• About
  • ART CARDS
  • THE DRAWING ROOM
  • DESIGN WORK
  • GALLERY I
    • GALLERY II
    • GALLERY III
    • GALLERY IV: THE ANCIENT PALETTE
  • Label Design

Backyardnotes

~ All things botanical in photos and words—in my West Seattle garden and elsewhere; seeing and creating art and assorted musings.

Backyardnotes

Category Archives: Cameras

SOME WINTER SUNSHINE

27 Monday Feb 2012

Posted by backyardnotes in Cameras, Desert, Flowers, Travel, Winter

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

clematis, crocus, Death Valley, hamamelis, hellebores, railroad locomotive, sunshine, Travel, winter cyclamen, winter flowers

Hiking above Texas Spring campground, Death Valley

WE TOOK A BREAK IN JANUARY IN SEARCH OF SUNSHINE and warmth. It’s hard to believe it has been more than two months since the last post! And now I’ve gotten out of the blogging habit. So time to do some catching up. We spent a total of eleven days in Death Valley over two visits, and explored some old and new territory in Arizona and California. We took ten great hikes in 30 days and plenty of short walks too. So much to see and explore…

Los Banos Reservoir walk

I’m not used to thinking of my phone as a camera, but on this trip I tried to use it as well as the point and shoot. Mixed results with the phone camera; this photo was taken at Los Banos Creek Reservoir St. Park (California) turned out pretty well. This was our first time here and we were the first visitors of the year!

Front of Death Valley railroad locomotive

I had forgotten to bring the regular camera when we walked through the Death Valley museum so used the opportunity to take some ‘arty’ photos with the phone.

Big logging wagon wheels

I managed to take more than 700! photos in 32 days and still have a lot of culling to do. Will post more later.

WHILE WE WERE AWAY the winter blooming clematis that we planted in 2010 began blooming in earnest. Masses of blooms and still blooming!

Clematis cirrohsa

Everywhere around the garden the drive to spring is in full swing.

Hamamelis x intermedia 'Diane"

A yellow variety of hamamelis x intermedia

WINTER’S SENTINELS. I like to think of crocus this way. A bridge between winter and spring. Some are sunny and cheerful, others taller and stately and in a range of colors.

Giant crocus–purple 'Pickwick' with white 'Peter Pan'.

These giant crocus are quite tall at four-five inches tall. Good multipliers, not too vigorous.

HELLEBORES! These cheerful, nodding flowers also show up in many color variations. White, pink, pale yellow, maroon, green, and nearly black. They tend to be free hybridizers so offspring can be a surprise.

An unnamed, lovely pale yellow specimen

Pink ones from Grandma T's garden

Another dark pink/red variation.

We have lots of sun over the last few days, so I’ve tried to take advantage of the naturally backlit petals.

Dried seedheads of eryngium giganteum 'Miss Wilmot's Ghost".

Even the dried seedheads of long ago bloomed perennials have interest through the winter garden season.

Lichens on ribes sanguineum.

Even the bare branches and trunks of shrubs and trees can be beautiful with the icy, glaucous color of these fluffy lichens and spots of mustard colored ones too with counterpoints of swelling buds of this native flowering red currant.

And to end this sunny day post parade are winter blooming cyclamen. I never tire of their dainty disposition.

winter blooming cyclamen

Share this:

  • LinkedIn
  • More
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

NIPPED BY FROST

10 Saturday Dec 2011

Posted by backyardnotes in At the beach, Cameras, Winter

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Frost, point and shoot camera, red cabbage

YESTERDAY MORNING WE HAD A VERY HEAVY FROST and on a whim I took the camera along on my walk to Lincoln Park and snapped a few pictures as the sun was just lighting up the beach and every frosted thing on it. I am always surprised by what I can coax out of this point-and-shoot.

A fallen madrone on the beach.

Back at home in the vegetable garden, a lovely and frosty red cabbage.

Share this:

  • LinkedIn
  • More
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

IS THERE LIFE WITHOUT CAMERAS & BLOGGING?

