วันอาทิตย์ที่ 30 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

2011-10-29 60D Delray Beach Halloween Night 239

photo

2011-10-29 60D Delray Beach Halloween Night 239

Happy Halloween ... was pretty far behind another photographer and held the camera up to capture this ... he had some fill light going before the camera flash ... this is without flash ... bad timing on the thumbs up ...

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James

FL

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Il

Bacio

Halloween

october

fall

nightclub

evening

night

low

light

midriff

cleavage

costume

party

fun

girls

tattoo

face

paint

halloween night, camera flash, delray beach, photographer, halloween, bad timing, online

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วันเสาร์ที่ 29 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

DSC_3039

photo

DSC_3039

The farmers blocked off access to the road near the bridge to round up the cattle. By the time we got down there they had the cattle round up.

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winter storm

snow

snow storm

PA

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cattle

escaped cattle

road

farmers

storm

cattle, farmers, bridge

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Backyard

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Backyard

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Refugee Rights protest at Bondi Beach

photo

Refugee Rights protest at Bondi Beach

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Bondi Beach

Canon EOS 450D

protest

Canon EF-S 55-250mm f/4-5.6 IS

demonstration

Amnesty International

refugee rights, bondi, ef, eos, protest

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NPP Satellite Launch (201110280010HQ)

photo

NPP Satellite launch (201110280010HQ)

NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver, left, watches the launch of the National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System Preparatory Project (NPP) at the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Satellite Operations Center on Friday, Oct. 28, 2011 in Suitland, Md. U.S Congresswoman Donna Edwards (D-Md) is seen next to Garver. NPP is a joint venture between NASA and NOAA, and is the nation's newest Earth-observing satellite, which will provide data on climate change science, allow for accurate weather forecasts and advance warning for severe weather. NPP was launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Photo Credit: (NASA/Carla Cioffi)

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National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)

National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System Preparatory Project (NPP)

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MD

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Carla Cioffi

Donna Edwards

accurate weather forecasts, vandenberg air force base in california, climate change science, satellite operations center, nasa deputy administrator, vandenberg air force, vandenberg air force base, environmental satellite system, national oceanographic and atmospheric administration, donna edwards, lori garver, operational environmental satellite, severe weather, cioffi, suitland md, noaa, photo credit, launch ebook download, congresswoman, advance warning

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วันศุกร์ที่ 28 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

On the Rocks

photo

On the rocks

The sun glare might be to much, but I like this photo. Makes me want to sit back on the rocks to listen to, and watch the waves.
Photo taken in Ensendada, Mexiico.

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water

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IMG_0486

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IMG_0486

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วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 27 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

Lake Washington-4.jpg

photo

Lake Washington-4.jpg

While bumming around Renton, WA, jess and I visited Lake Washington for the first time. We went on one of the lake walks and saw an actual Ivar's seafood joint.

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17-85mm

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renton wa, ivar, jess, walks, lake washington

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Australia_2009-12-07_TheGap_029.jpg

photo

Australia_2009-12-07_TheGap_029.jpg

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2009

Albany

Australia

Natural Bridge

Southern Ocean

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วันพุธที่ 26 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

Cathdrale Sainte-Croix d'Orlans

photo

Cathdrale Sainte-Croix d'Orlans

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26/31 - Run to the sun

photo

26/31 - Run to the sun

A break in the recent downpours meant a rush to the beach this morning to blow the cobwebs away.

View LARGE On White

Photo-a-day-for-a-month

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วันจันทร์ที่ 24 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

Ice Fog

photo

Ice fog

On particularly very cold days with high humidity water vapor will crystallize forming ice fog, also known as Pogonip.

Setting up my 4x5 on this morning turned out to be quite a challenge. Fiddling with small knobs with large mitts on is very awkward.

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high humidity, cold days, water vapor, mitts, knobs, fog

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Bargam Bible Celebration

photo

Bargam bible Celebration

Celebrating the Bargam New Testament dedication

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วันอาทิตย์ที่ 23 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

Hot Springs Into River

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Hot Springs Into River

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Bill and Melinda Gates: Grading Teachers

[TEACHERS] Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

English teacher Angela Haskell, above, in Tampa, Fla., has agreed to have her classroom performance evaluated. Most teachers say they would do the same.

