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The fire is dancing tonight and the winds are talking
Dancers from past lives enter the circle
Leading me back and forth through the history of myself
The mind searches as the spirit dances
The drums...dancing to the heartbeat
Memories of long ago insights to the future
I hear the winds whispering my sweat lodge dreams
I see Sungmanitu tanka (the wolf) my guide
He shows me the ancestors, not mine
They are not Lakota, or Tsalagi, or Iroquois
But they are all Nations, one Nation
Speaking with wisdom to share with each other
Yesterdays create todays and promises of tomorrow
The lies will die with the smoke
And the whispers of the winds are clear and loud
And we shall all see the return of the buffalo.
AHO
These traditional row boats were used over the weekend at a Regatta and were cleaned to be stowed for the next race.
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Hey gang. Have you still got lots of lenses left from your old film SLR kit? Me too. Regular visitors to these pages may remember that back in March I dropped my Olympus E-520 digital and bust its 40-150mm kit lens. Seeing the thing in pieces left me with a rather low opinion of its build quality. Plastic elements and plastic tubing.
A few weeks ago I was looking at Mrs B's old Canon A1. As soon as I picked it up I was impressed by its enormous solidity and weight. Her old macro zoom lens, made from real glass and actual metal, was also built like a tank. It made modern kit lenses look like something out of a Jamboree Bag. I thought of the nice chunky lenses from my old Chinon CM3, unused for nearly ten years. I also had a set of extension tubes, so much more "user friendly" than the bloody silly, constantly re-autofocusing macro and "nature macro" modes ...I still don't know what the difference is. Then, browsing on eBay, I saw that there were many adapters available for coupling old lenses to new cameras. Such a device for linking my old 42mm screw-mount lenses to an Olympus four-thirds body cost £14.99. Well, you couldn't go far wrong.
This was taken with my old Chinon 55mm standard lens and the smallest ring of my extension tube set, linked via an adapter to the Olympus body. The drawback, of course, is the loss of electrical contact between camera and lens. The method is to set the camera to M for manual and select a shutter speed. The aperture is guesswork. It is necessary to use the lens manually. This means that the viewfinder darkens as you reduce aperture. The best strategy seems to be to focus wide open and then close to your selected f-stop. Digitals have some advantages of course, and if you misjudge the exposure you can see it immediately on the playback screen and, with luck, have another crack at it. I've not yet had time to practice much, but my impression is that quality is better, and certainly no worse. It also gives you greater "hands-on" control and more of a traditional SLR "feel". There are tons of beautiful old lenses going cheaply on eBay and I'm watching a 70-230mm zoom which comes up tomorrow and currently has a bid of 99p. I can see myself flogging the kit lenses.
Naoned Calling! en soutien au collectif "44=Breizh"
avec les Ramoneurs de Menhir, Gimol Dru Band, Francis Jackson et Daonet
Maison de Quartier de Doulon, Nantes (44)
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Naoned Calling! showing support for the "44=Breizh" (Brittany) movement with the Ramoneurs de Menhir, Gimol Dru Band, Francis Jackson and Daonet
At the Maison de Quartier de Doulon, Nantes (France)
It's 2pm, we're at rest stop #2, and I'm needing to call Kellie to tell her we'll be at the finish between 3:30 and 4pm. She's planning to take pics of us coming in, so I wanted to be sure to tell her when we'd be there. That's my friend, Leslie, to my right....smiling big for the camera! :)
One pinwheel is gone!!! Ahhh!
The Cinderella Classic is a 65 mile all-women's bike ride.
Another of the thieving magpies from our trip to Canberra the other week.
Bird cliche for Cliche Saturday.
A man makes a call to someone for help
Model: Danny Jones
All rights reserved. For information, permission to use, or licensing, contact me at : MarkDeibertPhotography@gmail.com
Calling Low farm above Lathkill Dale, at 330 metres above sea level, taken from the small copse on the top of Calling Low.
Photo of Josef Stalin, perhaps the most (in)famous native of Georgia, still admired by many, for some reason.
Flea market,
Tbilisi, Georgia
IMG_7410
James Mackenzie Morrison and Norman Smith at Beiridh ( Port Headland ) with an Army 38 radio set brought to Ness by James Macgeoch
Taken 1950s, this was the first shore based radio communication with Sulasgeir, there was later communication in the early 1960s with Type 19 sets ( commonly used in WWII tanks ) that was featured in the Adventure Presents Sulasgeir programme by BBC Scotland.
Photo and information courtesy of Norman Smith, Photo Copyright James Macgeoch
Naoned Calling! en soutien au collectif "44=Breizh"
avec les Ramoneurs de Menhir, Gimol Dru Band, Francis Jackson et Daonet
Maison de Quartier de Doulon, Nantes (44)
----------------------
Naoned Calling! showing support for the "44=Breizh" (Brittany) movement with the Ramoneurs de Menhir, Gimol Dru Band, Francis Jackson and Daonet
At the Maison de Quartier de Doulon, Nantes (France)