30 Wednesday Mar 2011

Posted by backyardnotes in Cameras, Musings, The Blog

≈ Leave a comment

WELL, OF COURSE THERE IS. It has been nearly a month since the last post and I must admit that I have felt lost without a camera; I used one nearly everyday for the past ten years. And, what is a blog without photos to share?

OTHER pursuits took precedence over blogging after the camera malfunctioned and life continued on. I made some wonderful orange jam (not marmalade) and orange pepper jelly with sweet, juicy oranges that I bought on our way home from our desert trip;

I finished some art projects; I tried to catch up on my travel journal; my sisters, a nephew and I helped my mother hang quilts for her guild’s show, and my husband and I went to Vancouver, B.C. to celebrate our 30th wedding anniversary (hooray)…

where I surprised him with a new point-and-shoot camera (Nikon Coolpix S9100) that he tried out in Vancouver’s Chinatown.

He had wanted something more simple than the camera that died and point-and-shoots have come a long way in the six years since the last camera purchase. So, now there is one functioning camera in the house while I continue to research the camera that’s right for me.

The detail captured with the 18x zoom is pretty impressive (and this is slightly out of focus).

We retraced a few honeymoon steps and spent the first day of spring with a walk through Lighthouse Park at Horseshoe Bay and tried to recapture a photo of the lighthouse that I took thirty years ago.

This day it was sunny and not as moody as the first time.

We finished the afternoon at Queen Elizabeth park and a trip through the Blodel Conservatory.

And a walk through the large quarry garden. Similar in nature to the one at Butchart Garden, but quite a bit smaller. The weather was quite delightful and returned to northwest normal the next day—rain.

Now to catch up to what is happening in the garden here and perhaps a few last notes about Death Valley.

P.S. Welcome to WordPress, Fabricgirl66 (see link in blogroll).

Share this:

  • LinkedIn
  • More
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

DEATH OF A CAMERA

27 Sunday Feb 2011

Posted by backyardnotes in Cameras

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Cameras

IN DEATH VALLEY the Canon PowerShot S2 IS camera started doing some weird things. Funny double beeps, the lens would extend part way and get stuck and then shut off. Then it was fine for a few days and the last two days it was completely unpredictable. One day it did not work, the last day it did. And, over the couple weeks since we returned home it seemed fine. But last week it finally quit. Tom bought it in October 2005. I cursed it and then learned how to get along with it.  It displays an E18 error code and from a little sleuthing online, I found that it is a problem with the motor and could cost anywhere from $150-$300 to repair. The lens is stuck in a partially extended state and unusable. So I will take it into Glazer’s (where it was purchased) and see if it is worth repairing or if I am now in the market for a replacement (which I can now justify, I think).

I feel kind of lost without it…my old Sony Mavica is not reliable anymore either and spring bulbs are starting to bloom!

Share this:

  • LinkedIn
  • More
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

Archives

Recent Posts

  • OUT WITH THE OLD POND, IN WITH THE NEW WATER FEATURE
  • WINNING SUBMISSION AND NEW DIRECTIONS
  • WHISPERS OF SPRING
  • NOT EXACTLY CANNING…
  • A GIFT OF WINTER APPLES

Art

  • ABC Typography
  • Annerose Georgeson
  • ArtPlantae Today
  • Drawing in Color
  • Fonts
  • Gage Academy of Art
  • Kapitza
  • Kathleen McKeehen
  • Katie Lee
  • Late Start Studio
  • New York Central Art Supply
  • Painting of the day
  • PastelPointers blog
  • The Postman's Knock
  • Wagonized
  • Wordle

Birds

  • Bird Note

Blogroll

  • A Gardener's Table
  • A Way to Garden
  • Annerose Georgeson
  • Backyardnotes\’s Blog
  • cold climate gardening
  • Homeward Bounty
  • The Fresh Loaf
  • West Seattle Blog
  • West Seattle Herald
  • WordPress.com
  • WordPress.org

Bugs!

  • BugGuide
  • What's that bug?

