Cuts, Bruises, Growth

It’s been a little over a year now that we’ve moved to a rural suburb.
The property was neglected so there is much work still left to do.

Last year’s oppressive summer was an eye opener for living on a hill that faces south. It gets hot. Hotter than other positions, but you just learn to live with it and move forward. I’m two months into retirement and we are working diligently to get the property back into shape.

Last year into the heart of summer, it became clear that a certain Spanish lavender was on the edge. It had become a mass of dead wood with a few sprigs of leaves eeking their way out into the world. We made the decision to give it a last go at life.
With that, I cut the plant back, removing dead wood and anything that was not contributing to the overall health of the plant. Very little of the original plant was left. We were both very sad for what we had to do. The little thing was trying, but it was sending too much energy for zero return for its efforts.
We’ve fed and watered it over the last 10 months, taking care to pay special attention to it. A little nurturing can go a long way. The winter/spring afforded lots of rain and gave the plant the confidence it needed. That lavender is well over three times the mass of what was left. It’s leaves are robust and healthy and it’s flowers call the bees and hummingbirds in.
It’s funny how something seemingly dead can be brought back to life, if only it first recognizes the need to rid itself of all the superfluous things that devour its energy and yet produces nothing. We can be like that too, no?

Hurry Up and Stop

Install the attic fan
Take out the garbage cans
Set up the garden beds
Adjust the doors on the garden sheds
Fix the leak
By end of week
Remake cabinet doors
Finish out kitchen floors
Paint the baseboard trim
Fix the light so dim

STOP!

How ’bout maybe just make some simple photos.
That’ll do.

Two more weeks and I’m officially “retired.”
Pretty sure I will stil have plenty to do!

A few more:

Hooded Oriole

There now. Much better.

The Rest

Banished

We stand upon the precipice
A thousand story edifice
The constant threat
All comes to this

What shall I do with my day?

I have heard it said many times that photography is dead. Too many cameras. Too many photographers. Now, with AI, the human element of photography is superfluous. Humans are simply not needed any more for this endevor.
Perhaps.
This brings fear to the surface and it is only at the surface.
A photographer performs this for themselves first. It is cathartic. It is the challenge that brings us back. It is discovery that makes our pulse race. It is the satisfaction of story and message, nuance, detail and blur, color and tone, and the mastering of the sun’s energy that drives us.
Too many cameras? Too many photographers? Ok. Each have their own journey.
AI? Ok. Without photographers, AI would have no reference to make its art. Machine art. Souless, lifeless machine art. If that is what the masses want. So be it.
Photographers know each other and the shared struggle to create.
Machines, not so much.

A simple walk:

Birds on the trail

Mist in the Towers

Oak Among the Boulders

Wide is the Trail

Western Blues

Stay frosty, keep shooting

Oakey Dokey

A walk in the natural world
Does wonders for the soul
It is not magic
Nor does it make all problems go away
It just sets persepctive in its proper place
Hmmm
Maybe it is magic, a little

Life comes at us so fast and sometimes we just get caught up in the swirl of it all.
Our “new” digs came with a couple of years of required maintenence fixes and upgrades in our future.
Floors, paint, appliance/fixture fixes/upgrades, leak reapirs. You know, the stuff that even black holes avoid.

In the meantime I allowed my WP payment to lapse and I was punished with having to “recover” my account.
“If you’ve lost access to your WordPress.com account, our Accounts Recovery team will get back to you as soon as possible to help you gain access to your account again. Please use this form…”

After 10 or 11 password attempts/changes I think I’m back.

Cover image is a 10-stack/stitch effort of an oak made on the Ramona Grasslands Preserve. (Trail is too close to it and I was using the 200-600)
I cannot image oaks without thinking of Alexander Kunz, who is a master at imaging these stately trees.Thanks for the inspiration Alex. you can find him here: https://www.alex-kunz.com/
I also have to say that I am thinking of you Alessandra and I my hope for you is to eventually see beyond the abyss.
My heart goes out to you.

The same tree, different perspective. Photographers seek different perspectives

Oak on Ramona Grasslands Preserve

Sky Trippin’

Searching for Andromeda
Finding Cassiopeia
Tripped over Jupiter
Looking for Saturn

These first renderings are so amateurish and yet so satisfyingly fun.
What a ride this is becoming.

Spent some time processing the Andromeda Galaxy. It took some searching, but I found it after multiple tries.

Andromeda

While searching for Jupiter I found Saturn! Very tiny. Barely 40 pixels wide on the originals!

Saturn

Jupiter was a horrible mess to process…too much atmospheric interference. These are all good lessons for future imaging. Looks like there are a couple of rogue pixels in there still. And the moons are a little hot as well.

Cover photo is of the Cassiopeia constellation…though I’m not sure it really looks like that!
Here are the separated channels it took to get to the final output: