Looking at a 1957 picture
Part of a march against austerity
Selfie, 1994
A gross of eggs in a square inch
Sea angel and its prey
Another Sea Angel
Roadside coltsfoot
Found a piece of glass
Next winter's firewood
White-throated sparrow
Show-offs
Purple finch
Nice light
Atop Butter Cove Mountain
Wet crow, mid-complaint
More of the rain
Graduation
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Still having frost warnings
NIMBY, sadly
Some alders
Dusty duckish doughnuts
Chickadee eating spanworms
Tan shoes with pink shoelaces
May first
Harry got a brand new beard
Only two seasons in the year
Short-cut
Buena Vista Social Club
Not warm enough.
Red-legged thrush, I figure.
Ten o'clock near Morón
This red flag means no swimming
Roused rabble
Flicker flashing his underwear at me
Hiding from the light
Stars, a plane, and something else.
Feral cat using her VNO
Another shot of Easter's grosbeaks
Eating dogberries
Mopes
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55 visits
Hand-made grave marker


I have a thing for hand-made grave markers. They strike me as more
meaningful than commercially-made ones. With this one, I even like
the plastic flowers and solar light.
It is signed by its maker, Samuel's granddaughter. It probably won't
last too many years, though. That's a good thing about
commercially-made headstones. I didn't pull back the leaves, but I
expect Ms Harrison put the stone there last July, 2015. If it makes
it through a few more Julys, it will be remarkable.
When I Googled Samuel Noseworthy's name the very first hit was
information about him. He came from Cape St Francis, about twenty
crow-flies km north of St. John's where this graveyard is. My own
grandmother and her parents are buried not far from this grave.
I took the picture in late March 2016 on 2014-expired Kodak Colorplus film
in my sixty-years-old Kodak Retina 1a.
meaningful than commercially-made ones. With this one, I even like
the plastic flowers and solar light.
It is signed by its maker, Samuel's granddaughter. It probably won't
last too many years, though. That's a good thing about
commercially-made headstones. I didn't pull back the leaves, but I
expect Ms Harrison put the stone there last July, 2015. If it makes
it through a few more Julys, it will be remarkable.
When I Googled Samuel Noseworthy's name the very first hit was
information about him. He came from Cape St Francis, about twenty
crow-flies km north of St. John's where this graveyard is. My own
grandmother and her parents are buried not far from this grave.
I took the picture in late March 2016 on 2014-expired Kodak Colorplus film
in my sixty-years-old Kodak Retina 1a.
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