Capture: Someone, Somewhere, In Summertime
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ChrisW, in reply to
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BenWilson, in reply to
Classic! NZ, where the sun shines out of cow's arses.
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
Beautiful. Any details about where that waka belongs?
Te Kauhanga Marae which incidentally is just around the corner from our land up North. The photo is the waka at home
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
Waka of a different ilk – waka hourua Aotearoa One in Gisborne for Transit of Venus week in June last year – with carved tauihu rather different also.
And another interesting one is Te Aurere which is seen here on the Waitemata Harbour this timeish last year
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ChrisW, in reply to
NZ, where the sun shines out of cow’s arses.
Wondered how long it would take :)
After 100% Pure NZ marketing, further thoughts of this inspiring image being used to sell the National Party's promised Brighter Future came to mind.
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ChrisW, in reply to
Aotearoa One is from the same stable as Te Aurere, built more recently with low-maintenance modern materials to traditional design, very well set up mainly for inshore training and youth development. Here under sail out of Gisborne/Turanganui-a-kiwa, and returning with Te Kuri-a-Paoa/Young Nicks Head astern. She handles beautifully!
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Steve Barnes, in reply to
National Party’s promised Brighter Future
Trouble with National voters is one is born every minute.
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Jos,
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
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Jos,
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
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1. A dead tree full of shags after sunset, by the Whau Creek, looking to the Waitakeres.
2. Orion over the Waterview Bore. A copper chopper flies between Taurus’ face and Jupiter. No tripod, just park bench, hence Jupiter looks like a sperm. I think the red flashes on the chopper were about a second apart, so presumably this shot had roughly a six second shutter time.
3. Looking South from the same spot over Oakley Creek. Handheld again, Southern Cross and pointers, and the lower part of Argos, keel and sails.
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ChrisW, in reply to
3. Looking South from the same spot over Oakley Creek. Handheld again, Southern Cross and pointers, and the lower part of Argos, keel and sails.
Alternatively - perfectly framed to show the comparison between the Southern Cross and the 'False Cross' directly above it.
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ChrisW, in reply to
Next, Jupiter, below the horns of Taurus. The moons clearly visible at 24x. You'll have to blow the picture up to see these details though.
For a direct camera image this/yours is very impressive!
I've followed these four Galilean moons of Jupiter over a few days or a week of nights several times with good binoculars or a small telescope, sketching their relative positions to show their obvious changes from night to night. It's a great feeling, the sense of connection to Galileo first seeing them with his first home-made telescope and doing just that in 1610, recognising the pattern of orbiting moons each with a different period, a major step in the Copernican revolution.
Might you consider trying this photographically, and showing us all a sequence of cropped images (ie enlarged)?
I don’t think my camera would be up to it, quite apart from my lack of tripod. It has excellent optics but, well, here is the moon 2.5 days after yours by way of comparison. Indeed the light and atmosphere is different, but getting x25 by combination of optical and digital zoom there are only 1.3 megapixels of definition.
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ChrisW, in reply to
When peppers go bad...
Jos, that's beautiful! Though perhaps not for the squeamish, there's splendid colour, light, texture and multi-layered imagery of life and death there. What chance of a sequence, if you have a sacrificial surplus?
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Jos, in reply to
I shall attempt to retrieve it from the compost heap Chris and document it's demise, or else just make a series on the pile itself. :)
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
Or a stop-motion time-lapse of decay.....
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
Love the cormorants in a dead tree Ben
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BenWilson, in reply to
Same tree, but this time with light. The shot from the previous night was taken well after sunset, using only my headlamp and bike torch for lighting (I didn’t want to startle them with a flash). It was my first time down the track along the Whau just below the industrial area, a track I never knew was there. Blundering along in the dark, I had no idea how far it went, and lost my nerve to continue when it became narrow and overgrown.
So I tried to get out up the bank in the second picture. I thought it led to the road, but no, after scaling the treacherously steep bank with my bike, in darkness, I found myself in the back of the Cadbury complex. I didn’t dare risk the bank again, so I had a surreal 10 minutes trying to escape a setting that smacked of Half-Life or Wolfenstein. I kept expecting to get chased by dogs, or guards, or aliens or zombies.
Which was a pity, because I missed out on discovering the spot in the last picture, at the end of the track, the rowing club pier, at high tide. Beautiful 270 degree vista on the corner of the Whau. I’ve lived in this area for 9 years and never knew this was here – the entry to it is down an obscure industrial backstreet, down what seems like a private driveway.
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I read about Chinese New Year celebrations planned in Auckland - anybody going? I'm getting kinda curious about how it's celebrated in mid-summer where fireworks are banned for ordinary people.... It'd be nice to not have to worry about the glue freezing before you can get the couplets up, though.
Got the couplets up with only one small patch freezing too quickly, though. A few years back we had to retreat inside and wait for the sun to finally reach the last door post.
And perhaps one for the cool cars thread...
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
Chinese New Year celebrations planned in Auckland – anybody going?
Love the annual jaunt to Albert Park for Chinese NY.... it gets bigger and better every year, jam packed with people and lanterns with louderer fireworks as the finale. The most startling fireworks year was the year something went wrong and one of the fireworks took off horizontally and hit one of the nearby portaloos. Bit shocking for the person inside!
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
Blundering along in the dark,
That's dedication!
Beautiful 270 degree vista on the corner of the Whau.
Nice : )
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