahone Bay, Nova ScotiaIce Cream, Mahone Bay, Nova ScotiaSavour The Sea From A Distance, Peggy’s Cove, Nova ScotiaPedestrians, Peggy’s Cove, Nova ScotiaSeafoam Lavender Farm in Seafoam, Nova ScotiaBagpiper, Pictou, Nova Scotia
Moving a very heavy mill stone made somewhat easier with the use of a crane. Balmoral Grist Mill Museum in Balmoral Mills, Nova Scotia
More photos from Nova Scotia….
I sort of half inadvertently developed a series of photographs of people working. Some more interesting than others, but all with a story or two to tell.
Moving a very heavy mill stone made somewhat easier with the use of a crane. Balmoral Grist Mill Museum in Balmoral Mills, Nova ScotiaWorker repairing a scallop drag, or net, Lunenburg, Nova ScotiaPouring samples for a tasting. The Glenora Inn and Distillery, Glenville, Nova ScotiaCassie & Maggie, Celtic duo performing in Lunenburg, Nova ScotiaRetired Captain Hanlon aboard the retired trawler “Cape Sable” on display at the Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic, Lunenburg, Nova ScotiaHorse-drawn carriage tours were a popular form of sightseeing in Lunenburg, Nova ScotiaCaptain John Bryson from our sailing cruise aboard the Amoeba on Bras d’Or Lake, Baddeck, Nova ScotiaIn this family, everyone does their part. Neil’s Harbour, Nova ScotiaFresh prosciotto at Luckett Vineyard near Grand Pre Nova ScotiaOur captain watches for whales and other boats, aboard our whale watching cruise with Pirate’s Cove Whale CruisesTour guide at the Glenora Inn and Distillery, Glenville, Nova Scotia
I’ve been running through my Nova Scotia photos looking for themes. One of the things I typically look for when wandering through a town are little details. These are a few that I took while we were in Lunenburg. Most of them were taken on the way to or from breakfast or dinner. See, photography and dining don’t have to be mutually exclusive!
Lunenburg, Nova ScotiaLunenburg, Nova ScotiaLunenburg, Nova ScotiaLunenburg, Nova ScotiaLunenburg, Nova ScotiaLunenburg, Nova ScotiaLunenburg, Nova ScotiaLunenburg, Nova Scotia
Sunrise on the Beach, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
When Kathy & I want to really get away and relax, our favorite destination is the beach. And when we want to go to the beach, our favorite beach is Hilton Head Island, SC. We spent Labor Day Weekend there. With our house project rapidly nearing completion, and all the stuff that goes along with that, we knew that this would probably be the Last Hurrah for us for this year. I’ve used up just about all of my vacation time, and we’ve used up just about all of our vacation money, and what little we have left will probably be earmarked for furniture and stuff. It’s amazing how a new house tends to make all of your furniture obsolete!
Sunrise on the Beach, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
I’ve taken some of my favorite photographs at Hilton Head, but after a while it gets a little tough to do something new. So I mostly stick to the tried and true and hope for some inspiration along the way. I typically like to shoot when the tide is out, as I can frequently find some sand textures and pools that add some interest. This time, it seemed that sunrise and sunset generally coincided with high tide, so I was left with fewer options. That, combined with an overriding need for sleep kept me in the bed for all mornings but one. And I did manage to get out one evening, which was a nice departure, as we usually head out for dinner just about the time the light is getting nice. So, with one sunrise and one sunset to work with, I don’t think I got anything I’ll be hanging on the wall, but it felt good to get out when I did.
Sunset on the Beach, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
I’m still putting the old 5D through its paces, and am convinced that it is working just fine. I just wanted to be as sure as I could be before I put it back in the pack in a backup role. The biggest surprise for me was how quickly I got dust on the sensor! With the automagical dust removal system of the newer Mark III I never have to worry about dust. But the combination of small apertures and no sensor cleaning means I’ll need to pay a little more attention.
Sunrise on the Beach, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
I’m still working on Nova Scotia photos, too. So I’ll have a few things to post about coming up, even though my adventures may be on hiatus for a little while!
Sunrise on the Beach, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
Tired of Nova Scotia photos yet? Good, ’cause I’m not!
Another photo from our July adventure, the light is what I think makes this photo. The boarded up windows on one side and the hint of color in the other window hint at possibly a difficult past with some hope for the future.
We saw a lot of buildings with this shake siding, much of it in need of a coat of paint. Probably very durable against the elements despite occasional deferred maintenance.
I got my camera back from the shop last week and had a chance to test it out over the weekend. Kathy & I visited Shelton Vineyards with some of our nature photography buddies. As far as I can tell it looks like the machine is functioning properly. The operator felt a little rusty but I got the hang of it pretty quickly.
