Monday, June 02, 2008

Yellow Day Lilly...


Yellow Day Lilly..., originally uploaded by RMStringer.

I have many of these blooming at the moment. Well over 100+ blooms ready to open!

Exposure: 0.002 sec (1/500)
Aperture: f/5.6
Focal Length: 50 mm
ISO Speed: 400

Sunday, June 01, 2008

Looking into The Dead Zone...


Looking into The Dead Zone..., originally uploaded by RMStringer.

I do not know how many graves that are located here but it is many of them. This is located about 3-4 miles from my house. I wanted to get some of the fence looking over to the graves. I used 16:9 aspect ratio to capture some of the vastness of this cemetery. I was not able to get them all in the photograph. The fence makes it look like it is forbidden to enter the area if you are a living person.

Exposure: 0.001 sec (1/1250)
Aperture: f/5.6
Focal Length: 18 mm
ISO Speed: 400

Mountain Biking Saturday Morning

We went to Pocahontas Park on Saturday morning and we rode The Red and Blue Trails. It was very humid but we got there early enough so it was not that hot. We had a 9 mile ride when it was all over with.

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Mack: When in Doubt, Blame the Soldiers

 

Thanks to Mack Hall for letting me publish this story. 

When in Doubt, Blame the Soldiers

 

"War hath no fury like a non-combatant"

 

-- Charles Edward Montague

 

On the night of 6 June 1944 my father was on a ship in the English Channel with his armored car and crew and a few thousand of their closest friends, waiting for their turn to land in Normandy on the second day of the invasion.  He said "it looked like all Europe was on fire."  He landed on 7 June, and was told by the beachmaster to "drive inland as far as you can go; drive like *&##; nothing is secure."

 

"As far as you can go" turned out to be Zwickau some ten months later, with leisurely stops at Bastogne and Dachau.

 

Imagine a soldier in World War II landing on a beach in Normandy or anywhere else and being sent home for saying something rude about Hitler or the Emperor of Japan: "Sergeant Hall, stop that; mass-murderers have their feelings too, you know.  We have to understand Hitler's special needs.  After all, he had a rough childhood.  Didn't you pay attention during the group therapy sessions that replaced lifeboat drill?  We're pulling you out of the invasion and sending you home for sensitivity training."

 

Perhaps a journalist from, oh, Princess magazine heard about that exchange, and published it.  In a few days Hitler could have read the sad story in the Washington Zeitgeist or the San Francisco Morning Screed and wept into his morning injection of weird drugs before filing a complaint with the United Nations.

 

Recently an American soldier was sent home from Iraq because he was accused of using a copy of the Koran for target practice.  This was said to be offensive to the sort of people who strap bombs to their own children.

 

More recently a Marine was removed from checkpoint duty for handing out coins which bore the quotation from Saint John 3:16 on them instead of quotations from the Koran about how lovely it is to kill Jews.

 

Okay, okay, a soldier surely has better things to do than pot at a book, and a Marine at a checkpoint should be watching carefully for the little girl whose father packed her school bomb that morning so she can kill and die for his god.

 

Somewhere nearby there is a cranky old sergeant whose job is to growl "Private Ponsonby, if you want to discharge that firearm you find an Al Queda," or "Corporal Snortborger, you ain't no missionary."  And that should be the end of it.  The United Nations, whose craven peacekeeping forces are a terror only to women and children, doesn't get a say.  Neither should the sort of people whose experience of war is limited to John Wayne movies and pose-for-the-camera protest marches.

 

A soldier who gives someone a token or religious medal with a few words about divine love on it may be a little off-task (or maybe not), but he's the one who was sent in to clean up the mess the politicians made, and he appears to have a better idea than most politicians about how to do it.

 

Could we at least pause for a moment to say something at least slightly disapproving of an ideology that tortures and murders the few prisoners it manages to take?  Dare we suggest that strapping bombs to one's own child is not good parenting?  Is it beastly to infer that cutting the throat of a diminutive stewardess is not nice?  Is one boorish to notice that the previous Iraqi regime actually built a concentration camp for the children whose parents it had imprisoned or murdered?

 

Could we at least pause for a moment to say something at least slightly approving of the American soldiers we have sent into combat and, worse, "peace-keeping?"

 

Giving a Christian blessing to a civilian is not a soldier's duty, but neither is it a war crime.

 

-30-

 



Chairman: "We deplore your spirit of disharmony."
No.6: "That's a common complaint around here, isn't it?"

-- The Prisoner

 













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Rain Storm...




We have had a chance of Thunder Storms for the last 2 days. It did not rain here yesterday when we had the greatest chance but it rained this evening. I saw it rolling in and wanted to get a few photos of the clouds. I took the first one in Black and White and the rest in color. All were shot in 16:9 HD Aspect Ratio.


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Our Cat, Another Pose!


Our Cat, Another Pose!, originally uploaded by RMStringer.

I just happened to have my camera handy yesterday afternoon while the cat was looking at me. She is in a comfortable sitting position on the couch and she sits there often. She has a very big attitude and is very playful even at 5+ years old.

Exposure: 0.333 sec (1/3)
Aperture: f/5.6
Focal Length: 40 mm
ISO Speed: 400

Panorama Creations...

Well folks, i have been doing some reorganizing of my Flickr Account and i made a new set called Panorama Creations. It is all the Panoramas that i have made over the last 3-4 years using Panorama Maker 3.0. Here is the link: http://www.flickr.com/photos/rmstringer/sets/72157605360343797/

Please go and take a look at them.


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Ambient Massive - There Is Grace In Their Feelings

. Instruments used were: Kurzweil 2000vx Microfreak' Maschine 2 Wavestate Deepmind 12 Virus Ti2 Monotron and various VSTi synths. Releas...