Showing posts with label self portrait. Show all posts
Showing posts with label self portrait. Show all posts

Sunday, December 27, 2015

Mama Got Macro

Several years ago, the Farmboy gave me a set of extension tubes for my then-camera, that allowed me to take macro images without the expense of a real lens.

They were a fun toy that I used off and on, but they were a bit tricky to work with, and usually the photos fell short of what I wanted. I haven't said a word to him about wishing I had a better option for macros in the years since then, so imagine my surprise and delight when I opened my gift from him on Christmas morning and found the real thing (for curious minds, it's a Canon EF-S 60mm f/2.8).

It isn't super high-powered, so don't expect close up images of snowflakes or insect eyeballs, but it is a wonder nontheless, and perfect for the things I have often wanted but couldn't get close enough to capture before.

Monday, August 17, 2015

Weekend Trip: Sun River

We are extreme homebodies, so its pretty rare that we leave home overnight. But we made an exception for the Farmboy's family. His Mom, Sister and family, and Cousin and family all headed over to Sun River on the East side of the Cascade Mountain Range in Oregon to stay in a house together.

There wasn't much in the way of sleeping that happened, but the hours were packed with so much fun we didn't have a chance to feel tired. Group walks, biking, fun at the pool, cousin Minecraft sessions, live music, laughing into the night, ice cream cones at Goody's, and an epic canoe and kayak adventure down the Rogue River.

At the end of the weekend we all wanted to hit the automatic repeat button. But alas, the Summer was winding down, the school year approaching, and we had to settle for a promise to repeat as best as possible next year.
Due to a wildfire blazing across the highway on our normal route, our trip across was nearly doubled in time and distance. By our return trip, the firefighters had worked enough magic that we were able to travel home through the blackened acres of what resembled another planet, complete with hazy, smoky air and a glowing red sun.

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Wild West

In order for us to experience what is left of the Wild West, we have to drive East.

East, beyond the settled lands surrounded by rivers, forests, mountains. Up and outward, through the wind farms and ranchland, until all sound and scent of manmade congestion is but a memory.
There, in the middle of nowhere, is a little place we've been before.
To my mountain-girl eyes, which are accustomed to green everywhere, my daily world full of trees reaching toward the sky on all horizons, this landscape is entirely foreign and exotic.

Windswept undulating hills of grassland broken only by brave homesteads and weather-beaten barns, fencelines occasionally cutting across, following invisible lines of ownership.
We went to escape the bounds of duty and the weekly schedule. Out there even the cell phones are quieted, and the satellite wireless, although readily available while in the ranch house, is two-decades-ago s l o w. We drove for a full hour on the paved roads and only saw two other cars and one tractor.

We also went to shoot things.
Balloons for the kids and old trucks and empty propane tanks for the grown-ups. BB guns, .22 pistols and rifles, various other gauges and powers available for making adult boys' faces full of grins.
And maybe even this girl's face, a little.
If I were a landscape painter, this place would hold a grip on my artist's heart. I might have to give it a try the next time we go, just to stand in a place like this and capture the movement of clouds with something other than lens and aperture.
On a nearby hillside, in a place chosen for who-knows-what-reason, lies an old pioneer cemetery. The first night we could see lights glowing among the headstones, an eerie sight in a place where there is no electricity. We braved the tick-infested grassland to take a closer look by daylight.
The glowing lights turned out to be solar lawn lights placed in a family plot that holds both old and new burials. Both a relief and a reminder of the staying power of strong bloodlines that sometimes tie people to the ground that they toil over.

Being an old cemetery and created in a harsh landscape during a time with few medical advancements, it not surprisingly held a large percentage of young people and infants. This was sobering and disturbing to some of our party. I personally found the lost markers and unidentified sites the hardest to digest. Lives lived and lost with little or nothing left behind for remembrance.
In the grand turning of the wheel of time, our lives are really oh-so-short. Maybe that is why I like to visit old burial places... to help me keep perspective and remind me that I can only do so much, but what I can do I should, to add light to the world.
I didn't really set out to get philosophical in this blog post, but as usually happens when I set my fingers to the keyboard, words came tumbling out of their own accord. So I leave them there where they landed because they do somehow fit.

Our group, at the end of the weekend, was tired and ready for familiar beds, but happier and fuller for the memories added to our life stories. I like this new tradition.
Our final stop before resuming normal life had to be at our favorite giant-ice-cream-cone dealer.
The end... until next year, that is...
I hear the date has already been set.