Lake Easton
Jul. 27th, 2006 11:20 pmPhotos:

Bits:
Visited Tito in the back yard; posed him with a stick+ball problem -- he had a ball in his mouth, so what was he to do with the stick I tossed? Eventually he got them precariously both in his mouth.
The lake was very very cold.
Somewhere
Played with Miles the dinosaur -- I was a prey herbivore and also a fellow tyrannosaur. We watched bugs on a log -- he was curious whether each was a biting bug (and asked
Subparty went for a walk.
Beth: stuffing a peach into her maw, and peach juice in driplines rounding the curve of her belly, and an ant exploring her. She loved
Went with Beth over to the jungle gym. She put together a routine: walk up to the high platform, stick a foot out wishing she could reach the laddery thing, walk back to the low platform, spin the steering wheel, back and forth, then walk down to the bottom of the slides, and in each one walk a little bit up, then slide down. Also a bit of going underneath, and we peeked at each other through the slot in the bench back. When she started to be done, it showed in that when she was high and near an edge she was nervous and called for mom, but once down she was happy, went back up. The second time, I declared her done.
The potato salad tasted exactly like clam chowder, minus only the clam. Just add clam nectar. Leave out the rubbery bits of clam, those are no good.
Campfire smoke had been layering over the lake, in an apparent inversion layer. Towards evening we saw the layer stir, and then blow off upwards, accelerating. Then a cool, very welcome, draft of air.
no subject
Date: 2006-07-28 01:07 pm (UTC)Say, what kind of lens did you use for those peach shots?
no subject
Date: 2006-07-28 02:42 pm (UTC)You can have some geek love too. :)
no subject
Date: 2006-07-28 02:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-28 03:27 pm (UTC)I would have liked to see that.
no subject
Date: 2006-07-28 05:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-28 06:20 pm (UTC)I really think they need to work on developing it some more. In front of us, of course.
no subject
Date: 2006-07-30 10:07 pm (UTC)Everything's the 50/1.8 -- 1.6x crop factor, so it's an 80-equivalent, great portrait lens. (Kind of doughnutty bokeh though.) I got the camera with this lens, figuring I'd want one, and as a stopgap until the 18-200 came back in stock... which it hasn't.
no subject
Date: 2006-07-30 10:08 pm (UTC)