Category Archives: Photography

One More Time With FEELING & Four-Part Harmony

Sort of winging it after one idea cascaded into another and suddenly starting late last night my plans for the weekend starting radically changing.

I was really hoping to sit on my ass and catch up with my naps. Instead…

After scrambling all through July to get ready to move and get packed and close escrow and get two PODS containers packed and then doing the last-minute sprint at the end of July to get out of the old house, then spending seven weeks getting the two PODS containers emptied and everything put away in the house, all while trying to keep current at work and getting settled in the new house and trying daily to not explode, AFTER ALL OF THAT…

There’s one major loose end. (Probably dozens of minor loose ends and “honey do’s,” but those can be tackled one at a time.)

Seven years ago when we moved from the 5-bedroom, 3300 square foot house where we had lived for over 30 years into the 3-bedroom, 1600 square foot rental home which was intended to be an interim home for “a year or two” we went through a HUGE freakin’ process of culling, tossing, pruning, throwing out, donating and we still ended up with WAY TOO FREAKING MUCH STUFF to fit into that half-sized house. So everything else went into three large storage units.

The Forever Home has enough room for all of that and we need to stop paying extra for those units. So everything in there needs to get here, and since we kinda wanted it here by the end of July and the end of August at the absolute latest, the coming of the end of October is applying some mental stress to “get ‘er done!” Some plans to get a big chunk of that done later this week fell into place, so the balance of that task was either this weekend or “sometime in November.” For reasons that I can’t quite explain, especially given my desire for naps and ass-sitting, there’s now a HUGE U-Haul van in the driveway. The two-hour-plus drive each way factors in and somehow this made the most sense.

Once more into the breach, friends! There will be plenty of time for naps when I’m dead. Or in November. Whichever comes first.

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Filed under Forever Home, Paul, Photography

A Teeny TEENY Tiny Bit Of Joy Photographing Comet Lemmon

If you’re expecting one of those great, professional pictures that shows the bright comet trail stretching across half the sky, taken from a superior dark-sky location – Google it, move on, I’ll see you tomorrow.

But if you want to see how it really works for the amateur astronomer with decades-old, marginal equipment in the suburbs after four days of hunting – here you go!

See it? Click on the image to blow it way up, bigger than full screen sized! It’s right there!

Need some help? No worries. Let’s start over on the far right, where just over those trees you can see five of the seven brightest stars in the Big Dipper. The two left-hand stars in the bowl of the dipper are right next to the right edge of the image, with the three bright stars of the handle arcing up toward the lower center. Got them?

Now, just barely visible over the house, to the left of that tree in its back yard, is a bright star. That’s Arcturus, in the constellation Bootes.

Next, look straight up from Arcturus to right about the middle of the image. Do you see a “C”-shaped circle of six brighter stars, the open part of the “C” pointing to the upper right at bit? That’s the Corona Borealis constellation.

Finally, look between Arcturus  and Corona Borealis for an elongated diamond of four bright-ish objects. Here’s a cropped image of that region, with Corona Borealis at the top and the “elongated diamond” in the lower left:

Using binoculars, I could see the comet pretty clearly, at least the fuzzy head (coma) and the tiniest bit of bulge of the tail. Not spectacular, not overwhelming, not mind-blowing, but also definitely not my imagination. I saw it to the left and slightly below two bright stars in a tilted, vertical orientation, with a much dimmer third star just above and to the right of the upper one. Here’s an even further crop of that “elongated diamond.”

Blow it up as large as you can on your screen. It will be grainy, that’s okay. See those two brighter stars in a tilted, vertical orientation with the much dimmer third star just above and to the right of the upper one? See the object to their lower left that’s a bit fuzzy, with sort of a dim, baseball diamond shaped bit of light off the top side?

That’s Comet Lemmon.

It’s not going to be the Astronomy Photo Of The Day any time soon, but it’s my capture. These days, you have to take the Teeny TEENY Tiny Bits Of Joy wherever you can get them.

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Filed under Astronomy, Photography

Proof Of Life – October 2nd

Last night’s second picture showed clouds to the south over the Cajon Pass – I didn’t think anything of it. I took the photos, came home and downloaded them, wrote my post, hit the “publish” button.

Not ten minutes later the whole house shook with a massive peal of thunder right overhead. There had been 0% chance of rain, no mention of any clouds or storms at all. But for the next hour we had quite the little pop-up thunderstorm.

I might have just loved it.

Tonight the clouds were still hanging around, making comet viewing impossible again, but we did get some gorgous crepuscular rays at sunset.

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Filed under Photography, Sunsets, Weather

Photographing Comet Lemmon – Strike Two

I hauled my binoculars, two tripods, three cameras, and four lenses over a block or two to the dark area where the empty lots in our subdivision are. Few lights, which is good. Scattered clouds, which is bad.

If you click on the image to blow it up, on the right you’ll see the three stars that make up the handle of the Big Dipper. Follow that arch to about just over the right-hand street light in the distance. Right about where that cloud is. That’s where Comet Lemmon C/2025 should be. I’m not seeing it.

Off to the south, there were clouds over Cajon Pass, lit up by the traffic coming up I-15 between Los Angeles and Las Vegas.

The predicted peak brightness for Comet Lemmon is about now and in the next day or two. From here out it should be fading slowly. I’ll look for another of those “clear and a bazillion” days and see if we get lucky.