America's schoolteachers are some of the most brilliant, driven and highly skilled people working today—exactly the kind of people we want shaping young minds. But they are stuck in a system that doesn't treat them like professionals.

In most workplaces, there is an implicit bargain: Employees get the support they need to excel at their jobs, and employers build a system to evaluate their performance. The evaluations yield information that employees use to improve—and that employers use to hold employees accountable for results.

At Microsoft, we believed in giving our employees the best chance to succeed, and then we insisted on success. We measured excellence, rewarded those who achieved it and were candid with those who did not. Teachers don't work in anything like this kind of environment, and they want a new bargain.

We know this because they told us so in a recent survey that our foundation undertook with Scholastic. It turns out that teachers don't like their no-support/low-expectations working conditions any better than we do.

[TEACHERS2] Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Studying up: Cleopatra Thomas watches a video of herself teaching.

The Scholastic project found that teachers are desperate for more support. Three kinds rose to the top: more involvement from parents, more engagement from school leaders and higher quality materials to use in the classroom.

The teachers who took the survey were given a list of 15 things that might help to retain the best teachers. Higher salaries ranked 11th on the list, behind benefits like more time for preparation and opportunities for professional development.

Another key finding was that teachers are open to being evaluated in a comprehensive way. Eighty-five percent said that "student growth over the course of the academic year" should be a factor in how their performance is measured. Eighty percent said that teacher tenure should be re-evaluated regularly, and as a group they believe that tenure is granted too early in teachers' careers.

The research shows, in short, that teachers want to be treated as professionals. They want to be put in a position to succeed, and they're open to having their performance measured, as long as the measurement system is fair.

It may surprise you—it was certainly surprising to us—but the field of education doesn't know very much at all about effective teaching. We have all known terrific teachers. You watch them at work for 10 minutes and you can tell how thoroughly they've mastered the craft. But nobody has been able to identify what, precisely, makes them so outstanding.

This ignorance has serious ramifications. We can't give teachers the right kind of support because there's no way to distinguish the right kind from the wrong kind. We can't evaluate teaching because we are not consistent in what we're looking for. We can't spread best practices because we can't capture them in the first place.

For the last several years, our foundation has been working with more than 3,000 teachers on a large research project called Measures of Effective Teaching, or MET. These teachers volunteered to have their classes videotaped and their lessons scored by experts, to have their students evaluate their teaching, to fill out surveys about the support they receive and to be assessed on their content knowledge.

The intermediate goal of MET is to discover what we are able to measure that is predictive of student success. The end goal is to have a better sense of what makes teaching work so that school districts can start to hire, train and promote based on meaningful standards.

In developing MET, we have worked closely with Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), and we have seen both the AFT and the National Education Association show a willingness to rethink evaluation systems. Given the scale and scope of the problem, there must be dialogue about solutions among unions, teachers and administrators.

Some people think that teachers should be like commissioned salespeople, receiving pay based on end-of-year test scores. We don't believe that. When we think about the kinds of teachers we hope our children have, we realize that it's impossible to capture everything in a single metric. We believe you need multiple measures to make evaluations accurate and fair.

There are others who say that teaching is so nuanced that it is simply impossible to measure. We can't accept that either, because we know that just throwing up our hands is bad for students and for teachers.

Because we have been unable to define effective teaching, we now reward teachers for easy-to-measure proxies like master's degrees and seniority, even though there is no evidence that these things help students learn. As a result, a tenured teacher with a master's degree whose students aren't learning much will always earn more than a recent college graduate whose students are sweeping the academic decathlon.

The 3,000 teachers who are helping us with the MET project are already getting feedback on their teaching. Last year, we visited Ridgeway Middle School in Memphis and sat down with Mahalia Davis while she watched a videotape of herself teaching. Ms. Davis had many years of experience, and it was obvious to us that she was a standout. She watched her video because she wanted to get even better at something she already did well.

We were impressed by how much Ms. Davis enjoyed taking apart the craft of her own teaching. She leaned forward in her chair and said, "Look, I just lost that student." Then she said, "The class wasn't with me on that point. I need to teach that concept in a new way."