More photos than words today, so enjoy!
Shelton Vineyards, Dobson, North CarolinaShelton Vineyards, Dobson, North CarolinaShelton Vineyards, Dobson, North Carolina
Color version that I’m pretty happy with. Lunenburg, Nova Scotia
I’m still not convinced that this is the successful photograph I thought it would be when I made the frames, but I’ve enjoyed working on this one. I originally envisioned a high-contrast, low-saturation photo and thought it might work in monochrome, but (a) I think I’ll always be a color sort of guy, (b) I never did get the hang of what a black & white photo is “supposed” to look like, and (c) I might not be working on a good enough example. Hard to say.
Black & white version that I think looks pretty close to what I visualized.
I think it’s a pretty interesting scene. It’s a little cluttered, but I feel it has good balance and good light. In the post sunset twilight I was trying to capture an old-timey look that would suggest a vintage photograph, although not necessarily black & white, rather than one taken with a new-fangled digital camera.
Sorry, I couldn’t resist the pun. Besides, it gives me a great excuse to show photos of…buoys!
More Buoys, No Gulls (Sick, Huh?) Neil’s Harbour, Nova Scotia
I’m processing photos as I find ones that interest me. Sometimes I have words to go with them, and sometimes I don’t.
We saw very few wooden lobster traps still in use. Most of the wooden ones we saw were along the roadside for sale to tourists. Neil’s Harbour, Nova Scotia
These are really cliche, of course. But when you see them you still have to shoot them. I think there is rule about that.
Kathy’s Photo – The more common wire lobster traps. These were everywhere.
I’ve found some photos that are going to require my time and attention to get the look I have in mind, so in the mean time, here are a few Velvia-like photos of fishing stuff. I hope you enjoy them!
Yellow. With a misfit!Oh, and there were ropes!More red!
I mentioned in an earlier post about having broken my camera while in Nova Scotia. Here’s the story.
We were driving around the Grand Pre’ valley late one afternoon, doing some sightseeing in the beautiful light that was so common there. Driving down a country road, Kathy – the eagle-eyed eagle spotter – spotted this bald eagle perched atop a telephone pole. I slowed way down to see if I could get a place to pull off, but there were ditches on both sides of the road, and the road was lined with rows of corn, so there was not a lot of choice.
Fortunately, I chanced upon a tractor path that I was able to back into, which gave Bill on the passenger side of the van a good shot out the window. My camera, of course, was in the back of the van. Keeping the van between me and the eagle, I was able to work my way around the back, open the door without causing too much of a fuss, and assemble my 70-200 and 2X teleconverter. He was still a long way off, but that was all I had.
5D Mark III after swapping cameras
I’m not sure why I decided to put my old 5D on this lens setup. I was probably thinking that I didn’t need to use 22 megapixels on what would probably amount to a bunch of sleepy eagle photos, and that 12 megapixels would be plenty. I just don’t remember. So, by my count I had taken 34 sleepy eagle photos, he was just sitting there, posing and looking cool. He would occasionally turn his head to one side or another, but that was about it. Zzzzzz….
Who turned out the lights? This frame is when the mirror fell of
On the 35th frame, the camera made a strange clunking sound. It sounded like the shutter was still open, since I didn’t hear the mirror return to its usual position. The camera sounded like I had used mirror lockup, just a lot louder. I turned the camera off, and the mirror – or at least the mirror mechanism – finally came back down. Looking through the viewfinder it was immediately apparent what happened, but I wasn’t exactly sure why or what was going to happen next. The mirror had become separated from the mirror-holder-thingie that it attaches to.
The eagle took pity on me and gave me time to swap camera bodies
Kathy and our friends up front were still marveling at the eagle and our amazing fortune to find it with such a great place to watch, and I was standing in back of the van saying, “umm, guys? My camera just broke.” Fortunately I had the presence of mind to pull off the old body and put my new one on. Of course all the time I knew the eagle was going to fly off while I didn’t have a working camera in my hands. Fortunately, he was kind enough to wait for me, and allowed me to get another dozen or so shots off before he flew off. And I got a couple of decent flight photos. No prize-winners, but considering the circumstances, not too shabby.
The eagle took pity on me and gave me time to swap camera bodies
After I returned home, I packaged the camera up and sent it off to Canon Professional Services for evaluation. A few days later I received an e-mail stating that they are going to repair the camera at no charge, calling it an “in-warranty repair.” A friend of mine asked me if it was covered for a period of time or a number of shutter actuations. I told him that it was covered under an “ain’t suppose to happen” warranty. I’m still waiting for it to come back, but I expect it shortly.
So that’s the story of the broken camera. Hopefully there will be a happy ending in a few days.
The eagle took pity on me and gave me time to swap camera bodies