Chickadee extricating his breakfast
Now that the cold weather is coming . . .
Double exposure, or triple
Just the hands
Virginia Dillon
Venus before supper
Sean listening, laughing
Jpegisation
Today's visitor
Thistles three months ago
Not far from here
Christmas Eve morning, three years ago
Yesterday's moon from the back door
Old friend retiring
Snowbirds at the feeder
Goldfinch on the clothesline
Chickadee
Our Christmas amaryllis
Painting in progress
Sharpie's lunch
Tree on the back deck
The tree in the living room
Political microcosm
"Quelle belle brume!"
Jump
Mid-November
Ten minutes' walk from home
Greedy-Guts
Out for a walk before supper
A hundredth of a second in a lucky blue jay's life
Blue jay
Pacing
Looking the other direction
Murmuration
Two crows
Easy Nutting
Back for peanuts
Catches tuna apparently
Hallowe'ened co-workers
If we're lucky, we go to seed, too.
Hanging out in our yard
Some Agaricus
Ritual post
Moon rising, clouds flying, jpg artefacting
C and her first-born
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105 visits
Junipers


This is making the best of a bad, flat picture.
I keep hoping to find regular use for the Tokina Reflex 300mm lens
that I have. It's not a really good lens but it has some surprises
now and again. This was looking 300 or 400 metres across the valley
from our house, at the junipers catching sun above the highway.
(Okay. I know. Hereabouts we call it juniper, but people in most
other places call it larch or tamarack.)
Anyway, the out of focus areas of pictures taken with this lens are
expressed as doughnuts (does anyone write doughnoughts anymore?).
Thus you see the brighter branches only about ten metres from the
camera as a kind of chain of links; the duller ones are a flat hazy.
I keep hoping to find regular use for the Tokina Reflex 300mm lens
that I have. It's not a really good lens but it has some surprises
now and again. This was looking 300 or 400 metres across the valley
from our house, at the junipers catching sun above the highway.
(Okay. I know. Hereabouts we call it juniper, but people in most
other places call it larch or tamarack.)
Anyway, the out of focus areas of pictures taken with this lens are
expressed as doughnuts (does anyone write doughnoughts anymore?).
Thus you see the brighter branches only about ten metres from the
camera as a kind of chain of links; the duller ones are a flat hazy.
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