Peekskill Riverwalk Park – The Peekskill Brewery

I went to the riverfront in Peekskill to take some pictures the other day. My wife needed the car so she dropped me in Cold Spring and I took the train down. It was a very hot day and when I got there the sun was still very high and the light wasn’t good so I decided to wait for a while to see if it would improve (it didn’t and I couldn’t stay long enough to see if it would). I’d been to the Peekskill Brewery before – but in its previous location a bit closer to the train station. This was my first time in the new building. The top two floors are not open to the public. The first floor contains a restaurant and the ground floor the tap room (also serves food) and the brewery. Yes the Peekskill Brewery is not just the name of a restaurant. It actually is a brewery – and a fine selection of craft beers they have too.

Interior. The Tap Room.

A view of the brewery.

Another view of the brewery.

Peekskill Riverwalk Park – The Golden Mean

By Carole A. Feuerman.

A nearby plaque reads:

The Golden Mean. Bronze with patina and gold leaf.

Using the riverfront’s edge on as its diving board, Feuerman’s monumental sculpture activates the urban environment and its inhabitants through a site-specific installation. Two years in the making, and more than 8,000 hours of labor, The Golden Mean is part of a series of swimmers and bathers Feuerman began working on in the late seventies. It is and icon for the strength and resilience of the human spirit, for achieving the impossible and for the struggle for survival

Peekskill Riverwalk Park – A Local Legend

This is Dylan’s Wine Cellar in Peekskill, NY and in front of it is the stuff of a local legend. It seems that L. Frank Baum spent a couple of (apparently quite unhappy) years at the Peekskill Military Academy. A road ran from the waterfront to the academy and on arriving (either by train or boat, opinions vary) Baum is said to have asked for directions. As the road had fairly distinctively colored bricks he was told to “follow the yellow brick road”. This small patch, now a parking lot, is all that remains. L. Frank Baum was, of course, the author of “The Wizard of Oz”. Is the story true? Some think so. Others don’t and apparently there are a number of other candidates for “the yellow brick road”. However, the Peekskill Town Historian, John Curren clearly feels it’s true, but then he would wouldn’t he.

Nikon N70/F70

I didn’t especially want this camera. When I started collecting cameras I though I would stick to rangefinders, but somewhere along the line I got distracted towards SLRs. I bought a Yashica FX-3 in a thrift store because I found myself stuck without a camera and wanted to take pictures. I’d never owned a Nikon so I thought if I’m getting SLRs I might as well get a Nikon – that led to the acquisition of a Nikon F2 body. Then I needed a lens and I found the lens (a manual focus lens) I wanted attached to a Nikon N90s. I liked the N90s and realized that I’d never actually used an autofocus SLR – so I needed an AF lens. I found such a lens attached to this N70, which as I said, I didn’t especially want. I think I spent about $30 for the camera and lens so what did I have to lose. I put a roll of film in it to see if the body worked, put it away and never used it. The other day I remembered there was a film in it and decided to try it. Inevitably I took pictures of what was close to hand: flowers in our garden.

As I was only trying to see if the camera worked I can’t say that I tried it out very thoroughly. I put it into aperture priority and largely “pointed and shot”. I was using an old film and taking pictures at the worst time of day (around noon). All I can really say is that the camera felt comfortable enough in my hands and not too heavy around my neck. The rather strange fan-shaped interface is unique to this camera and I don’t think Nikon used it again – probably because of all the negative feedback. Nikon aficionado Thom Hogan had this to say (I don’t know when this was written):

The F70/N70’s gimmicky LCD interface met with a lot of derision. However, unlike the F60/N60 or F65/N65, the F70/N70 gives its user plenty of feedback on what’s been set and what the other options are. As such, it’s a good learning camera. The F70/N70’s specifications are mostly good (other than the 1/125 flash sync), and the camera is arguably a bargain at its current prices. The metering and autofocus systems are quite good for an amateur camera and the range of abilities of this camera are quite sophisticated. The built-in flash isn’t very powerful and large lenses get in the way of its coverage, so don’t count on not having to buy a Speedlight. Three things keep me from recommending it wholeheartedly to advanced amateurs or aspiring pros:

1. The lack of depth of field (DOF) preview is a serious omission.
2. That LCD interface really does demand that you take your eye from the viewfinder to make many setting changes, which is okay for learning, but frustrating when you need to work fast.
3. The F80/N80 that replaces it in the Nikon lineup is clearly a better camera and fixes nearly all the F70/N70’s shortcomings.

While I agree that the interface is rather “fiddly” I imagine that once you’re used to it it’s not that bad. Definitely a usable camera though. The pictures were very contrasty and the colors were a bit off (probably because of the old film) and so needed “tweaking” in post processing.