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Month: March 2017 Page 1 of 2

Quality Control: Why Camera Lens Copies Vary – Home of the L-series: Inside Canon’s Utsunomiya lens factory — Master Craftsmen can tell when to apply more or less pressure by feel alone. Some processes, like this one, are considered so critical that they must be performed by hand

The home of the L-series: Inside Canon’s Utsunomiya lens factory

With decades’ of experience, Master Craftsmen (or ‘Takumi’) can tell when to apply more or less pressure by feel alone. Some processes, like this one, are considered so critical that they must be performed by hand.

It typically takes between 25-30 years before a lens polishing technician attains the status of ‘Meister’, and their experience is essential to the production line.

STORY

Dogs – After they’re gone…

(video) Why Don’t Dogs Live Forever? | Rodney Habib | TEDx

Oldest known dog: 30 years

Oldest known cat: 38 years

Super cute dog @ 13:35

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Why Don’t Dogs Live Forever? | Rodney Habib | TEDxNSCCWaterfront

(1 min video) Be Like Jesus / Fruit of the Spirit : )

Be Like Jesus / Fruit of the Spirit

(video) The Lord’s Prayer: ‘Forgive us our sins’ – Christopher Frost

BEAUTIFUL & REFRESHING!!!

Filmed in Wales with a Canon 6D and 70D with Samyang 24mm f/1.4, Samyang 50mm f/1.4, and Canon 85mm f/1.8 lenses.

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The Lord’s Prayer: (5/6) ‘Forgive us our sins’

(video) Dr. Nick Begich: How To Break The Zombie Trance — “Be the light, even in the dark places!” • Connecting with each other eyes to eyes

I know Nick, but haven’t seen him for awhile. He’s clearly doing great! At age-58 with Rob Dew in Austin, Texas. Positive solutions!!!

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“Be the light, even in the dark places!”

– Nick Begich

• • •

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bCFSkaxxpGM

Dr. Nick Begich: How To Break The Zombie Trance

(video) Jon and Vangelis – He Is Sailing – 1983 – with lyrics

This is a bit new agey, the lyrics and these graphics here, but I’ve always liked this song — used to listen to it on my he-man stereo rig.

It should be “His Kingdom come,” not “our true kingdom come,” etc., doctrinally. But still a great song!!!

Jon Anderson from YES with Vangelis!

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Jon and Vangelis – He Is Sailing – 1983 – with lyrics

(video) Angelo Badalamenti explains how he wrote “Laura Palmer’s Theme”

Angelo Badalamenti explains how he wrote “Laura Palmer’s Theme”

(audio) Angelo Badalamenti – Twin Peaks Suite – World Soundtrack Awards 2008 – Brussels Philharmonic conducted by Dirk Brossé

Moving!

And the second song @3:28 is monumental!!!

Infinitely humable!!!!!!!

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Angelo Badalamenti – Twin Peaks Suite – World Soundtrack Awards 2008

(video) Twin Peaks – Twin Peaks Theme (Instrumental)

Twin Peaks – Twin Peaks Theme (Instrumental)

(video) Twin Peaks – fingerstyle guitar

Twin Peaks – fingerstyle guitar

Lending a paw (or four): Sled dog team pulls out tourists’ car stuck in snow

It’s an old Alaska adage that if you’re stuck on the side of the road, then someone will stop to help. And for a group of tourists on Sunday, that help came from a dogsled team.”

STORY

(video) Findings Confirming the Bible – Greatest Biblical Archaeology Discoveries of All Time: Red Sea Crossing • Noah’s Ark • Mt. Sinai • Gomorrah • Ark of the Covenant — Ron Wyatt made no money from his adventures

Important point at 1:22:30 — The famous, so-called sightings of Noah’s Ark on the actual mountain of Ararat were false. Mt. Ararat is a volcano that formed years after the flood.

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Findings Confirming the Bible – complete – The Greatest Biblical Archaeology Discoveries of All Time

(video) Power of Photography & Forgiveness: Jaleel King

Power of Photography & Forgiveness: Jaleel King Pt 2: The reDefine Show with Tamara Lackey

(video) Young Redwoods, Whakarewarewa Forest – New Zealand!

