Wednesday, September 5, 2018
Monday, September 3, 2018
The End of Summer and Who Knows What Else.
While school started last week here in Dallas, summer is officially over today with Labor Day. It seems that Labor Day is also the kick off of the final run of campaigns leading up to the elections in November. I'm not done eating watermelons yet. Things are just not working out like they have in the past. That's not all bad. It also isn't all good, either. I'm working on some things that I hope will have me ready when all that snow comes in February.
It's been a pretty depressing summer for me and I don't get depressed. It was the heat that kept me inside more than I like and I've had three months of high Edison bills---high for me. I calculated with the arrival of this months bill that TXU had gotten an extra month out of me this year. An extra month! I have already located the extra blanket that I had stowed away. I'm setting the thermostat at 55 when I flip the switch from cooling to heating and I'm not moving it's time to flip back to cooling in March.
All joking aside, it has been a rough summer. I've never had cabin fever during the summertime, but I sure did this summer. It got hot a month early and even summer got an extra month of hot weather out of me. Then, I noticed that the leaves had flipped a whole month early. Then, the trees started showing signs of color change (usually follows the leaf flip) and then, the tell-tale sure thing that things were running a whole month early, the cattails that normally are harvested here about this time dealt a surprise to those that harvest them for the local florist by shedding their seed pods a whole month early. When they shed their seeds, it destroys the cattails.
So, it's been a strange year in more ways than one. We have lost people that were monuments in music and politics. We've had some really strong earthquakes all over the world that were in the 6.0 to 8.1 range and above. Wildfires and volcanoes going off were noted with unusual patterns. And---outside of the first few tropical depressions and storms that were also a month before Hurricane season started officially, there has not been a single hurricane in the Atlantic. Yes, the eastern Pacific and Central Pacific got a line of them in their neck of the woods but until just this week, there has been nothing in the Atlantic that beelines toward the Texas coast.
Which brings me to the question: What in the world is going on here on Plant Earth? Yes, I do tend to notice the subtle changes more than most. I always have. My mom and my grandfather taught me a few things that have stuck with me and it has even helped with business over the years. It has paid off watching the weather and paying attention to it. This old world is as regular as clockwork on so many things that we notice with no exception. But, it's the other things that are so subtle that it builds and catches us by surprise. Over the years, I've gotten pretty good at reading the subtle changes and planning along with them.
It's been a pretty depressing summer for me and I don't get depressed. It was the heat that kept me inside more than I like and I've had three months of high Edison bills---high for me. I calculated with the arrival of this months bill that TXU had gotten an extra month out of me this year. An extra month! I have already located the extra blanket that I had stowed away. I'm setting the thermostat at 55 when I flip the switch from cooling to heating and I'm not moving it's time to flip back to cooling in March.
All joking aside, it has been a rough summer. I've never had cabin fever during the summertime, but I sure did this summer. It got hot a month early and even summer got an extra month of hot weather out of me. Then, I noticed that the leaves had flipped a whole month early. Then, the trees started showing signs of color change (usually follows the leaf flip) and then, the tell-tale sure thing that things were running a whole month early, the cattails that normally are harvested here about this time dealt a surprise to those that harvest them for the local florist by shedding their seed pods a whole month early. When they shed their seeds, it destroys the cattails.
So, it's been a strange year in more ways than one. We have lost people that were monuments in music and politics. We've had some really strong earthquakes all over the world that were in the 6.0 to 8.1 range and above. Wildfires and volcanoes going off were noted with unusual patterns. And---outside of the first few tropical depressions and storms that were also a month before Hurricane season started officially, there has not been a single hurricane in the Atlantic. Yes, the eastern Pacific and Central Pacific got a line of them in their neck of the woods but until just this week, there has been nothing in the Atlantic that beelines toward the Texas coast.
Which brings me to the question: What in the world is going on here on Plant Earth? Yes, I do tend to notice the subtle changes more than most. I always have. My mom and my grandfather taught me a few things that have stuck with me and it has even helped with business over the years. It has paid off watching the weather and paying attention to it. This old world is as regular as clockwork on so many things that we notice with no exception. But, it's the other things that are so subtle that it builds and catches us by surprise. Over the years, I've gotten pretty good at reading the subtle changes and planning along with them.
