Today's Bird
Sightings:
Plum Island
northern harrier (2)
Canada goose (114)
herring gull (16)
American black duck (2)
American robin (3)
northern mockingbird (1)
red breasted merganser (7)
common loon (1)
northern shrike (1)
song sparrow (1)
starling (about 1000)
Mammals
white tailed deer (1)
Today's Reading:
Reminiscences of a Nonagenarian by Sara Anna
Emery
2001
Book List
Plum
Island Bird List
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Today's
blue tarp photo was taken this afternoon in Boxford - the
next town east of here. The two most common things covered
with blue tarps are firewood and boats. I passed one
driveway where the firewood and the boat were under the same
blue tarp, but it was too dark for a photo by then.
I've been heavily into comparing myself to other people
lately, unfavorably. I think everyone on earth writes better
than I do, or at least proofreads better. I think a blind
monkey could take better photographs than I do. Must be
either a lack of serotonin or a lack of a list of escapades
getting me down.
Speaking of escapades, continuing with my irreverent
irresolution, I note I've only done two things on Jessie's
list of escapades:
- 7.Develop and print a photograph without help.
- I took a photography/darkroom course about 25 years
ago during my black and white period and did make some
nice prints. Can't lay my hands on the box where they're
stashed at the moment so I'll spare you the results. I
don't have a darkroom now and don't want one. I'm much
more interested in the seeing part of photography than in
the making a nice print part of it. Besides that, at the
moment I only have a digital camera. I guess one of my
New Year's resolutions should have been to buy the N80
I've been wanting to replace the stolen Pentax ...
- 8.Learn a foreign language.
- Maybe it's not fair to list this is as an
accomplishment because I was forced to take French from
the 4th grade on. It didn't become a choice until college
and by then I was far enough along that I could actually
enjoy it. I've let it lapse and can barely get by in
French now, but enough of it sticks that I can understand
it if I need to. When the herbarium harridans in Beijing
couldn't find an English speaking person to kick me out
of the conifer collection at lunch time they sent a
French speaking woman who had beautiful pronunciation and
perfect grammar to kick me out. I understood every word
she said perfectly. Never in my wildest dreams did I ever
imagine I would ever use French in China. Then again, I
never imagined I would be in China. At least not
back in 4th grade French class.
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