here's my feeble feedback. |
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I've been scribbling down stuff for years.. some good, some bad, some ugly. Found these today in the garage when I was cleaning up cat shit. These range from somewhere between good and bad.. to bad, and I'm thinking from the late 80's. I'll stop if ya's gag, otherwise, I might turn over a few more cat turds and see what I can find. |
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Last edited by Flavour of Night; 07-13-2009 at 03:45 PM.
here's my feeble feedback. |
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well thanks, folks. So far, I guess I'm my own worst critic. |
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I guess I can slap up some photos too. I'm mostly an outdoor/nature shooter, but I've got a tendency to take a lot of my grandson too.. Of course, I like to combine the two and capture him interacting with the outdoors. |
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Last edited by Flavour of Night; 07-14-2009 at 04:55 AM.
The rhododendrum is the king of the understory in the Southern Appalachians. June is the month that this shrub, which grows big as trees in the moist conditions of the mountains down here, flowers in mad profusion. We've got two varieties, the larger-leafed white rosebay, and the smaller-leafed purple to pink catawba. I prefer the catawba when it's in flower. Both can form thickets, hells, slicks, lettuce-beds, patches, etc... as I call them, that can make cross-country travel not a matter of miles-per-hour, but rather a matter of hours-per-mile. Voluntarily and involuntary expletives are the norm when threading a route through this stuff (and just try to use a map and compass when all around you is impenetrable green). Interestingly enough (perhaps) is the fact that rhododendrum is often referred to locally as laurel, though laurel is more properly the mountain laurel, with pink-highlighted hexagonal white flowers that bloom in May, a bit earlier than the rhododendrum. |
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Last edited by Flavour of Night; 07-14-2009 at 04:56 AM.
The 1,000 square miles inside the Great Smoky Mountains National Park are my stomping ground. I've stomped 3,500 miles through the park, but sometimes you gotta switch hands, so to speak, to keep from getting bored. So I've put in a miscellaneous 500 miles elsewhere. |
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Last edited by Flavour of Night; 07-14-2009 at 04:14 AM.
I was going to reply with three simple words: "I am impressed," but I blew it. |
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They sure as hell aren't Red Spruce or Frasier Fir. Unless I am wildly mistaken, they are Eastern Hemlock. |
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Last edited by Flavour of Night; 07-14-2009 at 05:28 AM.
Thanks! Very educational, as usual. |
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I put it to MoS or any other outdoors type that my buddy Adam is doing no fewer than 3 stupid things here. Can you identify them? |
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Last edited by Flavour of Night; 07-14-2009 at 08:31 AM.
lovely photos, dan. |
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I see too much fuel, too close to gear and a nice bed of dry leaves (unless they're wet). It also appears that he is sitting down wind from the giant flame, along with the gear. Is that a plastic canteen almost close enough to be melted in the heat from the flames? I can't tell how close it really is by the picture. |
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Art
The ability to happily respond to any adversity is the divine.
Dream Journal Shaman Apprentice Chronicles
i see all the same things as you, xaqaria. |
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Everything Xaq said, except I'm pretty sure that's fuel, not a water bottle? Can't really tell, but the neck looks funky. Could be a Guyot-style though. |
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It's not a canteen, it's a 22 oz alumimum fuel bottle (and this trip was only a 2 nighter, get a smaller bottle, jackass!). Really more properly, he's being an idiot because he didn't prime the stove correctly. That fireball is coming out of the burner. The vaporizer loop is obviously still cold, else he'd have a nice blue flame and not currently be the subject of ridicule. Points for all the others. Oh, and he's not leveled the stove, and he's drunk. |
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Thanks. |
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Last edited by Flavour of Night; 07-15-2009 at 09:26 AM.
Meet Kain's friend Ratty. Ratty is a stuffed rat, a perfectly normal friend to a four year old boy. |
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hahaha. i don't like kids much but he's pretty damn funny. |
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The dot in the middle of this one isn't a defect in the picture, it's an underwater rock.. just barely breaking the surface.. quite neat and odd. I'll just shut-up for a change and post: |
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The picture of the lake is breathtaking. |
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Starry starry night, paint your pallet blue and gray,
Look out on a summers day,
with eyes that know the darkness of my soul.
CB, Barbara Lake, Wind River Range, Wyoming. |
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Last edited by Flavour of Night; 07-16-2009 at 06:54 AM.
i like your picture more. like waaay more. |
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