Butterflies

  • North American Butterfly Association

Canning & Preserving

  • A Gardener's Table
  • Canning Across America
  • Fermentista
  • Food in Jars
  • National Center for Home Food Preservation
  • Phickle.com
  • Well Preserved

Creative & Handmade

  • Aunt Peaches
  • BackyardDesigns
  • RedClothespin
  • Whirlygig Fashion

Design

  • ABC Typography
  • Before and After Magazine
  • Clients from Hell
  • Communication Arts
  • Font Bros.
  • Fonts
  • Kapitza
  • My Fonts
  • The Graphics Fairy
  • The Postman's Knock
  • Typographica.org
  • Wordle

Font Love!

  • Emigre
  • Font Bros.
  • Fonts
  • Hoefler & Co. Typography
  • Kapitza
  • My Fonts
  • The Postman's Knock
  • Typographica.org
  • Wordle

Food & Drink

  • David Lebovitz
  • Indian Simmer
  • Jeffrey Morgenthaler
  • Punk Domestics
  • Rose Levy Beranbaum
  • Serious Eats
  • Tapas Bonitas
  • The British Larder

Gardening

  • A Gardener's Table
  • cold climate gardening
  • Cornell Plant Pathology Vegetable Disease Web Page
  • Hellebores
  • Hosta library
  • Johnny's Seeds
  • Naylor Creek Gardens
  • North American Butterfly Association
  • Not Dabbling In Normal
  • Territorial Seed Company
  • Wells Medina Nursery
  • West Seattle Nursery
  • What's that bug?

Inspiration

  • Toom-ah? What Stinkin' toomah?

It's About Life

  • Toom-ah? What Stinkin' toomah?

Let's Eat!

  • Anson Mills
  • Five and Spice
  • food52
  • Northwest Sourdough
  • The Artisan
  • The British Larder
  • The Cook's Thesaurus
  • The Fresh Loaf
  • Wild Yeast

Painting & Drawing

  • Annerose Georgeson
  • ArtPlantae Today
  • Draw a stickman
  • Drawing in Color
  • Gage Academy of Art
  • Kathleen McKeehen
  • Katie Lee
  • Painting of the day
  • PastelPointers blog
  • Wagonized

Plant love

  • Flower World
  • Hellebores
  • Hosta library
  • Naylor Creek Gardens
  • USDA Plants database
  • Wells Medina Nursery
  • West Seattle Nursery

Shops

  • BackyardDesigns
  • RedClothespin
  • Whirlygig Fashion

Vegetables

  • Johnny's Seeds
  • Territorial Seed Company

West Seattle

  • West Seattle Blog
  • West Seattle Herald

Categories

Blogs I Follow

  • grow it cook it can it
  • Red Road Diaries
  • A Gardener's Table
  • Backyardnotes
  • WordPress.com

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 64 other subscribers

apples Art birds black radish brussels sprouts cabbage camelias camping canning clematis compost cranberries crocus dahlias Daikon radish Death Valley desert Drawing fall fava beans food friendship gardening Gardening garlic hamamelis harvest hellebores herbs hiking hostas iris lavender mangoes mixed media mustard greens narcissus nature New Orleans nicandra painting pears peas peonies peppers pesto Pickled asparagus pickles pickling planting plants poetry poetry exchange poppies preserving Radishes rain roses Sandhill Cranes seedlings Sisters snow Spring Spring flowers sunshine tetons tomatoes Travel trillium tulips vegetable garden volunteer plants volunteer seedlings wildflowers winter cyclamen winter flowers

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 64 other subscribers

April flowers Art Canning & Preserving Cooking & Eating Fall Flowers Fun in the Garden Growing Harvest Inspriation Jellies & Preserves March flowers Spring Spring bulbs Spring flowers Summer! Tomatoes Travel tulips Uncategorized Vegetable garden Weather West Seattle garden Winter Winter flowers

No Instagram images were found.

BYN_IG

No Instagram images were found.

Blog at WordPress.com.

grow it cook it can it

Red Road Diaries

Musings from the back roads

A Gardener's Table

Celebrating the Harvest

Backyardnotes

All things botanical in photos and words—in my West Seattle garden and elsewhere; seeing and creating art and assorted musings.

WordPress.com

WordPress.com is the best place for your personal blog or business site.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Follow Following
    • Backyardnotes
    • Join 64 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Backyardnotes
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d bloggers like this: