Catching up

It’s been a busy couple of weeks, so I’d better catch up.

Our Premier_DSC2912-1Last week we put on a big dinner at work to hear the Premier talk about his latest budget. It was interesting to hear the broad strokes from him.

I was one of the photogs taking pictures that night. Unfortunately I drew the back of the room, while my colleague drew the up-front view. Still, it gave me a chance to test out the D700 in low light with my 70-300 lens. Ever learning.

Still have to process the pics properly, but I’ve posted a quick sample, after two minutes in Lightroom.

 

Nature Centre_DSC2979-1Last weekend I attended the grand opening of the new Green Timbers Nature Centre in Surrey. It’s part of a huge new park that the City of Surrey is putting together, after purchasing the land from the province. I was lucky enough to work on the site for the province for a few years while much of the land was still a reforestation nursery and extension centre. The site has an interesting historical link to forestry back to the 1930s. My office was smack dab in the middle of the park and my commute to work took about 5 minutes. Nice.

At the grand opening, several local politicians made the required speeches and thanked the local Green Timbers Heritage Society for their hard work to preserve the site. The City has renovated an old 1940s nursery building as a start, and done some upgrades to paths, etc. Should be a great addition to our city and a valuable resource in learning about the coastal forest.

Out for a “photo drive’ in Delta and Richmond

What a gorgeous day!

Old Baldy 2_DSC2718-6A buddy and I went for a drive, trying to find some eagles today. Boy, did we luck out.

We went over to east Delta, near the Boundary Bay Airport. Everywhere we looked there were bald eagles soaring or resting in trees. Lots were in their full ‘bald-iness’, but there were a few young ones around as well.

Most were in pairs in trees, or soaring around in fours, looking for food or just enjoying the light breeze from the ocean.

After we tired of taking pictures of eagle bums in trees, we headed off to Richmond to see what we could find at YVR. Took a few pics of the planes coming in and of some of the estuary on Iona Island.

Overall it was a great day. I took a ton of equipment in the car with me, but ended up using my Sigma 120-400 lens all day. Oh well. If I didn’t take all the stuff, I’d need it and be kicking myself, I guess.

Busy learning about my Mac

February clouds_DSC2569Some days the sky just amazes me. As it was clearing up today, I noticed some big, low, fluffy clouds and just couldn’t help but take a picture. Nice.

It was great to get outside. After I bought my MacBook Pro last week, I started to realize how much I had to learn about working with a new operating system! That’s kept me inside for most of my free time. And no matter what the rumors say – Macs don’t ‘just work’ all the time. At least they don’t if you know nothing about them to start with.

So far I’ve grazed through networking, installing software, copying and pasting files, syncing up my google account for mail and calendaring. I’m getting there, but there is still a long way to go. I mean, what’s with the delete key that works backwards?

Don’t get me wrong. I like the interface, how fast the thing boots up compared to Windows, the trackpad, and other stuff I’m finding out. It’s just a big learning curve right now. Just need to find some time for taking pictures too 😉

Trying a mac

Yikes, what a difference from Windows!

Expensive – yes

Different terminology – yes

Different workflow – yes

Different software – yes

Different installation process – oh ya

Slick – still experimenting, but I think so

We’ll see over the next couple of days

An Evening with a Circle of Friends

One of my colleagues at work plays with the band Circle of Friends in his spare time. They play a mix of music from the 60's through 80's that's guaranteed to get you up dancing (when there is room). I've seen them live a couple of times now and they can really get a place with the right crowd hoppin'.

Circle of Friends 2 They were playing at the Fireside Cafe in Whalley last Saturday night and my colleague asked if I could take some pictures. I did.

The cafe was small, and the lights were low. I didn't want to ruin the ambience all night with flashes, so for the most part I just jacked up the ISO and took my chances.

For my first shoot in a nightclub/cafe, I'm reasonably pleased with the outcome. My ISO ranged from 640 for a couple of shots I took with flash, up to 3200 for available light. The spotlights were changing colours every few minutes, so it was hard to keep the colour balance in check. It was also a trick to get the whole band in focus. Most of the time the f-stop was pretty wide open, resulting in quite a shallow depth of field. Still, a couple of tweaks in Lightroom gave me some acceptable results. More time in Photoshop will also help with some noise.

I was able to take a variety of shots over the evening, and my colleague seemed happy with the results.

Add one more thing to take pictures of on a dreary day on the wet coast. Heh, head inside and see what you can do in there.

External drive follow up

I started formatting a WD My Book external drive last Sunday at about 3pm. By Saturday morning it had reached 45%. Enough.  I cancelled the formatting, shut my computer down and moved the drive to my laptop.

On the laptop, I started formatting at about noon, and was finished by 10pm. Slow, but soooo much better than waiting for my desktop to do it.

A Mac is starting to look pretty good right about now.

Anyway, now I have an operational 1TB drive and I’m looking for a way to (economically) retrieve the data from my old 500GB drive. It still powers up, but it doesn’t communicate – not with the desktop or the laptop.

I see in the WD FAQ section, that you can use the drives as internal drives, but doing so will void your warranty. Well, any warranty on that old 500GB drive was up long ago, so I need to figure out how to open it up and try the drive directly on my computer.

