Bernlaws at their sternlaw's wedding
In 1985
Betrothal announced
Bah bah bahbbing
A visitor to our front lawn
Yellow-rumped warbler
The ice in Ganny Cove Arm on Sunday
A kilometer to the north
Dad at 80
Dad's lupins
Bowring Park ravine in October 1991
Duck Pond
Even in 1992
Spring sign
I dunno
Before they mow
On the roof watching a forest fire
Early fast film
Magnolia
Grainy
Cat, screen
Mourning cloak
Late 1982
Wood but not a wooden expression
Windfall
Robin
Siskin for lunch
Chickadee in the bushes
Sharpie's lunch
A pine siskin's face, with some of his lunch in hi…
My teapot gets used a lot
The angel with a flower basket on his arm
I'm hesitating
In my local graveyard
Cherry pits after the winter
Clouds scudding past the waxing moon last night
More juniper -- sorry, I mean larch
We call it juniper, but many Canadians call it tam…
Siskin and junco
May Bush
Max and Guinness from outside
Twin kittens
While I made supper, a pine siskin
A seven-foot slide rule. And its small cousin.
Jan resting in the snow
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78 visits
Summer of 1983


In July of 1983, when this was taken, everyone in this picture was
about thirty years old. Luckily, we're all in our early or mid-sixties
now.
This beach, one of the most beautiful ones on the Avalon Peninsula,
was recovering from an oil spill a couple of months before and even
though we could see no oil, as we walked around, the little bits below
the surface of the sand would stick to our shoes or bare feet.
Thirty-four years later, it is fully recovered today.
I can't remember which camera I used, nor which slide film I used, but
I over-exposed almost every slide that day. Based on that fact, I
suspect I was using my Zenit E which required manual stop-down after
focussing, and I didn't know that. So most things were shot at f/2.8
when they should have been shot with smaller apertures. Sigh.
about thirty years old. Luckily, we're all in our early or mid-sixties
now.
This beach, one of the most beautiful ones on the Avalon Peninsula,
was recovering from an oil spill a couple of months before and even
though we could see no oil, as we walked around, the little bits below
the surface of the sand would stick to our shoes or bare feet.
Thirty-four years later, it is fully recovered today.
I can't remember which camera I used, nor which slide film I used, but
I over-exposed almost every slide that day. Based on that fact, I
suspect I was using my Zenit E which required manual stop-down after
focussing, and I didn't know that. So most things were shot at f/2.8
when they should have been shot with smaller apertures. Sigh.
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