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Tuesday April 16, 2013

Posted by Dave Updegraff on April 16, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized.

Hurstville Duck Pond 08/31/2012

It’s been awhile since my last blog post.  A combination of events have kept me from bloviating  however today I am back and hopefully there will be a more predictable schedule for my posts.  Above is an image of the Hurstville Duck Pond I made last August 31, 2012.  The severe drought we experienced left the marsh bone dry and exposed the young goslings and other young to the whims of a variety of predators.   It was very sad to watch the loss of the pond and the lack of wildlife.  It is one of my favorite spots to just sit and observe.

Over the last few weeks we have experienced a significant amount of rain and nasty weather.  While that has dampened some spirits to be sure it has produced wonderful results to farm ponds in general and to the Duck Pond specifically.

Hurstville Duck Pond 04/15/2013

So as you can see from this image the Duck Pond is at full capacity (water wise) and it has a pretty healthy supply of geese, ducks, and occasionally some swans stop by.  Lots of little coots are there as well.  It has been a real treat to drive by the pond and see the abundance of water and all the wildlife that is frequenting the pond.

Geese nesting at Hurstville Pond

Many of the geese have constructed their nests and are preparing for their young to be born.  Once again the nesting mounds provide safety from 4 legged predators and it won’t be too long before there are a lot of new goslings swimming in the ponds.

On those rare occasions that I don’t have a lunch appointment it is my favorite place to be.  I usually grab a sandwich and sit in my car watching all the activity.  Grabbing a shot now and again is just a bonus.

I hope you had a good Monday and will enjoy your Tuesday.  I have a Chamber function tomorrow evening so I may not get a post done but will try to get back to a regular routine shortly.  Thanks for sticking with me.  Be careful.

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Wednesday April 10, 2013

Posted by Dave Updegraff on April 10, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized.

Food From The Fat Farm

A lot of the blogs I follow and for that matter a lot of Face Book folks I follow have a tendency of showing shots of their food in their posts.  I’ve always enjoyed seeing those images especially some of the more exotic concoctions.  The problem is I don’t like to take my DLSR into a restaurant to only take a picture of my food.

What to do.  I suppose I could use my smart phone camera but I’ve never been a big fan of those.  I know some people swear by the iPhone camera and I have version 5.0 but I really don’t like taking pictures with it.   So today I’m having lunch with my friend Dave and I decide to whip out my new point and shoot camera and take a picture of my food.

“What the hell are you doing?” was his first response.  🙂  Taking a picture of my food.  Then he gave me the look as if to say are you stupid?  Obviously he is not into food photography.

Nikon PNP

So last week I got an email from Nikon (I’m a good customers of theirs) and they recognize that I have NAS (Nikon Acquisition Syndrome) so they periodically send me offers that cannot be refused.   Well last week there was such an offer.  It was for a little point and shoot camera that was being discontinued and it was being offered for a great price.  I had enough reward points saved up that I was able to buy this little guy for under $50.

I wish I would have had it earlier in my 365 project as there are many times during the day that I would take a quick picture of something if I had a decent camera with me.  The only downside is it doesn’t shoot in RAW but it is a 14 mp camera and takes decent shots.

Now for the really bad news.  This was my second plate full.  I’m so bad and then I wonder why I am not losing any weight.  😦

Thanks for stopping by.  Enjoy your midweek hump day.  Be careful.

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Monday April 08, 2013

Posted by Dave Updegraff on April 8, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized.

Gabby

Happy Monday.  A more productive weekend than normal.  I actually got a few things on my to-do list accomplished.  Before you get too worried I was still able to procrastinate about a lot of stuff that needs to be done including our taxes.  😦

Saturday Jeanne and I enjoyed an outing and as usual we ended up down by the river.  Mostly open water now but not much wildlife activity except for a lot of ring billed gulls.  No eagles and only a very few geese.  We also stopped at the 16th Street Basin but again it was mostly gulls.  We had lunch at the Mason-Dixon Saloon.  I usually like to eat there but we had a waitress with an attitude problem and the food wasn’t up to their normal standard.  May not go back there for awhile.

Joshua

Sunday we met some good friends Greg, Deb, and Sara at a relatively new restaurant for breakfast after church.  I ordered the “wrecker”  and the waitress said “Oh, My God.”  Well it wasn’t that bad.  The “wrecker” is  three scrambled eggs, 4 strips of bacon, two sausage patties, hash browns and toast.  It was supposed to be three pancakes as well but she forgot those (which was okay with me.)  I was not hungry the rest of the day and didn’t have any dinner.  So when you spread the “wrecker” out over two meals it sounds much better.  🙂

Josh and Moma Jeanne

As you can see from the images above we ended the day by paying a quick visit with Angie and Ben.  We were only there about 30 minutes but we crammed a lot into those precious minutes.  So a very nice conclusion to a good weekend.

