Answer — Friday Foto Quiz # 13

Only a day late with the answer. It was a busy Mon­day. Do you know this water­fall? I received one cor­rect answer via email. For the answer, con­tin­ue read­ing below the pic­ture.

It was very crowd­ed and hot the day we vis­it­ed McArthur Bur­ney Falls Memo­r­i­al State Park and we decid­ed not to hike to the base of the falls. So this is the only view I have. Check out this link for an over­dose of pic­tures from Google Images.
Bur­ney Creek orig­nates not far away due to the porous nature of the vol­canic rocky ground. The falls are fed by snowmelt, numer­ous springs and a large under­ground reser­voir, cre­at­ing a wide and misty basin. Of course it is anoth­er Cal­i­for­nia state park.
More infor­ma­tion here.
Thanks for play­ing

Answer — Friday Foto Quiz # 12

Did you know what’s going in this pic­ture and the event that took place this last week­end? Read on below the pic­tures.

These pic­tures were tak­en at the Great Reno Bal­loon Race in Reno, Neva­da in 2009. It is the largest free hot air bal­loon exhi­bi­tion in the nation and the 2010 race was this past week­end. I did­n’t go this year, but it is a great oppor­tu­ni­ty for pho­tog­ra­phy and the won­der­ment of get­ting close to these hot air bal­loons.
When I say close, I mean that the pilots will actu­al­ly let you inside the bal­loon while it is inflat­ing with the fans only (which they use before the propane fire breath­ing blasters). You can walk through the field of 100 bal­loons ris­ing at once with no restric­tions or cost. I have a stop action ani­ma­tion of the mass ascen­tion at this link.
It is an easy dri­ve to Reno from the San Fran­cis­co bay area and it is pos­si­ble to avoid the down­town casi­nos all togeth­er if you want.
Plan on get­ting up ear­ly if you want the “Glow Show” and “Dawn Patrol” pic­tures. They start at 5am. The entire 3 day event is over by 10am each day.
For more infor­ma­tion, see the Great Reno Bal­loon Race web site.
Anoth­er sim­i­lar but big­ger event takes place in New Mex­i­co, Octo­ber 2–10, the Albu­querque Inter­na­tion­al Bal­loon Fies­ta with more of every­thing. I’ve nev­er been there but this is the mec­ca, accord­ing to the bal­loon­ists I talked to. Good luck get­ting a hotel room at this date.
Well, thanks for play­ing.

Answer — Friday Foto Quiz # 11

Did you iden­ti­fy any­thing about the pic­ture? More infor­ma­tion below the pho­to.

This pic­ture was bor­rowed from the Light­house­’s web site.

Pigeon Point Light Sta­tion is a Cal­i­for­nia State His­toric Park about 30 miles south of Half Moon Bay. At 115 feet, it is one of the tallest light hous­es in the Unit­ed States and the tallest on the Cal­i­for­nia coast. It first went into oper­a­tion on Novem­ber 15, 1872 using a Fres­nel lens com­prised of 1008 prisms which projects light as in the above pho­to­graph. That lens is no longer in use and is only fired up for 2 hours each year on the Sat­ur­day clos­est to the aniver­sary date. On that night, hun­dreds (thou­sands?) of peo­ple show up to wit­ness the event and take pic­tures. The dete­ri­o­rat­ing con­di­tion of the light­house may stop the dis­play indef­i­nite­ly and you can no longer tour the light­house tow­er itself. The grounds and muse­um remain open and there is a work­ing hos­tel on site.

If all goes well, the next light­ing will be Sat­ur­day, Novem­ber 13, from 6pm to 8pm. Some tips if you plan to pho­to­graph the next event. Wear warm clothes. Get there ear­ly, before sun­set, if you want to park close by. Take a tour of the grounds, the muse­um, the hos­tel and the local beach. After light­ing the lamp, the lens remains sta­tion­ary for 5 min­utes for pho­tog­ra­phers to cap­ture the star for­ma­tion and then it begins to rotate. Hope for some mois­ture in the air. Fog helps to define the rays of light. You will meet lots of oth­er pho­tog­ra­phers with tripods. Con­sid­er using a red flash­light when adjust­ing your equip­ment. It’s kinder on the eyes and less chance of spoil­ing oth­er’s pho­tographs.