The Redwoods, Whakarewarewa Forest

 

(2 min video) Magnificent Giant Tree: Sequoia in a Snowstorm | National Geographic

Magnificent Giant Tree: Sequoia in a Snowstorm | National Geographic

 

(video) David Milarch at TEDx: Replanting Redwoods!!!

The man who planted trees – pay it forward to the year 4012: David Milarch at TEDxSanJoseCA

 

(1 hr video) Richard Preston, author of ‘The Wild Trees: A Story of Passion and Daring,’ tells the story of Steve Sillett, who discovered a mysterious world hidden in the canopy biosphere of the largest and tallest organisms in the world above California

Fuzzy picture, but fascinating talk!

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Wild Trees: Uncharted Canopy Biosphere of Redwoods

 

Kelly – the boy nobody wanted

Kelly, my boy dog (breeders named him after the clown Emmett Kelly) died today (3/3/17) at age 10 (born  6/30/06). Little did I know that when I first met him during this visit to a kennel (photo below), that he would become my dog about a month later. I already had another Gordon Setter, William Wallace at the time, who died 1.5 years ago (10/9/15). Both died from heart failure. Ugh!

I fell in love with Setters while reading Jim Kjelgaard’s Irish Setter books as a teen, and ended up getting an Irish Setter, who I named Harvey. I had to leave him with my parents when I moved to Montana and Alaska in 1980. After Dad died, Mom moved to Alaska and bought a house, so I could again have Setters, starting in 1993. This time, we bought Gordon Setters (Mom got a girl), and we’ve had one or two ever since, until today.

When I met Kelly at the kennel I was visiting in the lower-48, I was playing with and taking photos of the male dogs in the very large fenced-in area. I laid down on the ground, face up, to capture a different perspective. All of a sudden, a dog laid on my chest, and got right up again, which surprised me because this isn’t typical Gordon behavior. This one was also the most interactive with the camera too, as the photo below shows. He was only 33 pounds.

Afterward, I asked who that dog was, and found out that Kelly had failed their hunting dog standards, so was basically stuck in the kennel as they couldn’t find a home for him. I wasn’t looking for another dog, but a month later, they suggested I take Kelly for free, as long as I paid the costs to get him to Alaska.

I had no idea how much trouble he would be, having never had a dog with serious issues before, including chewing steering column control levers & etc. in our cars.

Kelly was a true rescue dog. He had teeth that couldn’t close against each other properly, so he had trouble chewing food, which they didn’t tell me about. He had some type of ADD, which they didn’t tell me until later, and that they had considered him a troublemaker. Three long years in the kennel with too harsh discipline and hardly any TLC made him extremely wary of women. A woman was in charge of the kennel, and she later told me how she had treated Kelly, when I asked her advice on what to do. It took him YEARS to warm up to Mom, despite Mom being so sweet! And at first, he wouldn’t look me in the eye, and had a mind of his own. He was a bird addict, including smaller ones that sporting dogs aren’t supposed to be interested in. While riding in the car, he constantly scanned the sky, looking for birds with great excitement, as if he actually would have the chance to catch them. And often, while I was photographing nature, he would spend the entire time trying to catch birds, sometimes getting into the picture. I’ll post some of those, now that he can’t be James-3 cursed anymore. I learned this the hard way with a previous Gordon who suddenly acquired and died from lymph cancer at age-5, after using her photo as my profile image on my blogs.

He’s the first dog I’ve had who would go off on his own during walks but then would too often get lost, being unable to find me. I would have to find him, and usually could within 20 minutes, but a few times it was more like an hour? The beeper collar helped; though, only worked at close range.

Mom has often said how he found the perfect home, because we had the patience and love to work through all of his special problems.

In his later years, he let himself actually miss me a lot when he got lost, and he’d let the world know it by barking. And after William Wallace died, we got very tight. He would almost always be where I would be in the house. At the computer, he’d be by my feet; watching TV, nestled by my side on the couch — or sometimes next to Mom. That took so long! Mom grew to really love him too. His hair was so soft, Mom would say: “like velvet.”