Camera specs:  Nikon D4 | Nikon 28 – 300 mm lens | Nikon SB800 speed light with modifier | ISO 100 1/60 sec @ f8.0 

I hope you enjoyed your weekend as well.  Thanks for checking out the blog.  Enjoy your Monday, it’s here all day long.  Be careful.

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Saturday April 06, 2013

Posted by Dave Updegraff on April 6, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized.

Burroughs Class 1 Model 9 Bank Posting Machine

I was at one of our smaller branch banks this week and although I was vaguely aware of this great old bank posting (adding) machine I had forgotten about it.  This time I happen to have my camera with me so after my meeting I took a few minutes to look over this piece of history and capture a few images.  The book beside the machine is the original handbook of instructions.  The machine itself weighs 63 pounds and I have no idea what the metal stand (specifically built for the machine) would weigh.

Burroughs Calss 1 Model 9 Adding Machine

A Google search of the model number retrieved some interesting facts.  This Burroughs Class 1 was one of the most spectacular adding machines made. It was quite imposing at 19″ deep, over a foot tall and more than 63 lbs. It had beveled glass walls on 3 sides allowing viewing of the rocking segment mechanism. (The segments and key stops are seen clearly in the front window.)

The printing mechanism was “blind” meaning the user couldn’t see numbers as printed because they were behind the large machine. However, there was also a numeric register at the front of the machine just above the Burroughs logo. The printer had a wide carriage with a paper length setting and an end of page bell.

The red keys at the top allowed individual clearing of each column. The “C” key cleared the entire keyboard and the “R” key allowed repeated additions for multiplication. Total and Subtotal keys were also included.

These machines were made from 1905-1914 in models with 9, 11, and 17 digits – this 63 pounder is the smallest model. Options included fractions, dates, counting, and electric drive. There was also a similar class 2 series with two registers and a “transfer total” key to move numbers between the registers. Prices ranged from approximately $300 to more than $900 — Certainly not a trivial amount of money at the time.

Probably way more than you ever wanted to know about an obsolete adding machine but at least you can say you now know something you didn’t before reading this blog.  🙂

Thanks for stopping by.  Enjoy your Saturday they are so precious.  Be careful.

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Friday April 05, 2013

Posted by Dave Updegraff on April 5, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized.

Gary Takes Off From Maquoketa Airport

I had a meeting at one of our branches yesterday morning and my friend Gary (President of one of our banks) flew to Maquoketa to attend the meeting.  I picked him up at the Maquoketa airport and after the meeting I photographed his take off and departure.  I was his first passenger a couple of years ago right after Gary got his pilot’s license.   In fact I posted a video of our landing on YouTube.

Close up of Gary

The point of today’s post is not necessarily about the airplane or even Gary although both are very interesting subjects to write about.  It’s more about the Nikon D800 DLSR and its remarkable 36.6 megapixel sensor.  I shot this take off with the D800 and the new Nikon 80 – 400 f4.5-5.6 ED VR Lens.  Not the best camera for shooting action scenes because of its slow 4fps capacity.  But the level of detail it captures also makes it the perfect camera for these types of shots.  So it’s a trade-off.  Frame speed for level of detail.

Up Close And Personal

The file size is over 7,900 pixels wide (huge.) I cropped this shot down to 940 pixels and then enlarged it to 1200 pixels for the format of this blog.  It is starting to get a little grainy at this level but look at the detail.  I would guess that he was 600 feet in the air and about 500 feet away from me.  I was just amazed at the results when I was processing this photo this morning.  Keep in mind this is the same photo as the first one in this post.

Well that’s it for today.  Enjoy your Friday.  Thanks for stopping by and be careful.

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Thursday April 04, 2013

Posted by Dave Updegraff on April 4, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized.

Lake at Green Island

I like this image even though you may look at it and wonder what the subject is.  The eye is not drawn to any particular spot or salient point in the image.   Aside from some sharpening and white balance this is pretty much what came out of the camera.

Earlier in the week I told you about a story our Pastor told on Sunday.  It is about an article published in the Star Tribune, written by Jon Telvin and published March 17, 2012.  I liked it so much I wanted to share it with you.  It is a little long but worth the read.  Enjoy…

Sally Packard had waited seven months to get the chance to talk to the teenager who stole her car, and with it some of her independence.