Water parks are replacing pools and the trend is that pools are probably a soon to be a dead goose. |
Tuesday, August 28, 2018
Suprise After The Shoot
Sometimes, you see things before you shoot. Sometimes, its afterwords. I discovered a mother coyote with five pups just at the edge of a grassy area three years after I shot the image. Then, there are times when you discover it on the second or third edits but didn't see it when you shot the image. Such was the case yesterday and it was a double whammy! Both were birds.
The first shot in the field was to check out a light standard over a ball field. If you don't know by now, you will here because falcons and birds of prey like hawks and ospreys and/or owls and eagles like to watch over their territories from the highest vantage point. Light standards are a good place to look for raptors and I have found pairs of red tail hawks, red shoulder hawks, and kestrel hawks all sitting on light standards. So naturally, that's the first place that I check.
The second shot is usually looking for unusual signs or signs that stand out among the normalcy of everyday life. This second shot was after spotting that unusual display. The low angle level of signs are either super good or just plain dull. No in between. The high angle shots are standouts or super duper jackpots. So you need to look for both. If you see something don't just jump at the shot. Pull back in a parking lot or away for the close up and observe for a bit. You begin to see a pattern of how things fit in with others (businesses in a strip mall) or they stand out and just beg to be shot. Those images are the keepers usually.
In this particular instance, I know that military recruiting offices are rather mundane. And while I'm sitting in a parking lot checking my Gas Buddy app for the lowest prices in the area, I spot a section of the strip mall that sits behind the normal flow of traffic. It's an unusual layout and I go by it time and time again just not paying much attention. In fact, I was there because the app in the past has proven that STORM was the best price in the area for gas. When I got there, all the pumps were being ripped out and the station on the app was showing closed. Across the intersection was a Tom Thumb Grocery and gas station.
Finding the unusual branding of this recruiting office stood out and all but waving to come shoot this as being different. As I started to shoot, a stern looking big built guy in military green and white fatigues came out and just stood looking at me. I put down the window and said to him, Everything looks good but where is the Coast Guard. He did not find that funny at all and got into his Mercedes without saying a word. I wondered what his demeanor was with the young recruit prospects and how many actually signed up at his office. He was that typical "drill sarge" [en persona].
As it turns out, long story shorter, It was different and when I got home and was editing it, surprise number two was just awesome to me. I hope you like it as well.
The first shot in the field was to check out a light standard over a ball field. If you don't know by now, you will here because falcons and birds of prey like hawks and ospreys and/or owls and eagles like to watch over their territories from the highest vantage point. Light standards are a good place to look for raptors and I have found pairs of red tail hawks, red shoulder hawks, and kestrel hawks all sitting on light standards. So naturally, that's the first place that I check.
The second shot is usually looking for unusual signs or signs that stand out among the normalcy of everyday life. This second shot was after spotting that unusual display. The low angle level of signs are either super good or just plain dull. No in between. The high angle shots are standouts or super duper jackpots. So you need to look for both. If you see something don't just jump at the shot. Pull back in a parking lot or away for the close up and observe for a bit. You begin to see a pattern of how things fit in with others (businesses in a strip mall) or they stand out and just beg to be shot. Those images are the keepers usually.
In this particular instance, I know that military recruiting offices are rather mundane. And while I'm sitting in a parking lot checking my Gas Buddy app for the lowest prices in the area, I spot a section of the strip mall that sits behind the normal flow of traffic. It's an unusual layout and I go by it time and time again just not paying much attention. In fact, I was there because the app in the past has proven that STORM was the best price in the area for gas. When I got there, all the pumps were being ripped out and the station on the app was showing closed. Across the intersection was a Tom Thumb Grocery and gas station.
Finding the unusual branding of this recruiting office stood out and all but waving to come shoot this as being different. As I started to shoot, a stern looking big built guy in military green and white fatigues came out and just stood looking at me. I put down the window and said to him, Everything looks good but where is the Coast Guard. He did not find that funny at all and got into his Mercedes without saying a word. I wondered what his demeanor was with the young recruit prospects and how many actually signed up at his office. He was that typical "drill sarge" [en persona].
A Kestrel Hawk with Fledgling. It looks like mom brought lunch in for the fledgling. |
Do you see it? Look in the bottom portion of the "C" | . | A mourning dove sits on a nest.Peace! |
As it turns out, long story shorter, It was different and when I got home and was editing it, surprise number two was just awesome to me. I hope you like it as well.