Like all people who are proud of the work they do, teachers want to improve, but they need the tools to do it. We are now compiling libraries of tens of thousands of videos, and we plan to use these videos to advance professional development for teachers.

Once the MET research is completed, we hope that school districts will work with teachers and their unions to create fair and reliable evaluations that reward teachers who are effective and identify and help those who need to improve. When that happens, we believe that districts will be on the cusp of providing every student with an effective teacher, in every class, every year.

We can't say that now. In fact, 98% of our school teachers are rated "satisfactory." Clearly, rating systems that pass pretty much everybody are a fraud. Worse, such pass/fail evaluations don't give teachers enough feedback for improvement. So why would we ever expect them to get better? Why would anyone who's called to teach want to work under these conditions?

In our society, you pay somebody a compliment when you say they're "a pro." But the truth is that professionalism is a dynamic relationship, not one person's responsibility. We have to hold up our end of the bargain, too.

—Mr. and Mrs. Gates are co-chairs of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
Online.wsj.com

วันเสาร์ที่ 22 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

Fire in the Sky 46/52

<a href=photo" width="640" height="342" onload="F.imageChecker.load(this);" onerror="F.imageChecker.error(this);">

Fire in the Sky 46/52

I had been meaning to get a photo of Murlough and the Mourne Mountains for ages. I had imagined in my head snow-capped Mourne mountains in November or December but I did always intend a sunset shot. I actually just happened to be driving through Newcastle and hadn't intended to get a photo but when I saw the sky that was shaping up in my rear view mirror I knew I had to pull in!

Murlough Nature Reserve lies on the coast of County Down in Northern Ireland, situated close to Newcastle. Murlough makes up one fifth of all dune heathland in the British Isles. It offers spectacular views of Slieve Donard, the highest peak in the Mourne Mountains and Dundrum Bay. In the distance here you can see Donard as the biggest mountain with Slieve Commedagh sitting to its right.

Its 6000-year old sand dune system has been managed by the National Trust since 1967, when it became Ireland's first nature reserve.

I used my B+W ND110 10-stop filter to get some cloud movement into the shot.

f/14 ISO 100 62 seconds.

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murlough

beach

dunes

mournes

mourne

mountains

clouds

red

sunset

sunrise

irish sea

ireland

uk

northern ireland

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10-stop

nd110

b+w

filter

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550d

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forest

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eire

dundrum bay, rear view mirror, mourne mountains, dune system, cloud movement, sand dune, fire in the sky, slieve donard, heathland, nature reserve, national trust, spectacular views, british isles, northern ireland, newcastle, hadn, sunset, photo

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วันศุกร์ที่ 21 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 20 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

DSC_0158

photo

DSC_0158

Mack Truck Historical Museum,
Allentown, Pennsylvania

www.macktrucks.com/default.aspx?pageid=40

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Mack

truck

museum

antique trucks

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Mack Trucks

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pennsylvania

truck museum

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วันอังคารที่ 18 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

Rediscovering Italy in a Silent Town

Over the last decade or so I have visited almost every city in Italy. I've seen the Amalfi Coast, have teared up while standing in the destruction of L'Aquila, which was hit with a 6.3-magnitude earthquake in 2009. I have tromped through Roman ruins, ogled ancient frescos at Herculaneum and Pompeii, walked the crumbling streets of Palermo, been awe-struck in Turin and marveled at the opulence of Florentine art.

I have considered the notion that I have "done" Italy.

[Italy] Hadley Hooper for The Wall Street Journal

But two years ago, my friend Cristina Di Benigno invited me to lunch in her village near Corvara, a tiny, little-known ruin of a town in Abruzzo, about an hour by car from the port city of Pescara.

We arrived late in the morning. It was decided that before our midday meal, which Cristina's grandmother was preparing at the family's restaurant, her father would show us around Corvara.

He explained that it is not possible to reach the town by car, as it has no roads. Corvara is situated at the highest elevation in the area, on top of what is essentially a massive boulder. On one side of this huge rock is a sheer 200-foot cliff.

The elevation and remoteness of the hamlet are fairly typical for a region that has defended itself from invasion for some 2,000 years. But Corvara is anything but typical.

