Here are a few photos - and not one of my dog which is uncommon - I might have to remedy that later. 
Just a few I dug out from my composition class that I don't think suck too much. Includes some notes. Unless otherwise noted, they're shot with a Canon 20D DSLR. They are unretouched since the class didn't allow any photoshop work. (composition in camera)
All natural light - no lighting permitted.
Crocus Vernus Upus Closeus

f/1.1 (yes, that's not a typo...), 1/60sec, Canon XI 98mm f/1.1 fixed, My Backyard where Spring has Sprung!, ISO 100, Matrix Metering, Manual.Playing with a lens that I acquired from a friend who was cleaning out their garage. It's an f/1.1 fixed focal length Cannon lens. Amazingly shallow depth of field and quick with the light! Still had to shoot inbetween the breeze which seems like a 10.0 earthquake from that close.
Toad In A Hole

f/64, 3sec, Autobellows w/135mm, ISO-200, Manual Exposure, Exposure Comp. +0.7stop, Metered Pattern.
This is the most difficult photograph I've ever made. It was my first field shot with the new and incredibly complicated macro gear. All those dials-and-knobs-and-plungers when dealing with a live and active subject will take some getting used to! It was taken in natural light with very deep DoF. It's not perfect IMHO. I wish the rock on the right foreground was in focus.
On The Right Track

f/7.1, 1/100, 55mm.
Ant Flower

(Nothing Recorded)
Stroke!

f/5.6, 1/250, 70-300 @ 140mm, Pattern Metering in AV - ISO 100. Taken just before sunset on Lake Natomas, CA.
Deliberately broke the split-horizon rule in order to catch the setting sun's rays. Did it work? I think it's kinda mediocre.
Windblown Sparkles

Metering: Matrix, 70-300 @ 135mm (216mm @ 35equiv)
Lake Natomas at Sunset, Folsom, CA.
Slow And Steady

f/64, 1/2sec, 105mm, shot in my backyard in Folsom CA about 1am.
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