The car, a 1989 Dodge, wasn’t worth much. But it was important to Packard, 76, because she needed it to drive to mass at the Church of St. Peter in Richfield every morning. It also got her to doctors appointments at Hennepin County Medical Center three times a week.

When Packard finally got to meet the boy, 17, in Hennepin County Juvenile Court recently, she started with a quote:

“When we forgive, we don’t deny the hurt that we have received. We don’t deny that it was wrong, but we acknowledge that there is more to the offender than the offense.”

Already, Packard had the boy’s attention. But she also had the attention of Judge Kathryn Quaintance and the lawyers and court staff in the room.

Packard went on to tell how she was called to the impound lot several days after the car was stolen and found it totaled and filled with garbage. Her driver’s license was gone, along with religious books and a rosary given to Packard by her mother.

Then Packard talked about being a foster mom for about 50 kids, many of them who had been abused and neglected, and how much she empathized with the young man standing before her in court.

“I personally know most of these kids have not been parented, and maybe their parents haven’t either, or maybe they got into the wrong crowd, or got into drugs,” she said.

“I would like [the teen] to know that I pray for him and the other two [boys who were with him] daily, and that it is not too late for them,” Packard continued. “I would also like these boys to think of their own families. Would they want their families to experience what I have?”

“Again, please let [the boy] know that I sincerely care about him, and I am praying for his redirection and rehabilitation,” she said. “A good life awaits him, if he will just choose a new path. God bless.”

Packard then asked the judge if she could give the young man two stones. One said “Hope,” the other said, “A special prayer for you.”

The young man took the stones, and began to sob.

“The hurt, I never thought of that,” said the teen. “I’m really sorry. I regret this decision. I’m sorry for all of the hurt that I caused you.”

“I care. Lots of people care about you,” said Packard.

Then Packard did something none of the people in the courtroom had seen before, she hugged the person who had upset her life. He squeezed her hard and sobbed.

By now, everyone in the courtroom was crying. For years, many of them had watched hardened, defiant kids and angry, vindictive victims.

But nothing like this.

Judge Quaintance, known to be stern and no-nonsense, finally spoke from the bench.

“I think many of us have been doing this work for a very, very long time, and I have never seen such a powerful moment in my career,” Quaintance said.

“The [teen’s] recognition that you had an impact on somebody, that this is not an anonymous hurt, this is a personal hurt,” said the judge. “[It] just so happened that you by chance chose as a victim somebody who can change your life.”

After court, Quaintance was so moved, she sent me an e-mail:

“It was the genuine concern and love for this kid who stole her car that blew us all away,” wrote Quaintance. “It was a miracle.”

Packard did not want the teen to pay restitution for her car because he’d lost his job. He did have to pay $500 for another charge, something that worried Packard.

A few days after the court hearing, Packard sat in her small Minneapolis home and talked about the experience. “When the police told me [the car thieves] were underage, I just kept praying for them,” she said.

She recalled the hurt in the teen’s eyes as she spoke in court. “He was hugging me so hard I couldn’t believe it,” Packard said. “I felt everybody in that room was affected. I’m not sure what happened, but I call it a spiritual moment. That was God.”

Packard said she knows judges and lawyers toil away without praise, and often get jaded because they deal daily with violence and sorrow.

“There is often so much disillusionment,” she said. “I found myself thinking that everybody there needed this. Everybody needed the kind of attention that boy got. We all need some source of value in our lives.

Thanks for stopping by.  Enjoy your Thursday and be careful.

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Wednesday April 03, 2013

Posted by Dave Updegraff on April 3, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized.
Kevin and Ann Burns with a Trumpeter Swan

Nikon D4 | Nikon 28 – 300 mm lens | ISO 100 1/640 sec @ f8.0 EV-7

Enjoyable event late yesterday afternoon.   I left work about 30 minutes early and drove down to Green Island to watch and photograph the Jackson County Interpretive Center release 3 swan cygnets back into the wild.  Shown in this image are my friends Kevin and Ann Burns.  Ann is a Naturalist for the Iowa DNR and Kevin works for our organization.  There has been a decades long project in Iowa to reintroduce Trumpeter Swans back in the main wildlife echo system.  They at one time were almost extinct and have since been brought back from the brink by efforts like the one at the Interpretive Center.

