Sunday, November 23, 2025

Fogless Frost

. . . although the morning had blessed us twice already, we were up for being thrice blessed and headed off to the trail bridge. While the fog had dissipated, the frost remained and did not disappoint. Onto the bridge we ascended where two pedestrians provided an anchor point in the scene. Little did they know that they would be seen in far-flung places, perhaps even in the antipodes.


From the trail bridge, I looked back to the little bridge and to the mill.




Looking down, from one spot I saw a man riding his bike in the freezing weather. From another, I spied a frosted little bush surrounded by rocks on the riverbed.



I also took a couple of closeups when we were nearer the vegetation where the bridge was over the land.



What a delightful morning it had been.




Saturday, November 22, 2025

Moar Hoar

. . . off we drove from our neighbourhood park, where there be tamarack tress, to Riverside Park. You probably won't recall, but I said in yesterday's post that I hoped to capture the birches on the far bank when they would be softened by the fog. Yeah no, that wasn't going to happen with the fog being so heavy.

The far bank is pretty well obscured

I promised to explain why fog-plus-frost isn't as photographically perfect as one might assume. Fog is great, and so is hoar frost, but we found that to some extent the fog dulled the frost. It's as though the fog took a bit of the shine off the frost, so to speak.

There was a time, at the country cottage around Thanksgiving, that my sister-in-law, Heather, woke us early to walk about the fields to behold glorious hoar frost on the trees and bushes. It was bright out, and the frost was sparkling. This wasn't that. Don't get me wrong; it was very very pretty but it didn't always show up terrifically in the photos.

You can see the frosted trees a bit in these two photos, however.



Closeups, as in the berries yesterday, showed the frost better, but holding the phone close with cold, shaky hands and in a breeze, does not always yield the sharpest of photos, Nevertheless, here is one effort. Although I wish the foreground leaves were sharper, the blurry background works well enough.


Meanwhile, Sue and I did get a photo or two of one another.


With a little processing magic, the trees show up quite well in hers of me. I like the edit. Sometimes, you edit a photo to make it look like you wished it really were, and to be fair, in our minds it really was like this.


It had been a sudden, early morning adventure in below freezing temperatures. We were cold and needed to recharge. We stopped to pick up Tims coffees on the way home where we then did our usual morning thingies. The fog dissipated, but the frost remained, so after recharging we proceeded out again later in the morning . . . 



Friday, November 21, 2025

I Lied: Tamaracks, Fog and Frost

I was quietly and innocently working on my morning sudoku when Sue burst into my room without a by-your-leave and proceeded to turn out the light and open the blinds.

As soon as I saw outside, I remembered that I had seen fog on the prior evening and had made a determination to get out there and take some photos because the softening effect of fog is greatly desired by photographers. Specifically, I had thought of the birches across the river at Riverside Park and how they might look in the soft fog. But first we drove to the neighbourhood park where lay the tamaracks that I said that I was done with for the year in yesterday's post. I lied but not intentionally.

Who knew that there would be both fog and hoar frost?  Not me: so, it was necessary to take one more peek at the near tamarack trees before heading off to the farther Riverside Park.

Hoar frost is a deposit of ice crystals that forms on objects exposed to the air, such as grass blades and tree branches. It occurs when water vapor condenses directly into ice at temperatures below freezing, typically under clear and cold conditions. The term "hoar" comes from old English, referring to the frost's appearance, which resembles white hair or a beard. Hoar frost is often more photogenic and rare compared to regular frost, making it a beautiful natural phenomenon. 

The fog is more noticeable than the frost in these photos because the frost just looks like snow in the distance. It's still pretty though, especially in the fog.




Wider views of the pond and park.



It turns out that we have to be close to truly appreciate the frost as we see in this photo of a berry tree.



And then we were off to Riverside Park, and when we get there tomorrow, I'll talk about why these conditions were not actually all that good for photography.



Thursday, November 20, 2025

The Tamaracks Make Their Final Appearance of 2025

When I was displaying the tamarack trees in their glorious autumn colour not so long ago, someone asked when the leaves would turn green again. Of course, they won't. Although they are coniferous trees, they also behave like deciduous ones, dropping their leaves in autumn and growing new ones when spring rolls around. I thought I should show this by returning to the park where I hoping to see the trees with reduced foliage and the nearby ground around littered with fallen needles.



The tamarack trees in another spot — on the left of the path — were totally denuded with their needle leaves almost carpeting the path. 