We parked just below the summit of the mountain and walked into the town through a gap in the low stone wall that surrounded it. It was then that I saw that the settlement had been constructed on gradually descending levels separated by primitive stone-paved walkways.

The word "Italia," I was told, was first stamped on a coin here, sometime around 91 B.C. As we began down a central rough-hewn path between the buildings, I stopped, suddenly aware that I wasn't just looking at a centuries-old village, but an architectural time capsule. A town that remained practically untouched by modernization.

Corvara is as it has always been; a series of about 50 buildings made of irregular stone, with rustic wooden doors and roofs covered in tiles. The houses have no running water or electricity, except for the dwellings of the dozen or so hearty souls who have restored the interiors of a few structures, bringing in generators and water supplies.

What probably inspired the most reverence in me was not the architecture but the sheer emptiness of Corvara. It felt deserted, and in that stunning silence it was impossible to avoid the feeling that I was in a unique place. I left my guide and his daughter and began passing slowly from building to building, hearing only the sound of my breath and my own feet on the stones.

Years ago, at a gathering in New York, I met a prominent, bow-tie-wearing American psychic. A few minutes into our chat he stopped talking and stared at me.

"You should know that in a past life you were a first-century Italian poet," he said. "You're the only one I've ever met."

I dismissed the remark and quickly excused myself to refill my plate. A few months later, I made my first visit to the Forum in Rome. Standing there, looking across the expanse of ruins toward the Colosseum, I felt myself shiver in the 90-degree heat. Somehow, I intuited, I had been there before.

That day in Corvara I experienced something different but equally powerful: An awareness of my own humanness, a sense of privilege. I was standing on ground and walking through a place where for hundreds of years people had worked and lived out their hopes and tragedies, leaving the town untrammeled for others to admire. I felt honored.

Ninety minutes later we were back at Cristina's grandmother's restaurant looking out a window across the valley at Corvara, now bathed by the afternoon sun.

Lunch that day was 12 courses and lasted three hours, until just before sunset. Every time I whispered "basta" to grandma she just smiled and gave me something else to eat. The Italian people have managed to retain a kindness that in my experience is unequaled. Even the most cynical American writer can't deny it.

—Mr. Fante is the author of 10 books, including "Fante: A Family's Legacy of Writing, Drinking and Surviving," published in September.

herculaneum and pompeii, magnitude earthquake, paved walkways, midday meal, word italia, friend cristina, massive boulder, primitive stone, florentine art, wooden doors, foot cliff, roman ruins, last decade, time capsule, amalfi coast, opulence, hadley, hooper, aquila, gap

Online.wsj.com

วันอาทิตย์ที่ 16 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

ISTANBUL by Wolfgang Wildner

photo

ISTANBUL by Wolfgang Wildner

ISTANBUL, turkey,
by Wolfgang Wildner

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Wolfgang Wildner

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วันศุกร์ที่ 14 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

fragile

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fragile

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วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 13 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

Liberians Vote, With Presidency at Stake

Liberia's Nobel laureate and incumbent president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, fought for her political survival on Tuesday as voting got under way in the struggling west African democracy.

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LIBERIA

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LIBERIA

Reuters

A Liberian woman holds up her voter's card while waiting to vote in Tuesday's presidential election at a polling station in Feefee, Bomi County.

The country's presidential vote is the second since the end of its 14-year civil war and marks a crucial step in Liberia's long climb out of chaos. Despite an early thunderstorm, polling centers were jammed with voters who cast ballots peacefully, locals said. The government was expected to begin announcing results Tuesday night, after polling stations closed.

Liberian voters are involved in a massive image makeover. Until recently, the country was a battleground for child soldiers. The country is now growing more than 6% a year, and has become a target for multinational investment. Former child soldiers now make up a bulk of Liberia's adult population, although an estimated eight out of 10 working-age people in the country still can't find jobs.

"Everybody's tired of war," said Sam Mitchell, president of Liberia's Business Association.

Ms. Johnson Sirleaf, who shared the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday with two other women, headed to her ancestral village—two hours from the capital—to vote. A former World Bank loan officer, she is seeking a second six-year term, after earlier vowing to step down after one. Despite Liberia's problems—unemployment, corruption and poverty—she has asked voters to remain patient.