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No Joy Photographing Comet Lemmon

Well, extremely limited joy at best. Comet Lemmon (C/2025 A6) is in the evening sky right now, 60-90 minutes after sunset, in between the “handle” of the Big Dipper (easy to find in the northwest) and Arcturus (the brightest, orange-tinted star just above the horizon in the west). I could spot the coma (head) with binoculars, just a grey, fuzzy puffball, but no tail. I tried to photograph it both with my iPhone and with the good Canon DSLRs using both the wide-angle “light bucket” lens and the “regular” 50 mm lens. In all of the longer exposure photos there’s a fair amount of light from the porch lights at the neighbors’ houses. I can sorta see a fuzzy dot where the comet should be, but not enough to be 100% sure that it’s it. Tomorrow I’ll take the cameras out to some empty land near our house, away from all of the house lights, and see if that helps.

Meanwhile, the atmposphere today was PERFECT for contrails.

The sunset lighting helped!

I do wonder what causes the sawtooth pattern that’s seen so often. Is that an atmospheric effect, or something caused by some sort of pulsing in the engines?

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Filed under Astronomy, Photography

Inland Empire 2025 Work Event

As noted, I work for the ALS Network, a non-profit organization that supports those living with ALS and their families, as well as raising awareness and funds for research. As part of those efforts, we have events all over California and Hawaii. In the past I’ve posted pictures and talked about events in Los Angeles & Ventura Counties – now that I live in the “Inland Empire” (i.e., Riverside & San Bernardino Counties), I’m attending the annual IE event.

The weather today was ideal, which always helps, and our turnout was fantastic.

The Long-Suffering Wife also came along to volunteer and we ended up working the registration station most of the day.

We ended up missing the Chiefs’ game, but it was for an excellent cause. (Given that the Chiefs gave a good old fashioned ass whooping to the hated Raiders, 31-0, it was fine.)

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Filed under ALS Network, Panorama, Photography

Fall Is Falling

Having spent my high school years in Vermont, I know what fall foliage is supposed to look like.

It looks like this a lot, just TONS more.

To my high school friends who are probably snickering with embarrassment for me because I’m gushing over a handful of leaves on one tree when they’ve been looking at tens of thousands of acres of riotous color for months – yeah, I get it. You’re right. Let’s see you come out here for fifty years and see how much you miss it when all you have are palm trees and tumbleweeds.

The Forever House has the one maple tree in the front yard, which had a couple of leaves turning shortly after we moved in. Now it’s starting to turn in earnest.

If you think I looked stupid out there snapping pictures of the occasional bright red leaf, wait until they see me in the spring trying to hang a bucket on a tap to make my own syrup!

The Black River from Springfield down to the Connecticut River this isn’t (the three large palm trees give it away) but it’s better than nothing!

Stand by! I’m sure as the High Desert Fall Foliage Season (HDFFS) proceeds I’ll be sharing more pictures!

 

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Filed under Forever Home, Photography

Mt San Antonio

Today the clouds cleared out, and as I expected yesterday, Mt San Antonio to our southwest was covered in snow from Tuesday’s storm.

Up here we see the northeast face – the millions in the LA Basin see the southwest face.

When you see a picture postcard photo of downtown LA’s skyscrapers with the snowcapped mountains in the background (think “Hi, MOM! From SoCal & The Rose Parade!”), it’s this mountain that’s the big one.

Known better as “Old Baldy” it peaks out at 10,064 feet, so even in SoCal there’s plenty of snow for a couple of ski resorts.

Yes, you can go surfing in the morning and snow skiing in the afternoon. It’s SoCal! We’re just a bit more toward the fringe edge of SoCal now.

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Filed under Forever Home, Photography

First Snow Line

From the pictures I’ve seen, later in the winter when we get snow down to 3,000′ or lower (and they start closing the I-15 from LA to Las Vegas), not only will we (at least briefly) have snow in our yard, but the low hills all around will be covered in snow for weeks and months at a time.

For today, following yesterday’s cold storm, the snow level got down to somewhere below 6,000 feet. Off to our southwest, Mt San Antonio (10,000+ feet) should be a gorgeous, snow-capped wonder, but it was still covered in clouds. However, off to the east, there was some snow on Rattlesnake Mountain (6,093 feet).

Again, not nearly as bright and magnificent as I expect it to be later in the winter, but it’s a first. Through binoculars, the snow line was quite distinct, which I’ve always found to be fascinating.

As I said yesterday, I’m a clueless doof. And easily amused. Hopefully in the same manner as a golden retriever.

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As The Prophecy Foretold

Okay, so it was more like the National Weather Service than some old crone with a crystal ball or a wizard with a Palantir, but still.

The rain was steady, hard at times, but nothing in the Forever Home leaks, which is good! It was the cold outside that was noticeable – it never even made it to 50ºF.

And yes, the heat in the house DOES work. Still not sure WHERE the furnace or heating equipment is, but fans turn on, warm(er) air comes out of the vents, and the temperature inside slowly creeps up a degree or two.

The other thing that I realize now is that there are three separate gas fireplaces, including one in the master bedroom and one in the living room. It’s not that I didn’t know they were there, and both of our two previous houses had them, but we never USED them. They’re there to hang Christmas decorations and Chiefs flags on! But we’ve tested all of the ones here and know they work – I guess in a pinch they’ll heat up a couple of rooms, right?

Yeah, I know. I’m a clueless doof. This is not news.

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Filed under Forever Home, Photography, Weather