Capture: Someone, Somewhere, In Summertime
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Cecelia, in reply to
Good picnic spot at Omeru Reserve - you walk down a wide track to it. Have you seen the Kaipara Sculpture Gardens nearby? Your mum would love hydrangea avenue - it's just past its peak ...
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ChrisW, in reply to
Thanks Cecelia, I think you're right, both places seem attractive and achievable - with ancestral churchyard cemetery as well, this will be a Big Day Out!
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ChrisW, in reply to
Jos (and Jackson) - is that big puriri really Taketakerau itself, or another splendid specimen in Hukutaia? Though perhaps seen from a different side, it seems much more 'tidy' than in my memory of Taketakerau (last visit ~10 years ago).
Have either of you seen Taketakerau - The Millennium Tree by Marnie Anstiss - an interesting book that won the children's book section of the Ashton Wylie Book Awards 2012? It's based on the premise that the tree is 2000 years old (a reasonable educated guess) so germinated at the same time a boy child was born in a stable far far away thus the retrospective start of our calendar, and follows a selection of subsequent world history and NZ human history in parallel with the story of the tree and its ecological context, these becoming somewhat intertwined.
A great concept and the book looks the part – but falls rather short of its potential in my view with some of its historical snippets or lack thereof a disappointment, but still, worth a look.
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Jos, in reply to
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Joe Wylie, in reply to
the old burial tree
Thanks very much Jos. That's definitely the one I recall visiting in 1985, following the instructions in the Mobil Guide, which I'm pretty sure gave its age as around 900 years.
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Ian Dalziel, in reply to
the Mobil Guide, which I’m pretty sure
gave its age as around 900 years.That's a very old Mobil Guide!
; - ) -
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Paul Williams, in reply to
It’s Kakamatua, Paul. Near Cornwallis.
A belated thanks Jackie. Just returned from holidays and revisiting this thread to see all the fantastic photos - TraceyMac, thanks for the shot of Oriental Parade, I lived there for a while and miss it, particularly when the weather is so wonderful.
This is my favourite shot from my Christmas. My 7 year old bowling to her friend on NYE (down the south coast of NSW).
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Jos,
Lovely photo Paul!!!
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Danielle, in reply to
I would never, ever be able to photograph that ball in the air at the perfect spot like that. I have terrible timing. :)
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BenWilson, in reply to
I've got a disposable waterproof I've never used. It's like an old wine that the opportune moment is never quite big enough for. I bet when I crack the camera open, it will be corked.
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JacksonP, in reply to
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
summer splash-capturing purposes!
I had a waterproof disposable camera once. Plenty of pics of underwater legs! All murky and greenish, weird light leaving everyone looking fishy and froggy.
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My niece has some great shots of my great-nephew swimming underwater, taken with a disposable waterproof camera. Young fella having a FANTASTIC time. :-)
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Thanks for the kind words; it was a fortuitous shot. Capture is proving a new favourite within the PA stable. Inspiring in fact (though I too, use mainly my phone). Danielle, that splash shot is great... joyous in fact!
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
though I too, use mainly my phone
as a wise person once observed.... the best camera is always the one you have with you.... you could start calling them cameras, that just happen to have a bit of other functionality attached - great shot no matter what : )
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
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Paul Williams, in reply to
….. do you think he’s related to this one? Similar hair-do…
Reminds me of a Ralph Steadman cartoon.. or Janice from the Muppets
you could start calling them cameras, that just happen to have a bit of other functionality attached
Certainly the instagram filters provide a remedy for almost every error (or at least the ones I regularly make).
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ChrisW, in reply to
much more exciting was the Blue Heron
That's a White-faced Heron, Jackie - common in such places and all sorts of others, occasionally as at my place appearing as something of a sniffy roof inspector. Self-introduced from Australia in the 1940s and now common all over as an honorary native NZer.
Whereas the Reef Heron is an uncommon native from way back, is much darker slatey grey with any white around the face scarcely apparent, and only found in small numbers on natural shoreline areas befitting this sensible name, though aka Blue Heron etc.
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