Saturday, August 25, 2018
New Creations and Images
A Great Blue Heron Fishes. He did catch a couple, too. |
Sunday, August 12, 2018
Two Months of Rain in 3 Days
Yesterday, for the first time in sometime, I was able to be out with the big camera for a bit and regardless of where I was, it rained enough to have the camera stay on the front seat of the car. I do have some rain gear to protect the camera from rain but somehow, it's just not me. Freelance with a rain coat on the camera doesn't sound like the tone of just saying freelance and ending it there. The weight of the extra words just does not sing like the lesser.
Today is also heavy with a 60 percent chance of rain. The one thing that I did notice was that the grasses have turned that lust green of Springtime again. However, there are plenty signs of fall showing up as I wrote about a couple of weeks back. The weathermen, as well as the models where they get their information, are forecasting already another cold front due to move in next week. It will keep the temps back down in the below normal category again.This coming Friday, the 17th, is when our average high temps drop a degree and then drop off more rapidly during the next 45 days. It is a welcomed relief. It has been a long hot summer this year, for sure.
Never-the-less, photography is about timing. Sometimes, the timing is good and sometimes it just is an empty box. Ansel Adams said that a being a good photographer is about where you stand. He has a point there and if you are not standing where the timing is right, then you are in the wrong place. I've had good days. I've have had bad. Over the course of the year, looking back, it boils down to about 1-3 percent of all shots are when the timing is right. There are those that will tell you that I'm wrong. On the flip side of that coin, I can say that they are wrong, too. It isn't about who is right or wrong. It's not about the flip side of the coin. It's about 1-3 percent of all shots are keepers. Technique can only do certain things. Wind can mess up a shot in a hot second. Just like it can bring down a jet liner at DFW, and did, before there was wind shear equipment. It's all relative in some manner.
With this writing, there are now over 7K images on line today under the Dallaspaparazzo tag. Those are with agents from coast to coast, the UK and Germany. And, their agents span markets from China to Australia to Eastern Slavic nations (Russia, Belarus and Ukraine), Western (Poland, Czech Republic and Slovakia) and Southern (Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Macedonia and Bulgaria).
With that said, helping these images find a useful place in someones blog, their web page, their newsletters or advertising piece or just an image you find something special about that is dear to your heart has become a growing challenge with so many cameras out there today. Yet, there are things that over the years have become embedded in my subject matter that is selling more and more each year.
If, from a business standpoint every cost factor was weighed in, I am loosing money. But how much weight do you place on a hobby vs. a business. From a business standpoint, the IRS says that I must count it as a business. From a personal standpoint, I'm officially retired and consider it a hobby. But, the bottom line is it cost money to either. Just to have a camera cleaned professionally today cost $50.00. Any adjustments made are extra. So, take the came in for a cleaning and you can walk out of the camera store with a bill of $150.00 on a good day.
I have stayed away from advertising. I really don't want to get into that game at this late stage in life. Or, with the haters on social media out there doing their destructive thing to society as a whole. There is no place in my life for those things, today. Absolutely none.
The passion that I have for photography in an urban setting is tops. I love this city, I love the momentum it generates, and I love to see a city that is alive culturally, and still keep nature and green spaces running like veins throughout itself. Already, looking back at a lot of my shots, those things do not exist today. They are gone, destroyed, lost, decayed, and a lots have been reduced to sawdust or firewood.
Yet, I have seen a couple of species of Raptors excel in their magnificence. I have watched cornfields become homes to not just hundreds, but thousands of individuals in less than 20 years. I want to continue to shoot urban settings. They are the heartbeat of one area of humanity called Dallas, Texas. Growing up watching the Thanksgiving Day parades from Dallas or seeing the Cotton Bowl Football game is part of who I am. Now, being here in Dallas watching the next great adventure take place---the transformation of Fair Park with its many museums, the Cotton Bowl and Starplex ,the Midway, aquarium, Pan American Arena and the largest collection of Art Decco Buildings assembled in one place in the nation, into the daily park that it should have been years ago, is like an adrenal rush of excitement. It's like a kid's excitement of something new and exciting. The potential for photography to show off Dallas is at hand.