Earlier

Laureate, Striker Face Off in Liberia

"Don't change the pilot when the plane hasn't even landed yet," said a campaign sign at the recently renovated airport.

But while Ms. Johnson Sirleaf is credited with reviving growth and bringing back investors, her critics have assailed her administration. Her chief opposition, led by former justice minister Winston Tubman, spent the final days of the campaign arguing that she should be tried for crimes against humanity. In 2009, she told Liberia's Truth and Reconciliation Commission that she contributed $10,000 in 1990 to militia leader Charles Taylor's National Patriotic Front for humanitarian relief.

"She's a warmonger," Mr. Tubman told the British Broadcasting Corp. hours after she won the Nobel prize on Friday. "I did more to stop the war than she did because she was in for continuing the war. And now that the war has stopped she wants to continue on top of the country as though she is some liberator."

Ms. Johnson Sirleaf's spokeswoman didn't respond to requests to comment.

Her term marks Liberia's most peaceful period since 1980, when a coup by Samuel Doe, a former army sergeant, ended 160 years of rule by descendants of American slaves. Civil war ensued. From 1989 to 2003, child militias fought for control of the country's diamond mines and timber fields. By the time of Ms. Johnson Sirleaf's 2005 election, diamond, iron ore and timber exports had come to a halt, 500,000 Liberians had fled their homes and 250,000 more had died.

Ms. Johnson Sirleaf has since restored the country's mineral industry, bringing in major investors such as ArcellorMittal SA and Chevron Corp.

The opposition has sought to make the vote a referendum on her early support for Mr. Taylor, the rebel leader whose fighters kidnapped, drugged and drafted children. He is now on trial at the International Court of Justice, where he faces 17 counts of crimes against humanity. A verdict is expected by the end of this year.

Analysts aren't ruling out his bid to re-enter the political arena if the charges don't stick. That could throw a wrench into a possible second round of elections, which is scheduled for Nov. 8 if no candidate achieves a simply majority in Tuesday's vote.

"This idea that he'll be locked up for decades might not happen," said Africa analyst Alex Vines at London research group Chatham House. "Charles Taylor may yet try and re-enter Liberian politics."

nobel peace prize, bomi county, world bank loan, nobel laureate, ellen johnson sirleaf, winston tubman, image makeover, incumbent president, political survival, multinational investment, adult population, ancestral village, campaign sign, sam mitchell, president of liberia, target, child soldiers, presidential vote, president ellen johnson sirleaf, polling station

Online.wsj.com

วันพุธที่ 12 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

Wheeling Suspension Bridge

photo

Wheeling Suspension Bridge

Wheeling, West Virginia

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Marshall County

Wheeling

Capital Music Hall

Flickr

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1170 WWVA

West Virginia

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Wheeling Suspension Bridge

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วันอังคารที่ 11 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

Autumn leaf afloat

photo

Autumn leaf afloat

The 24-hour Long Beach photo competition is over. I used about five hours yesterday to shoot (had to work today) and have submitted my 15 photos. Results will be announced on October 22. In the meantime, I will share three photos a day here on Flickr. No manipulation was allowed, and everything is sized for printing at 4 by 6 inches. I hope you enjoy the variety!

This image is from the Japanese garden at California State University at Long Beach. (Olympus E-5 & Zuiko 70-300mm zoom at 300mm, f/6.3, 1/320 sec., ISO 1000, afternoon sun)

Some of my work is available for sale on Red Bubble (a collection of prints and greeting cards).

I am a Getty Images Contributor.

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CA State LB

green

Japanese Garden

leaf

water

yellow

california state university at long beach, getty images, autumn leaf, california state university, beach photo, afternoon sun, japanese garden, photo competition, greeting cards, contributor, manipulation, olympus, amp, prints, zoom, photos

Flickr.com

little stream in W. Texas

photo

little stream in W. Texas

found this in my archives from a trip we took to Big Bend years ago.
2 cameras ago too! a little p&amp;s.

