Weathering the Season

These past weeks here in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties have seen odd weather – not seasonally odd – but overall odd.  Thunder and lightning seldom occur here – but they did, in abundance.  Cold weather, and a week of rain.  Now, up into the 70s and 80s, the east winds are blowing dust and pollen everywhere.  Everyone is congested and feeling as if hayfever has descended like a plague.  The winds are drying up people and plants.  Tomorrow, we can expect more rain.

Despite my whining, it has been really lovely to get a week or so of rain.  The problem is the sudden shift from high humidity to low, and the winds just add to the mix by drying everything up more so than just higher temperatures might.  The skies have been beautifully clear and blue, and the clouds are more than usual – the usual is no clouds around here!

After work, a friend and I took our cameras and headed out to a local park in Thousand Oaks, Wildwood Park, which is part of the land dedicated to open space around the city.  This park has meadows and scrub, rocky paths, vistas.  In the early evening, with a week of rain behind us, the winter vegetation is beginning to green up.  Underfoot, the earth gives a little, which feels strange when one is used to a dry, dusty crunch.

The cacti are rather fat and full of water.  The prickly pear have ripening fruit.

Sagebrush flowers are dried, hollow shells, but the leaves erupt in an acrid spiciness when crushed.  While the hills still look burnt from the dryness of the summer, a hint of green may be seen.

The sunset was bright and clear, with a majestic descent of the sun into the western mountains, turning clouds pink and the valley gold, orange, purple, and gone.

 

Sparkles

I am a magpie at heart – I love shiny objects.  As a kid, I used to drive my mother nuts because I liked rhinestone buttons on my dresses and gaudy costume jewelry.  These days, I am more conservative, or at least demonstrate better taste, than I did when I was five years old as far as clothing.  But, I am still irresistibly drawn to sparkles –  splashes in water – spider webs in the morning light – flickery sun in dark shadow.

Today, I returned to the local botanical gardens.  Autumn is settling in.  The sky has a different quality of blue, the light is cool and intense.  The scent of pine needles rises up with the heat of the day.  With me came my Lumix ZS5, and the Canon QL17 GIII.  I took a few pictures with the Canon, and oodles with the Lumix.  This is the luxury of digital – 60 pictures without the cost for processing.

The path I took this morning was one I haven’t taken before.  I always head uphill for some reason, but today I deliberately went downhill.  Here, the garden is more of a woodland, with large California oaks mixed in with other native plants.  The colors are more brown and green in the woodland area of the garden than up the hill, but there are little bright spots here and there of sunshine and shadow, along with lingering flowers and autumnal berries.

What I looked for today, very deliberately, was the contrast of light and dark, of sun and shadow.  I stopped the camera down to -1/3 EV, to keep the camera from making all the light areas washed out.  In the shadows, this creates a bit of drama with contrast.  Compositional elements were a bit more studiously considered as well, such as movement of a tree branch across the picture, a pathway, a stairway.  Some shots I framed with foliage, others I attempted to focus on a specific part, such as a tree leaf, and open the f/stop as much as possible with this camera (which is not more than f/3.3 manual), to blur out the background.

The set on Flickr for today contains images as they came from the camera.  Most of them need some help, I think, but a few of the ones of the oaks are interesting and successful as they stand, I think.  The one below has been cropped.

I am always in conflict about post-processing images, yet it has been done since the early days of photography.  Images have been manipulated by time and f/stop, airbrushing out of unwanted characters who have lost political importance, handpainting.  Processing of film images also influences the final product.

Why should digital images be any different?

A Walk in the Garden

Close Up of Buckeye Flower

The weather this spring is so incredible this year.  There are breezes in off the ocean, the skies are blue, we have cool weather.  And we have had rain.  The result is that flowers are in bloom everywhere, and a few miles down the road, we are blessed with 33 acres of an ever-changing and evolving botanical garden, the Conejo Valley Botanic Garden.  I believe all the plants are native to California, and most are drought tolerant – perfect for the xeriscape garden – and incredibly beautiful.

California Buckeye
In the Cactus Garden
Matilija Poppies
Close Up of Matilija Poppy
Close Up of Monkey Flower
Penstemon
California Pepper Tree
One of the Many Varieties in the Salvia Garden
Oak Trees
Mystery Plant

Yarns of the City – 30 May 2009

Eva’s Needlework, Thousand Oaks, CA

People of talent are found everywhere.  In particular, I like Eva Wiechmann of Eva’s Needlework. She’s a creative designer, having a number of books out. She has a series of books out called Pursenalities – lots of purse patterns, knitted, crocheted, and felted. Her newest one is called Simple Stitches, which contains sweaters and tops.  You can purchase these books at her online store.

If you are in passing through Thousand Oaks, check out her store. It’s the kind of yarn store I enjoy – jammed with stuff. She has an excellent selection of pattern books (in addition to her own). Samples from her books are on display, too, which gives the knitter a chance to see what they really look like.