Monthly Archives: March 2008

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Stone Mountain LIVE - March 22

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[L-R: Carol Noonan, Lisa Saffer, Katie Noonan, Billy McGillvray, Duke Levine, and Tim Ostendorf]
Are these people having too much fun? Quite possibly - but so is the audience.

Stone Mountain LIVE is described as “A Prairie Home Companion”, only from the piney woods of Maine. The description is very accurate.

Between the diverse and really stunning musical performances, the SMAC troupe manages to come up with some pretty bizarre skits — but they are easily on a par with Mr. Keillor. When the snow is up over the windows in March (and this is after it has melted down a foot or so) you can’t really blame anyone for going just a little crazy - but in a good way.

And so what this winter of endless snow gives us is a 7 minute barrage of puns involving the names of towns in Maine punctuated by whistles, kazoos, and horns injected into a potboiler romance story. You had to be there.

For more pictures of the show, visit: http://smac.dmg-photography.com

To get tickets to the next Stone Mountain LIVE, head on over to: http://www.stonemountainartscenter.com

So Much to Learn… So Little Time

Summer Hill, Maynard, Massachusetts

Lots of people ask me where to learn more about photography. Here are some great resources that I use regularly:

1. NatureScapes.net - It has free content, but you get a lot more by joining. The forums give you access to top-notch technical, artistic, and business talent in the field of nature photography.

2. TWIP (This Week In Photography) - TWIP is one of several podcasts shepherded by the Pixel Corps (which I recently joined, but haven’t worked my way into yet). TWIP also has a blog and other activities in Flickr. They are striking that fine line between advanced photography and beginners. If nothing else, listening to their weekly or so podcast is a great way to hear different people’s opinions on photography — as if you happened to walk into a room with a handful of smart photographers yacking on some topic.

3. Luminous Landscape - Michael Reichmann’s site is simply full of great articles, equipment reviews, and opinions from both Michael and other authors. Michael has some great friends, like Jeff Schewe and Alain Briot to name just two. The Luminous Landscape Video Journal (LLVJ) is a quarterly or so, professionally produced, video program which you can subscribe to for a nominal fee. It used to be distributed by DVD, but is staying ahead of the curve with all-digital distribution now. (Bravo!) The Camera to Print video tutorial is worth its weight in gold (but only if you pretend that it actually has weight and weighs a lot…)

4. LensWork - Brooks Jensen sets the bar high for everything he does. LensWork is primarily known as a magazine featuring fine art black&white photography. But you can also subscribe to the extended version which arrives as a CD/DVD with audio interviews, extended galleries, and lots of other goodies. PLUS, Brooks does a “bursty” podcast with short essays on photography that are sure to inspire (or confound).

Each of these resources reflects a different way of getting information and spans a wide variety of photographic interests. Do I read other things? Sure. I’ve got five or six things (including two podcasts) on Adobe Lightroom alone that I track regularly. But the four above are the core that provide ideas, entertainment, and the technical background I need to practice my craft. They work for me. They may not work for you. But if you haven’t given them a look, they are definitely worth sampling.

My final recommendation, whether you are photographer or not, is Art Wolfe’s “Travels to the Edge” series, making its way around PBS. If you can watch it HD, do so! I think I’ve seen each episode five times. And now I just have to visit the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge!

March Arrives

River Ice, Sunset Glow

We received yet another snowfall yesterday. The northeast is on track for a record winter snowfall-wise. I’m not sure our little town is near its records, but up in northern New England, they are getting buried. One town in Maine is over 140 inches and there are weeks to go.

Such is our fate, so the climate models are predicting. Snowier winters and drier summers will increasingly become the norm for New England.

Our river, the Assabet, went to flood stage a week or so ago after snow and rains piled on for a few days. Not so long ago winter in my backyard had the river running slowly and nearly frozen across. In recent years it looks more like the spring thaw - in February.

With luck, in a few weeks time, we’ll be putting our kayaks in the river and start to paddle our way into spring.

AJAXed with AWP