The bottom line is that to get those shots--to log a piece of history--is going to take money to keep this blog, these images, etc going. Plus keeping pace with vectors and videos, I must explore a way to do that which will make those creative visions possible.The old clock is ticking faster each and every day. I'm coming to the end of the first ten years of this pacemaker. While the technology is smaller and better for the upcoming number 2 maker or battery change (which every the electrician determines necessary) so, I got to get running (pardon the pun).
This is a writing to let you know that the upcoming changes to this blog and even the website, is rooted in staying on line if at all possible. When changes begin to occur, it will have been the best choice in which to continue this project, to grow it and to enhance it to those what follow us online.
We thank you for your support. We appreciate your comments when we see you out and about. We believe that with God's help, this project will have opened hearts, minds and spirit through a lens on a camera that has benefited you in some small way; thanks be to God.
Today is also heavy with a 60 percent chance of rain. The one thing that I did notice was that the grasses have turned that lust green of Springtime again. However, there are plenty signs of fall showing up as I wrote about a couple of weeks back. The weathermen, as well as the models where they get their information, are forecasting already another cold front due to move in next week. It will keep the temps back down in the below normal category again.This coming Friday, the 17th, is when our average high temps drop a degree and then drop off more rapidly during the next 45 days. It is a welcomed relief. It has been a long hot summer this year, for sure.
Never-the-less, photography is about timing. Sometimes, the timing is good and sometimes it just is an empty box. Ansel Adams said that a being a good photographer is about where you stand. He has a point there and if you are not standing where the timing is right, then you are in the wrong place. I've had good days. I've have had bad. Over the course of the year, looking back, it boils down to about 1-3 percent of all shots are when the timing is right. There are those that will tell you that I'm wrong. On the flip side of that coin, I can say that they are wrong, too. It isn't about who is right or wrong. It's not about the flip side of the coin. It's about 1-3 percent of all shots are keepers. Technique can only do certain things. Wind can mess up a shot in a hot second. Just like it can bring down a jet liner at DFW, and did, before there was wind shear equipment. It's all relative in some manner.
With this writing, there are now over 7K images on line today under the Dallaspaparazzo tag. Those are with agents from coast to coast, the UK and Germany. And, their agents span markets from China to Australia to Eastern Slavic nations (Russia, Belarus and Ukraine), Western (Poland, Czech Republic and Slovakia) and Southern (Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Macedonia and Bulgaria).
With that said, helping these images find a useful place in someones blog, their web page, their newsletters or advertising piece or just an image you find something special about that is dear to your heart has become a growing challenge with so many cameras out there today. Yet, there are things that over the years have become embedded in my subject matter that is selling more and more each year.
If, from a business standpoint every cost factor was weighed in, I am loosing money. But how much weight do you place on a hobby vs. a business. From a business standpoint, the IRS says that I must count it as a business. From a personal standpoint, I'm officially retired and consider it a hobby. But, the bottom line is it cost money to either. Just to have a camera cleaned professionally today cost $50.00. Any adjustments made are extra. So, take the came in for a cleaning and you can walk out of the camera store with a bill of $150.00 on a good day.
I have stayed away from advertising. I really don't want to get into that game at this late stage in life. Or, with the haters on social media out there doing their destructive thing to society as a whole. There is no place in my life for those things, today. Absolutely none.
The passion that I have for photography in an urban setting is tops. I love this city, I love the momentum it generates, and I love to see a city that is alive culturally, and still keep nature and green spaces running like veins throughout itself. Already, looking back at a lot of my shots, those things do not exist today. They are gone, destroyed, lost, decayed, and a lots have been reduced to sawdust or firewood.
Yet, I have seen a couple of species of Raptors excel in their magnificence. I have watched cornfields become homes to not just hundreds, but thousands of individuals in less than 20 years. I want to continue to shoot urban settings. They are the heartbeat of one area of humanity called Dallas, Texas. Growing up watching the Thanksgiving Day parades from Dallas or seeing the Cotton Bowl Football game is part of who I am. Now, being here in Dallas watching the next great adventure take place---the transformation of Fair Park with its many museums, the Cotton Bowl and Starplex ,the Midway, aquarium, Pan American Arena and the largest collection of Art Decco Buildings assembled in one place in the nation, into the daily park that it should have been years ago, is like an adrenal rush of excitement. It's like a kid's excitement of something new and exciting. The potential for photography to show off Dallas is at hand.