For long expo­sure cam­era set­tings, I start with an F/8 aper­ture. That is about the best qual­i­ty aper­ture for my D80 and gives a decent depth of field. Exper­i­ment from there. I use the low­est ISO, again for best qual­i­ty. Even though it is a low light sit­u­a­tion, the light­house is not mov­ing. You don’t need that wide open aper­ture or a high ISO. Go for bet­ter DOF and low noise instead and use a longer shut­ter­speed. Use a tri­pod. Turn off image sta­bi­liza­tion, at least on Nikon lens­es. Use a remote shut­ter release or time delay to reduce cam­era vibra­tion. Focus­ing is always tricky in the dark, but the light­house is pret­ty bright, so aut­o­fo­cus should work.  Be quick, the five minute grace peri­od when the lens does not rotate goes by fast.

I’ll prob­a­bly be there, either to take pic­tures or as a docent. I recent­ly vol­un­teered to work there and begin train­ing this Sat­ur­day.

Here is a link to their web site: The Pigeon Point Light Sta­tion State His­toric Park

Thanks for play­ing the Fri­day Foto Quiz.

Friday Foto Quiz # 11

How much can you tell me about this pic­ture? It is not a prod­uct of pho­to­shop except that I warmed it up a lit­tle. I pre­fer not to think about how cold I was when I took it. Please leave a fun­ny com­ment but, if you know, don’t reveal the answer. I’ll do that on Mon­day.

Click the pic­ture for a larg­er view.

Answer — Friday Foto Quiz # 10

Did you guess what this per­son is doing? Keep read­ing.

His name is Rob­bie Virus and, in this pho­to, he is play­ing a theremin with his San Fran­cis­co based lounge band, Project Pimen­to. They have a new CD out enti­tled “Space Age Love Songs”.

The theremin is an ear­ly elec­tron­ic instur­ment, “invent­ed in 1919 by the Russ­ian sci­en­tist Leon Theremin” and often used to cre­ate mood music in sci­ence fic­tion movies. This instru­ment is played with­out actu­al­ly touch­ing it. The loop on the side and the anten­na on top cre­ate an elec­tro­mag­net­ic field. Dis­turb­ing this field with your hands will cre­ate a tone. Mov­ing the hands clos­er and away from the met­al anten­na varies the pitch and vol­ume of that tone, not an easy instru­ment to play well.

Rob­bie is the best I’ve seen on this instru­ment, at least live. His band con­tin­ues to ride the tiki lounge wave play­ing all your favorite James Bond themes, a very cool and unique show. I also saw his name list­ed as a theremin musi­cian in the cred­its of the first Hell Boy movie.

Click here for the Project Pimen­to web site.

Click here for a Google search for theremin.

Thanks for play­ing!

Friday Foto Quiz # 10

What is going on here? You can make com­ments, but if you know, don’t reveal the answer which I will give on Mon­day. And it has noth­ing to do with my owl pre­sen­ta­tion on Sat­ur­day at the HMB Library. (See the next post down for more infor­ma­tion on that.) Click the pic­ture for a larg­er view.

The Owls of Canada Cove

This Sat­ur­day, at 2pm, I will present my slideshow and lec­ture about the owls that live near my home at the Half Moon Bay Library. I’ve had the oppor­tu­ni­ty to watch and pho­to­graph them over the last 11 months and wit­nessed a one year life cycle of courtship, nest­ing, hatch­ing 2 owlets and then watch­ing them fledge. The pre­sen­ta­tion fol­lows them in pic­tures with facts about owls along the way and a fun select­ed short sub­ject too.

And, there is a nice write-up about me in this week’s Half Moon Bay Review.

Remem­ber the date, Sat­ur­day August 28, 2pm at the Half Moon Bay Library.

Walk towards the light... frame and shoot!