Since we are here, back with the tamaracks, I will use this as an opportunity to show one more photo that I missed posting previously. It was the day after the big snowfall, just 10 days ago. 


Bonus: you haven't seen one of these most glorious selfies for awhile, and I know you miss us terribly. lol









Wednesday, November 19, 2025

A Photo Process

As you know, Sue follows a photo prompt daily. I do not. I am not clever enough to come up with ideas, so I just follow my own photography nose and click if something catches my interest.

But our local FB group does put out challenges, and I, occasionally, very occasionally, feel a pricking, not in my thumbs but in my conscience, so I partake in some small way.

The current challenge: red and round.

When we passed a store window with red Christmas balls, it was too easy to pass up. I knew that it wouldn't be a commendable photo by any means, but it should show my cooperative spirit. I also wondered what I could do in post.

Here's the original: cropped and straightened a bit because I can't take a level photo to save my life, but that is all. It is banal, as I knew that it would be. Of course, there would be reflections —the passing car and building from across the street, but that is partly why I wanted to take the photo.


I wanted to see how well Lightroom's new reflection removal algorithm would work. The next photo shows the reflections all gone. All you can see, beyond the window display, is the interior. I simply clicked Remove Reflections, and it did just that.


Of course, I didn't want to see the interior either, so I then sent the photo from Lightroom to Photoshop, and I asked Photoshop to remove the background. I thought it would just erase the interior background and that I would need to replace it with something Christmassy, in a subsequent step. Surprisingly, however, the program did that on its own, somehow knowing that a woodsy winter scene would be just dandy. I suppose that I could have asked for a different background, this this one was good enough.


I thought that I was done and so I posted all three ↑ photos, to the group. Later, however, I decided to play a bit more, so I sent the photo along to ON1 Effects where I applied some filters and added a border.


I am not fooled. I didn't start with a great photo, and it is far from great at the end of my process, but it kept me busy for a while, and it's not absolutely terrible.





Tuesday, November 18, 2025

A Big Bang

A enormous bang sounded somewhere to my left. I wondered if Sue had fallen down or dropped something very heavy. 

When I looked in that direction, I saw that the door of my adjacent pop fridge was ajar.

I soon discovered that the pop can in the freezer had exploded. Indeed, it was ripped asunder with its frozen contents plastered around the interior of the fridge  

That's the sort of thing that can happen when you leave pop in the freezer for 10 hours.

I am sure that inquiring minds would like to know why I had pop in the freezer.

Well, I am going to tell you, even if your mind isn't of an inquiring bent.

Late morning, I saw that I had no pop in the fridge. I put cans on the shelf as one does but also decided that I should cool off a few cans faster in the freezer because I greatly prefer my Diet Coke very cold. In point of fact, if it were to have little ice crystals, that would be hunky dory.

Knowing that I have a mind like a sieve, I asked Alexa to remind me to remove the cans in 90 minutes. I subsequently impressed myself greatly when I remembered to take the pop out about 30 seconds before Alexa's reminder. I thought, what a clever boy am I.

I drank and enjoyed my nice, cold Diet Coke.

Unfortunately, I totally forgot that I had actually placed 2 cans in yon freezer and only taken 1 out.

I am not so clever after all.


Monday, November 17, 2025

Two Lights and Two Pots

Let us begin with a picture of these planters by the garage and from there work backward and then forward again.


First, you must picture the planters a day earlier: bare and frozen. Sue habitually adorns these baskets for the Christmas season as you see in the photo, but you just can't stick things in frozen soil, or at least not soft things.

To thaw them out on the previous day, I had lifted the planters onto a makeshift table, inserted them into plastic garbage bags, and carried them into the warm house. 

It wasn't a hard thing to do, but my back being what it is started to stiffen and spasm by that evening. Of course it did.

That night was also the night of my great fall, as described in yesterday’s post, when I landed rather heavily and bruised my unfortunate rump. 

With me being effectively out of commission the next day, Sue, herself, moved the thawed pots back outside and decorated them as you saw in the photo with nary a concomitant ache. She did this while manly me was nursing my hurts in my easy chair upstairs. It's doesn't actually feed my male ego, I tell ya.

We don't decorate for Christas much outside by stringing lights or erecting ornaments, but addition to the pots, we do insert a light over the garage that makes a rather nice night display.




We have a similar light inside the porch, so the place looks pretty festive without a whole lot of effort — just two lightbulbs and two flowerpots.