The bottom line is that to get those shots--to log a piece of history--is going to take money to keep this blog, these images, etc going. Plus keeping pace with vectors and videos, I must explore a way to do that which will make those creative visions possible.The old clock is ticking faster each and every day. I'm coming to the end of the first ten years of this pacemaker. While the technology is smaller and better for the upcoming number 2 maker or battery change (which every the electrician determines necessary) so, I got to get running (pardon the pun).
This is a writing to let you know that the upcoming changes to this blog and even the website, is rooted in staying on line if at all possible. When changes begin to occur, it will have been the best choice in which to continue this project, to grow it and to enhance it to those what follow us online.
We thank you for your support. We appreciate your comments when we see you out and about. We believe that with God's help, this project will have opened hearts, minds and spirit through a lens on a camera that has benefited you in some small way; thanks be to God.
The Horse |
The Cows |
The Cowboy, in Dallas |
Sunday, August 5, 2018
A Sizeable Shift In Format Is In The Works.
I'll post more later as things get more set on the new tracks. Until then, things will be much the same.
Friday, August 3, 2018
Arboretum August Days
With the city wanting to turn over the management of Fair Park to the parent of NBC television, I wonder what will really be in store for the public who live here. Tourist will come and go but it is the people in Dallas that may suffer the greatest down side of the overall planned up experience.
My thinking is that I have watched the Zoo and the Dallas Arboretum grow and draw in the people, but the cost of an average person going was never more obvious as to what really is happening this past Thursday. What I mean by that is the the membership has shot up into the $90 bracket, which is steep. August was always a fun time to go when the crowds were less and admission during August was $1. Well, scratch that, too, because the August admission is now $2.00 and that of course does not include parking. Parking in Dallas is almost as bad as New York, though not quite, yet, but it's coming. Keeping in mind that Ft. Worth's gardens are free. Albeit that even Cow town is talking about charging admissions as this is being written if they haven't done it already.
I was talking to a gentlemen who lives in Allen, that said he had, 'stopped coming on the weekends', during the spring and fall because of the crowds--which also includes my thinking, as well. Gardens such as the Arboretum throughout the country have always demanded respect at the ticket booth, but these are elective visits and people with some degree of caution, are beginning to see their electives going to different things more useful than just entertainment wise. My thoughts have echoed that more than once or twice of late. Never-the-less, I found myself wanting to see the finished product of the new Pavilion that sits down new steps from the old ones that went toward the Asian gardens, but that entire hillside that overlooks the lake is new and it adds great value to the Arboretum as a whole. For that alone, I'm glad I went.
My thinking is that I have watched the Zoo and the Dallas Arboretum grow and draw in the people, but the cost of an average person going was never more obvious as to what really is happening this past Thursday. What I mean by that is the the membership has shot up into the $90 bracket, which is steep. August was always a fun time to go when the crowds were less and admission during August was $1. Well, scratch that, too, because the August admission is now $2.00 and that of course does not include parking. Parking in Dallas is almost as bad as New York, though not quite, yet, but it's coming. Keeping in mind that Ft. Worth's gardens are free. Albeit that even Cow town is talking about charging admissions as this is being written if they haven't done it already.
The new bridge is where the old privacy fence once stood as you walked up to the terrace where the restaurant order window remains and with an expanded terrace. |
I was talking to a gentlemen who lives in Allen, that said he had, 'stopped coming on the weekends', during the spring and fall because of the crowds--which also includes my thinking, as well. Gardens such as the Arboretum throughout the country have always demanded respect at the ticket booth, but these are elective visits and people with some degree of caution, are beginning to see their electives going to different things more useful than just entertainment wise. My thoughts have echoed that more than once or twice of late. Never-the-less, I found myself wanting to see the finished product of the new Pavilion that sits down new steps from the old ones that went toward the Asian gardens, but that entire hillside that overlooks the lake is new and it adds great value to the Arboretum as a whole. For that alone, I'm glad I went.
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It All Started in the wee hours of May 28th when 80 MPH winds was tossing everything against the side of my house.
Those winds were substained for well over 40 minutes. The results were trees everywhere down or large branches broken off. One of my bus ro...
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Well, I remember being awakened by the roar of wind and things crashing all around and went back to sleep. Later I found out that the wind...
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Support a good cause. Support the rehab centers that take care of these magnificent creatures or even adopt one from one of the centers.