Strange creatures along Secor road


Crocodile

If you take the Taconic State Parkway north you’ll eventually, after passing Yorktown Heights and Jefferson Valley come to an exit called Bryant Pond Road. Turn right at the end of the exit ramp. You’d think this would be Bryant Pond Road but it isn’t. It’s actually Secor Road. Pass the mobil station on the right and just past the next stop sign, on the left, you’ll see these strange metallic creatures. I have no idea who made them and my attempts to find out have so far been unsuccessful. Some of them are recognizable (e.g. pig, alligator). Others less so.


Pig


Some kind of insect?


Spongebob Squarepants


Insect on a flower?


Your guess is as good as mine

Another day in the city


I went into the city again the other day.  As always there were picture taking opportunities like this women attempting to get a soda from the soft drinks machine at Scarborough station. The last time I tried to do this it took my money and refused to give me the diet coke I had requested.


Shadows. Taken from the train. A second after I took this someone walked up the stairs and cast their shadow. This would have made a much better picture but I was unable to react fast enough to get it.


Fiddling around here by focusing on the window and letting the background blur out. There’s something about it that I like though.


Daily News building facade.


Figures – Grand Central Terminal


Possibly the most beautiful building in New York City: The Chrysler building.


Light fixtures in the bar at the Wyndham hotel

All of pictures were taken with a Sony Nex 5n and Nikon 50mm f/1.8 Series E

My annoying wife

A recent post I referenced a Petapixel article, which (somewhat humorously) described different types of photographers. One was the “The Non-Photographer Friend” – described as:

This is that person in your life that has never defined themselves as a photographer, never had any interest in being a photographer, and certainly never edited a photo after they’d taken it. Heck, this person probably doesn’t even own a camera outside of their phone.

And yet, despite that, every time they do randomly decide to take a picture it’s a beautifully framed, perfectly lit masterpiece that you wish you had taken. This person clearly has a natural talent and you hate them for it. But it’s okay, we all do.

I noted at the time that my wife was something like that. The above pictures is a good example. Taken with her iphone 5S.

Sometimes I don’t know why I bother….and yes that’s me with our dog, Jackson.  I’m the cute one.

A day in the life

I’m sometimes asked what I do with myself now that I’m no longer working. I’m many ways today was a fairly typical day for me. In a couple it was not so typical. So here’s my day:

What was typical

Woke up around 8:00 am. It was snowing (not so typical) – the first snow this year. Went out to pick up the paper and then took out the camera and went outside and took a few pictures. Came back in and processed them. This took me to about 9:00 am.

Browsed around on the internet e.g. looking for old cameras to purchase. From time to time I bump into one that I don’t know much about so I spend some time digging up additional information. Now it’s nearly 10:00 am

10:00 am. My wife comes down. She stays up late and sleeps late. I too stay up late but I tend to wake up early. We have coffee and breakfast. I continue to browse around on the internet while she reads the New York Times and reads portions to me while she has breakfast (I don’t typically have breakfast). This is one of my favourite parts of the day.

Now it’s nearly time for lunch. I like to cook and so do most of the cooking – it’s only fair since Eirah did the cooking, most of the child rearing, driving etc. while working full time for the first 30 or so years of our life together. I prepare lunch: homemade pumpkin soup with oat bread I’d made a couple of days ago. Followed by pork and spinach dumplings. By the time I’m finished and we’ve eaten lunch it’s around 2:00pm.

It’s time to update my blog. Eight posts later and it’s almost 4:00 pm. Time to start thinking about dinner. I’ll be meeting up in the city tomorrow with an old friend from Geneva days, Brian Kelleher.


My old friend and former colleague Brian

So I decide to make dinner not just for tonight, but also for tomorrow. I found some other stuff in the freezer so I decided to make an additional dish. I’m making my take on Kung Pao pork for tonight; Pork and Chicken Adobo (a classic dish from the Philippines) and Spaghetti Bolognese. This way when I’m out tomorrow my wife won’t need to make dinner.

Around 5:00 pm Eirah leaves for her almost daily dance/exercise class. I continue cooking.

6:00 pm. Still cooking. Time to feed our dog, Jackson while I listen to music – the soundtrack to the movie Local Hero.

7:15 pm. Writing this post. Two of my dishes still simmering. I’m now listening to Mahler’s eighth symphony. I have 30 minutes before I make the final dish so we can have dinner when Eirah returns from her dance/exercise class around 8:15pm.

7:45 pm. Cutting up peppers, mincing ginger, cutting up garlic, making rice. Still listening to Mahler while I browse photo.net and rangefinderforum.com.

8:12 pm. Eirah returns. Time for dinner. Still listening to Mahler.

9:00 pm. Dinner over. Washing up done. I refuse to watch TV before 10:00pm so some time to relax listening to some music. Vladimir Horowitz. Legendary RCA Recordings.

10:00-midnight. Watching something mindless on TV.

Midnight. Time for bed. A bit early for me so I’ll probably read for a while.

What’s not so typical about today

I didn’t get out as much as I usually do. Normally I like to spend some time taking pictures, but apart from the relatively few snow pictures (taken on our patio and in the garden) I didn’t leave the house today As I mentioned it had snowed. There wasn’t a lot of snow, but it was a grey, gloomy day and I felt like sitting around in the house watching the lake.

I didn’t take Jackson for a walk. I like to take him for a walk of at least one hour per day. He’s an active terrier and he needs the exercise and so do I. By the time I’ve taken him somewhere, done the walk, and returned home usually about two hours has gone by. He’s sitting here at the moment looking at me as if I’ve betrayed him. I’ve noticed that dogs have a wider variety of expressions than cats. Our cat seems to have two expressions: normal and angry. Jackson can look happy, sad, puzzled, excited and show a number of other emotions. I’m not clear how he does it.

I usually decide what I want to cook and then go out and get the ingredients. This can take more and hour or two since none of the supermarkets are close by. Today, however, I had the stuff I needed so I didn’t need to go out.

This was certainly not typical. I cut up about seven Szechuan peppers for my Kung Pao like pork. At the time I thought that I must remember to wash my hands. Of course I forgot and then rubbed my eyes. Not a pleasant experience. I don’t recommend it. After much flushing with water and liberal application of eye drops I’m fine now although my left eye still hurts a bit.

So all in all a quiet, but busy day. When I stopped working I was afraid that I wouldn’t know what to do with my time. It’s turned out to be quite the opposite. The days go by so quickly that I wonder where the time goes. Do I miss the work? No. Do I miss the people at work? Yes (at least some of them), which is why I go into the city every few weeks to have lunch/drinks with some of them.

So that’s a fairly typical day for me. It’s supposed to be sunny tomorrow so hopefully I’ll be able to get out and take some pictures before going into the city to meet Brian.