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stream

water

west

texas

big

bend

national

park

green

slime

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rock

pebbles

little stream, big bend, amp, cameras

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วันจันทร์ที่ 10 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

The Wrightington Hotel Saturday 9th October 2011

photo

The Wrightington Hotel Saturday 9th October 2011

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วันอาทิตย์ที่ 9 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

วันเสาร์ที่ 8 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

The Pet

photo

The Pet

Charcoal & acrylic on paper, 2010
(27.7x 37.3 cm / 10.9 x 14.7 in)

Tags

painter

akab

wasfi

iraq

iraqi

middle

middleast

east

art

artist

artistic

geotagged

europe

italia

italy

beautiful

beauty

florence

color

portrait

original

draw

drawing

charcoal

paint

painting

paper

acrylic

black

white

blue

pink

red

yellow

brown

ocher

purple

love

lovely

pretty

cute

hair

light

street

firenze

strada

dog

pet

animal
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_DSC4598

<a href=photo" width="640" height="426" onload="F.imageChecker.load(this);" onerror="F.imageChecker.error(this);">

_DSC4598

Marco Consulting, 550 west Washington Blvd Chicago, IL. Monday September 26, 2011. photo by alBerto Trevino

Tags

Heavy Metal

Live

Photograph

Riot Fest

Rock

Rock and Roll

alBerto Trevino Photography

music

photo

photography

picture

punk

tech

Chicago

IL

trevino, photo, west washington blvd

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วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 6 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

วันอังคารที่ 4 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

Spanish Jobless Claims Soar

MADRID—Spain's Labor ministry said Tuesday jobless claims soared in September due to the end of the country's labor-intensive holiday season, a sign that Spain's overall unemployment, already the highest in the developed world, may still climb further later this year.

Claims rose by 95,817, or 2.3% in September from August. On the year, claims increased by 5.2%. Jobless claimants in September numbered 4.23 million.

Mari Luz Rodriguez, deputy Labor minister, said the end of the holiday season led to a jump in claims in recent weeks, with over 10,000 new claims registered countrywide on some days.

The labor ministry didn't provide an unemployment figure, but according to data from the European Union's Eurostat agency, Spanish unemployment stood at 21.2% in July, more than twice the 10% rate for the 17 countries that share the euro.

Spain's three-year long property bust, which started in 2008, has sent unemployment soaring, and subdued growth so far this year has failed to add a significant number of new jobs to the economy.

property bust, unemployment figure, labor ministry, labor minister, eurostat, jobless claims, claimants, new jobs, holiday season, european union, madrid, spain, economy

Online.wsj.com

วันจันทร์ที่ 3 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

Man vs Mountain

photo

Man vs Mountain

A man getting a driftwood that he found day before.

Tags

rowboat

man

rowing

mountain

sea

ocean

water

canon

5d

70-200

2.8

driftwood

big

small

waves

iceland

sland

arnar

rneshreppur

gjgur

westfjords
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Cathedral Rocks

photo

Cathedral Rocks

Another shot from Kiama, I took this one shortly after the sun peeked from behind the horizon.
If you like to see more images from this place please head over to my blog: www.soniamphotography.com/2011/10/sunrise-over-cathedral-...

Camera Settings:
Canon 7D
ISO100, F11, 17mm, 86sec
EF-S 10-22mm
B=W ND 1000
Cokin 0.9 grad

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B&W

Cathedral rocks

art

australia

black&white

downs

formation

jones beach

kiama

monochrome

nsw

print

seascape

canon

7D

camera settings, 17mm, amp, horizon ebook download, sunrise, canon, images, sun

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วันอาทิตย์ที่ 2 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

Egret Sunset

photo

egret Sunset

Taken on Lake Maurepas.

Lana gramlich, Abita Springs, LA, USA.

Tags

Lana

Gramlich

Canon EOS Rebel T2i

landscape

great

egret

bird

birding

wildlife

animal

water

Tangipahoa Parish

Louisiana

ardea alba

nature

Lana Gramlich

catchycolors

DailyNature-TNC11

DragonDaggerPhoto

Lake Maurepas

lake maurepas, abita springs la, eos rebel, gramlich, egret, lana

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วันเสาร์ที่ 1 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554