I want to just lay down in a pile of snow right now…

Photo #448: SnowbirdLocation Taken: Arcadia, Michigan
Time Taken: December 2007

Summer has come, and the high temperatures with it.

Today, it was hot enough to melt my chocolate! Do you know how irritating it is to reach for a tasty treat and find it all gooey and sticky when it shouldn’t be?! Do you know that re-solidified chocolate has a different texture, one that’s not quite as nice?!

I want to live in a place where it never gets hot enough to melt chocolate in its packaging…

But for now, I shall just look at snow pictures and try not to melt myself.

  

One step forward, half a step back…

Photo #447: Sand Dune ClimbLocation Taken: Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore, Indiana
Time Taken: October 2006

Have you ever climbed a sand dune?

I know, for most people, it’s never been an option. Sand dunes only show up in a few areas, and we humans tend to prefer living in areas with firmer ground. Still, you can find sand dunes along a lot of beaches around the world, so there’s a chance you might have been to one.

The sand dunes on the eastern shore of Lake Michigan are impressively large.

The sand comes from rock ground up by the glaciers that carved the hole that became the lake, and by the waters that filled that hole. And Lake Michigan is right below the jet stream most of the years, with frontal storm systems going across it frequently. The winds from that just add to the normal coastal winds to push the sand onto the shore, piling it higher and higher as the years go by.

These sand dunes get to be hundreds of feet tall. Though part of it is just that there’s enough moisture in the area that plants grow on the dunes and lock down the sand enough that it doesn’t just fall back down into the lake. Still, there are many places where the sand dunes are steep enough and active enough that they have few plants on them, and are essentially just a pile of sand.

I heard tales that this National Lakeshore had a big storm one night, and when the employees at a visitor center came back to work the next morning, all they found was a giant pile of sand where the building had been.

Climbing these dunes, though, is a lot of fun. Tiring fun, but fun none the less. Each step you take, your feet sink into the sand and you slide downhill a little. The ground shifts below you. And the fastest way up by far is running up the hill, because the sand has less time to sink downwards before you move on. So if you go to one of these tall dunes that are set up for people to climb to the top of, try running up it. I’m sure you’ll see others doing the same.

  

Storm Clouds have come, the Storm Wind has blown past, and the Rain comes down.

Photo #446: Storm CloudsLocation Taken: Western South Dakota
Time Taken: June 2010

The rain has been coming down all day long. Sometimes as strong as a waterfall, sometimes just a sprinkle on the leaves. There’s a front line sitting on top of us, and it’s bringing a lot of water with it.

And despite the fact that we’ve been listed as “Thunderstorms” in the weather reports all day, I’ve barely heard any thunder at all. Unless you count thundering rain, that I’ve heard a lot of.

The storm is moving on now, shifting to the east as the land cools down at night. I shall miss it when it leaves us behind.

  

Artsy Bolts

Photo #445: Artsy NegativeLocation Taken: Valparaiso, Indiana
Time Taken: 2007

During college, I took a bunch of photography classes. Despite all the evidence to the contrary, it’s never been my favorite form of art, but it’s still one I enjoyed enough to keep up with.

I don’t have digital copies of most of the photos I took in those classes. They were mostly film photography classes, and I didn’t get my own digital camera until my last year of college. I did take a bunch of good photos, though, so I had a few odd ideas for saving them.

This one was my attempt to scan a negative. Negatives are what is actually created by a film camera on the film, an image that inverts all the colors. It’s just how the various optics work best, and is actually necessary for making the photographic paper come out the correct color. White light shines through the negative, with the inverted colors letting through the proper wavelengths to make the chemicals react the way you want. It’s a lovely bit of chemistry and physics, really.

This particular negative was one I never fully printed out. It’s a bunch of bolts of cloth at a local fabric store, not too fancy to spend the time and money to print out in full, but still nice enough to give it a try. Besides, the slew of colors would give a really good example of how this worked.

Alas, my scanner was too low quality to really get the colors right, much less the detail. When I tried inverting it in a graphics program, it didn’t look any better than this.

Actually, since this looks pretty nifty, I’d say the “true color” version was actually worse. This one at least has heaps of that “artsy” look that some photographers go for intentionally.

  

From Earth You Came, and to Earth You Shall Return – or at least look like.

Photo #444: Stone BonesLocation Taken: Terra Nova National Park, Newfoundland
Time Taken: July 2012

These aren’t stones.

They’re all part of one giant whale bone, well weathered from the years.

It was just sitting on the boardwalk at the Terra Nova National Park’s main visitor center, a lovely display piece with no descriptors or anything around it. It just WAS.

And well, when you’re dealing with something this massive, that’s all it has to be.

And no, I’m not sure why they’re letting moss grow on it. It does add a nice level of contrast to it though, both in shapes and colors and in living versus dead. The moss and lichen really do make it look more like a pile of stones, though.