Ready for the release

Nikon D4 | Nikon 28 – 300 mm lens | ISO 100 1/640 sec @ f8.0 EV-7

The female swan at the Interpretive Center has a damaged wing and can never fly again.  They were able to acquire a male from another source and so each year the couple have 3 – 5 cygnets and they are then reintroduced into the wild.  Quite a process.  Although I had to shoot directly into the sun I did want to get an image of them before they were released.  The people attending the release stood on either side of the ramp so the swans had to go to the water.

Safety and freedom at last

Nikon D4 | Nikon 28 – 300 mm lens | ISO 100 1/640 sec @ f8.0 EV-7

There were about 30 – 35 people there for the release.  Ann did about a 20 minute talk on the Swans and the efforts to save them from extinction.  She showed the difference between a chicken egg, goose egg, and a swan egg.  The thing that really surprised me was just how big they are.  I have taken hundreds of photographs of swans and was never really aware of how big they are.  When you get up close and personal with them they are huge.

Home

Nikon D4 | Nikon 28 – 300 mm lens | ISO 100 1/640 sec @ f8.0 EV-7

Kevin let the one he had free and she ran, flapping and tooting to the water, then calm as could be she just swam away.  The others followed soon after and then all three were out in the middle of the small lake, swimming like they had been there for weeks.  It was an enjoyable experience.  Cold and windy but enjoyable none the less.  I was also surprised by the number of iPads there.  Many people used their iPads for movies of the event and to take pictures.

That’s it for today.  Spring is coming, it’s just taking its sweet time of it.  Thanks for stopping by.  Enjoy your day and be careful.

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Tuesday April 02, 2013

Posted by Dave Updegraff on April 2, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized.

April-01-2013-A

I enjoyed my impromptu day off yesterday.  Spent a lot of time doing nothing constructive and that in and of itself can be enjoyable to me.  I know that a day off like that for some people would drive them crazy.  There are friends of mine who have to be doing something all the time.  I can be happy just doing nothing.  🙂

After my extensive session of doing nothing (actually I did take several video lessons on macro photography, exercised, and read a little) I went over to Angie and Ben’s home.  Jeanne has this week off for Spring Break  and she is helping Angie get settled into a new routine.  So I went over to see my Grand Kids.  I like the sound of that.  The image above is the only image of Gabby I could capture with her eyes open and they were only open for a couple of seconds.

April-01-2013-B

No Joshua is not sad although it seems he is in this image.  He always does this when I first take a picture of him.  He is waiting for the flash to go off.  In subsequent images he will smile but this was the only close up of him I could get yesterday.  He was very busy playing with his Easter toys.

Megan Mouldenhauer (a long time friend of Angie) and her Mother Lisa were also there.  Megan brought two photo books of her recent trips to China.  She went over there for the pharmaceutical company she works for.  She also went to Africa on an extended vacation but didn’t have those photos put together yet.  Wow, I’ve got to get out more.  🙂

That’s it for today.  Hope you enjoy your Tuesday.  Thanks for checking out the blog.  Please be careful.

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Monday April 01, 2013

Posted by Dave Updegraff on April 1, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized.

Ben and Joshua

Happy Monday.  Wonderful Easter day yesterday.  I hope you enjoyed it as well.  Started off with a very nice service at Church and a truly remarkable story as told by our Pastor.  I’ll share that with you another time.  After Church, Jeanne and I took a little drive to our favorite places on the river.  We enjoyed watching the gulls, geese, and ducks.  We didn’t see any eagles flying so most of them have probably moved on North.

Taylor, Mark, Gabby, and Joshua

We finished up the day at Angie and Ben’s.  Got to spend some quality time with our new Granddaughter and of course Joshua.  Joshua had been taking a nap and was still asleep when we arrived When Ben brought him down it took him a little while to warm up.  A high school friend (and her husband) of Angie was there to visit and see Gabby as well so there were a lot of people in the room when he woke up that weren’t then when he started his nap. 🙂

Angie and Gabby

We had a wonderful dinner and a great visit. We were joined by Mark and Taylor.  Mark informed us that he will graduate this May.  That is so exciting.  He has really pulled it together and I am very proud of him and how he has handled both the successes and the challenges of college life.

Hope you enjoy your Monday.  I decided to take a PTO today and get a little more Gabby and Josh time.  Hopefully see you tomorrow.  Thanks for stopping by.  Be careful.

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Easter Sunday March 31, 2013

Posted by Dave Updegraff on March 31, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized.

Angie and Josh share a moment

Happy Easter.  He is risen!!

I was looking over last week’s images and found this image that I had overlooked.  I thought I would share it with you today on this very special day.

Enjoy your day, your family and your faith.  Be careful.

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