And he was the most hands on dog I’ve ever had. He used his paws like hands in ways. For example, if I didn’t respond to his walking to and from the door right away, he’d touch me with his paw. He was also the only Gordon to sleep right next to me at the top of the bed, not the bottom.

I’m recalling some key moments:

I watched when Kelly saw his first moose in our yard, who sometimes forage on our trees. In the kennel, they had a full grown horse. Apparently, they were friends, because Kelly went right up to the moose, but the moose kicked him. I couldn’t tell if the hoof made contact, but probably did, because Kelly never did that again.

He could sometimes appear vicious, such as when certain people walked by the house on the street. I had such a hard time getting him not to bark without me having to tell him not to, each time. The breeder is the one who later told me he’s ADD, which I don’t understand, but saw it in action.

And he never did learn how to be completely sociable with other dogs he would meet on the trails. Unlike any dog I’ve ever had, he would often go off-trail to avoid them, but some chased him anyway, which he didn’t like.

He really learned to trust me. Twice, he found porcupines and came back with DOZENS of quills sticking out of him. He allowed me to remove them with a pliers even from the inside of his mouth — no problem; even though, it must have really hurt — especially one. It must have been in the tender nail bed of his toenail, for when I pulled it out he snapped at my hand — and was still okay with me pulling the rest out. That was the only time he ever snapped at me. Many dogs wouldn’t have allowed that, which then requires an expensive vet bill.

I’m guessing that Kelly learned his lesson with the porcupines, because there never was a third time; though, I started to avoid photographing in areas where he’d most likely encounter them, or tried to keep him near the water and out of the woods in these areas. I also bought a small, collapsible pliers which I’ve carried in my pocket ever since, so we wouldn’t have to wait until we got back to the car. I’ve read that removing them right away makes it easier, but thankfully, I never had the opportunity to test this theory.

Incidentally, my previous photo buddy, William Wallace also had two major porcupine encounters during his life, so maybe that’s how many it takes, and Kelly was no different this time?

I affectionately often called him Kells, after the “Book of Kells.”

So my most problematic dog ended up being in some ways my favorite.

I’ll miss you, Kelly.

When-I-first-met-him post reposted below:


I thought I’d post a photo from my recent trip to California and Oregon. …

This one is so cool! What a riot!

God bless!

Jeff : )

_MG_1979 - 550pt no sat

_MG_1979 - 550pt no sat

_MG_1979 - 550pt no sat

Notice how small his foot is. I took this with the widest possible, non-fish-eye lens (Sigma 12-24mm at 12mm on a Canon 5D Mark II), which gives this perspective. His face and paws are very close to the lens. And that’s my foot at the bottom of the image. May 5, 2009

Related:

Kelly’s Last Day

(photo) Kelly – The Last Hug

(video) The Redwoods – World Tallest Trees — A 3 minute visual-poetic film laced with information tidbits

The Redwood Trees – World Tallest Trees.

 

(video animation) What’s hidden among the tallest trees on Earth? – Story of Steve Sillett’s bold (if not a little dangerous) exploration of the canopy of an ancient Redwood

What’s hidden among the tallest trees on Earth? – Wendell Oshiro

 

(video) View from the Treetops | National Geographic — How do you SCALE A GIANT whose lowest branches can be 200 feet off the ground? • Steve Sillett: “It MAKES YOU REALIZE there’s something MUCH GREATER than yourself, SO MUCH VASTER than you”

Blurry footage from NatGeo, but it’s Steve Sillett!

Clip from: “Climbing Redwood Giants,” a 1 hour, NatGeo documentary

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Peter Coyote (narrator): “How do you scale a giant whose lowest branches can be 200 feet off the ground?”

Steve Sillett: “If you’re lucky enough to get up into the crowns of one of these trees, it puts your own insignificant existence in perspective. It makes you realize that there’s something much greater than yourself, so much vaster than you.”

