layla: grass at sunset (Default)
Layla ([personal profile] layla) wrote2007-09-18 06:23 am
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New England pictures, part 2



Old stone wall -- we saw lots of them, some abandoned and overgrown, others (like this one) evidently still in use.


We passed a lot of old Industrial Revolution factories and mills along the mountain rivers.


Coastal Maine is pretty much everything that coastal Maine is supposed to be ... and the rain had finally stopped!


Sister on the rocks! With the tide coming in, we thought it might be a good idea to take turns climbing around on the rocks while the other person stayed behind as a spotter and potential lifeguard...


Probably half the pictures I took were of the Maine coast. We hiked around Portland Head for a while (which is where these pictures were taken), then drove up to Freeport and found some wildlife reserves where we hiked and hiked and hiked some more.

We didn't really get enough of Maine, but we were running out of time so then we headed up straight north through Maine and right into Quebec.


This was so utterly bizarre as a business concept that I had to take a picture of it. The fact that it's in Quebec just adds to the strangeness. As far as I could tell it was just an ordinary cafe, though. (It's in the town of Joliette, north of Montreal, if you want to go check it out for yourself.)

I didn't get any pictures at all of Quebec City itself because I was trying not to die in its rush-hour traffic and tiny winding streets. I really want to go back and explore it someday, because it has one of the most lovely downtowns that I've ever seen in a North American city, but not in a car and not at 5 p.m.


Wetlands in Ontario along the St. Lawrence River.


Boat on the St. Lawrence River -- we ate lunch at a bar & grill that was right on the water, and this was taken from the dock attached to the restaurant.


I know it's terribly American of me, but the quote marks around "liberate" on this sign in Ontario totally cracked me up, especially considering that I'd just a few days prior been in Boston and been talking about the American Revolution there.


One more picture of the river. Notice the pattern here ... I take tons of pictures of rivers and trees, but towns and people seem to completely evade my lens.

And that's it! I ought to take some pictures of fall around here too -- the colors are in full swing and it's quite lovely outside.
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[identity profile] sobelle.livejournal.com 2007-09-19 03:13 pm (UTC)(link)
Actually, I hate my digital camera... I understand that some don't seem to have the lag time that mine does when you depress the shutter release... but maybe I have to trade that off for the anti-shake option... I dunno... but I too really miss my old SLR... and I can't afford the digital SLR's... and since I'm so much older now, maybe I don't *really* need one... feh! doesn't matter, I *want* one anyway!!

I also miss the dark room (I was always a fan of B&W) but the digital photo manipulation programs do an okay job... I guess... I also miss being able to mess with depth of field and haven't figured out how to get my digital to let me mess with the aperture and shutter speed...

Re: your stone/fence building, yeah, flat rocks work WAY better :) especially if you're not gonna use mortar... (I wish I knew how to attach a pic to LJ so I could show you some fine work a friend of mine did)

[identity profile] laylalawlor.livejournal.com 2007-09-19 06:15 pm (UTC)(link)
I love the convenience of my digital camera, but I really loathe a lot of things about it -- the lag before and after taking the picture, the amount of post-processing it does on the image and lack of manual controls which makes it almost impossible to take good night or sky pictures. Still, convenience makes up for a lot in my world *g* especially when I just want to do quick family snapshots or carry around a camera that I can stick in my pocket. The manual one still comes out when I want to play with long releases or composing really nice shots, though.