Any ideas out there?

Patience

Sunday afternoon through Wednesday pm – 27% and counting…

The old, external backup drive crashed over Xmas. I have some redundancy, so I don’t think I lost much. But it meant it was time for a trip to the tech store.

I purchased one of those new fangled one terabyte, USB 2.0 My Books. Reading through the user guide pdf, I noticed it was supplied with a Fat32 file system.  There was a recommendation to reformat to an NTFS file system for better performance, if it was to be used solely on a Windows Vista system.

When I plugged it in, I noticed that all the USB ports on the back of my computer were USB 1.1. Imagine advertising USB 2 all over your computer package and only providing 2 out of 6 USB 2.0 ports…. Sigh.

The drive is backward compatible, right? Yep.

Fine. The instructions were 4 steps – go to computer management, delete the partition, re-initialized the drive, and choose to format the drive and follow the wizard.  Oh, and they note it might take some time (heh).

Done. On Sunday around 3:00pm.

Nothing much seemed to happen immediately, so I let things run for a while. When I went to bed around 10:30, it was reading 1% and formatting.

Now it’s Wednesday, and it’s getting exciting. This evening it’s reading 26%, and I’m sure by the time I hit the sack it will be 27%. Sheesh, I hope you caught the sarcasm.

Something’s up, but I don’t know what, and I really don’t want to start again – just in case it works. I’m just hoping that it won’t get to something like 75% or 80% and then announce that it can’t complete. I’ll really be pissed at that point.

Keep ya posted…

A Bump in the road

Yes, I ran into a bump in the road. A week ago last Friday, I ran into a medical problem that put me out of commission for a week or so. I've caught up a bit since, and things seem to be back to normal now, so here's hop'in.

 Clouds I think the last thing I was thinking about here was how to make the best of cloudy or rainy days for photos. I couldn't get out for pictures in our recent  fog, but this was an interesting sky back in December I couldn't resist.

This isn't a great photo, but it's a place to start thinking about making the best of those dreary days.

We've had some serious snow around Vancouver this year, and it's stuck around – that's unusual for the wet coast.  The weather usually warms up and melts it within a day or so. But this year, a high pressure ridge in the interior kept pumping the cold air out our way.

This day, I was out exploring in the snow with my G10 and saw the clouds rolling in for another dump. It's not often we see clouds like this. It was almost like they were bunching up as they collided with something (likely that cold high pressure ridge). I liked the dramatic patterns, the textures and the black and white effect produced as they rolled in, so I stopped quickly to snap a picture or two.

Lesson learned: Patterns, lighting, and texture are things we can take advantage of on cloudy days. They can be interesting. We just need to  be receptive and have a camera ready to experiment when we see them. So often I just pass by scenes like this, but I'm learning.

Not a great day for photos?

The West Coast is often affectionately called the wet coast,well, because it’s wet.

For example, according to the news tonight, Hope, just 100 miles to the east of Vancouver, gets an average of about 100 mm of rain in January. Over the last 24 hours, they’ve already had that 100mm of rain, and it is still raining.

Apparently Port Alberni, to the west of us, has had over 200 mm of rain, and that number is still climbing. The City of Surrey had close to 70mm, well above our usual.

Ok, so this is an unusual year. Still, we do get a lot of rain around here, and that can have an effect on the kind of photography we can do. Especially when we’re constrained to weekend shooting.

Looking through Flickr, I see tons of great pictures.  Bright, sunny, colourful pictures. I get jealous. Winter on the wet coast means sunless days, grey clouds, browns, and faded yellows. We have a lot of evergreens, so there are some dull greens too.

Much of the winter is grey and rainy. A sunny day is a glorious respite, and the activity of the city reflects that. I’m sure the number of pictures around Vancouver rises exponentially when the sun comes out.

But what does a budding photographer do when it rains.  If you can’t include great light and colour, what else sets photographs apart. What compositional tricks or other techniques can compensate for a dull, grey, wet day?

That’s what I’m going to explore this winter. I’m working on a short list of options to try, but your suggestions are welcome.

There must be lots of ways to take great photos in the rain. Whadayathink?

If you’ve got a drain, you’ll want to clear it

Derek over at Penmachine has a good post with pictures about the current state of Vancouver’s unseasonable snow.

Out in Surrey, things are much the same. The main streets are reasonably clear, but side roads are impossible. Mountains of snow are piled up and it’s near impossible to walk anywhere ’cause few of the sidewalks have been cleared. Where driveways open on to main streets, it’s often impossible to see past the snowbanks to suss out on-coming traffic. It’s dangerous out there.

As he says, in many ways the coming melt will be welcome. Unfortunately it sounds like it will be all at once, with a lot of rain.

Tonight Environment Canada just issued a warning calling for rising freezing levels, melting snow, and heavy rain. They say there could be 100-150mm of rain in the Fraser Valley and up to 100mm in Vancouver.

This, combined with the current snow pack and frozen soil below it,  could result in really serious flooding problems in Metro Vancouver and a dangerous rise in streamflow in local rivers.

If you know where a storm drain is on your street, help out your neighbours and clean it off so the deluge can flow away with minimal damage.

Ah, the wet coast.