Transcribed by Jeff Fenske

* * *

View from the Treetops | National Geographic

 

(video) Steve Sillett, PhD. Sequoia/Redwood Canopy Research, Humboldt State U

Footage is somewhat blurry, but Steve is the man!

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Steve Sillett, PhD. Sequoia/Redwood Canopy Research, Humboldt State

 

(video) Measuring Redwood Giants — “We have 175 Redwoods now in the world that are over 350 feet tall” • Steve Sillett’s team measures every branch of many

“We have 175 Redwoods now in the world that are over 350 feet tall.”

– Steve Sillett

• • •

Measuring Redwood Giants: Science on the SPOT

 

(video) Past, Present and Future of Redwoods by Stephen Sillett — Biggest Trees They Measured: HEIGHT – Redwood: 380 feet / Sequoia: 316 feet • AGE – Sequoia: 3240 years / Redwood: 2500 years • WEIGHT – Redwood: 425 tons / Sequoia: 550 tons • VOLUME – Redwood: 1,103 cu m / Sequoia: 1512 cu m • LEAVES – Redwood: 1.12 billion / Sequoia: 1.94 billion & GOOD NEWS on aging!

Gold mine of information! Stephen even explains how they obtained these figures!

My notes below:

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Past, Present and Future of Redwoods: A Redwood Ecology and Climate Symposium by Stephen Sillett – Save the Redwoods League

In the video’s cover image, “DTB” is diameter at top of buttress, and “DBH” is probably diameter at base height.

Ring width declines as trees get older, while rate of wood production increases.

“A tree’s rate of wood production continues to increase with size (e.g., leaf area) until near death.”

GOOD NEWS ON AGING:

“In this complete data set of all of our trees, only two trees have significant negative trends of growth in the last 100 years.” One is in the deepest of shade, and the other is in a swamp.

“The Redwoods, taken as a whole, in the old-growth forests of California, are growing faster now than they did in the past.” Same is true of Sequoias.

“Does a tree’s responsiveness to a changing climate diminish with age? No, regardless of age, tree growth responds to changes in the environment.”

How big are these trees they measured? [@19:40, apparently, these two are slightly less than the two record trees. Stephan says: “they’re actually number two of each, but they’re darn close to being the biggest.”]

WEIGHT – Redwood: 425 tons | Sequoia: 550 tons

VOLUME – Redwood: 1,103 cubic meters | Sequoia: 1512 cubic meters

LEAVES – Redwood: 1.12 billion | Sequoia: 1.94 billion

HEIGHT – Redwood: 115.72 m/380 feet | Sequoia: 96.29 m/316 feet

AGE – Sequoia: 3240 years (>1500 rare) | Redwood: 2500 years (>2500 rare)

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Stephen Sillett FINAL

 

(video) Rebuilding Redwood Trails – Humboldt Redwoods State Park

Rebuilding Redwood Trails v1

 

(video) Avenue of the Giants – Humboldt Redwoods State Park, California

Avenue of the Giants – Humboldt Redwoods State Park, California

 

(video) Giant Ascent: Chris Sharma Free Climbs Huge Redwood

Minute-4: Spectacular, give-God-glory views from above!!!

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Giant Ascent: Chris Sharma Free Climbs Huge Redwood w/ Help of Scientists

 

(video) Super Trees: Climbing a 3200 year-old Giant Sequoia | Nat Geo Live

This tree is about 3200 years-old and is the 2nd largest tree on earth!

Redwoods get taller though.

How they got the shot!

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Super Trees: Climbing a Giant Sequoia | Nat Geo Live

 

(video) Ground to Crown: Climbing the Giant Sequoia — Slingshot or Crossbow • View from the canopy! • Tiny size of a single seed! • M&M-to-mouth toss record

Redwoods can be 150 feet taller than this giant Sequoia!

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7:25 Slingshot or Crossbow

11:00 View from the canopy!

17:57 Tiny size of a single seed!

18:25 M&M-to-mouth toss record!

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Ground to Crown: Climbing the Giant Sequoia

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