10-16-16 Design and Serendipity

Can serendipity be part of the design? (read more)

By Scott Shephard

It is in a maple leaf’s genetic code that it will turn some color other than green and fall off the tree at the end of the growing season. How colorful and exactly when a leaf will change and fall involves serendipity. And that this particular photo of these particular leaves exists at all involved even more serendipity. What follows is how this happened.

Last week, Deb and I decided (on the spur of the moment) to drive down to Brookings to see the South Dakota Museum of Art.

When we were leaving our house, Deb asked, “Are you taking your camera?”

“Nope,” I said. But then I reconsidered and picked up my heavy orange camera bag.

After the museum (which is excellent), we decided to go to the Wooden Legs Brewing Company (which is also excellent). They didn’t open until noon and we had 20 minutes to kill.

I said, “Let’s just drive around.” And so we headed south on Main Ave. A few miles down the road I saw these trees a block east of Main. I wasn’t looking for something to photograph. But they must have been looking for me.

I turned around, parked the car and got out with iPhone in hand. My inner photographer’s voice (which seems to be mostly mute these days) in a scolding tone said, “You need the Big Camera for this.” And so I put my iPhone back in the car and got the Big Canon 5DII and the Big 70-200mm telephoto lens and spent 20 minutes taking way more photos than I needed of these beautiful maple leaves. Once I get started with a good subject, I have a hard time stopping.

Still reading? Here’s the moral of this story: Serendipity and Design are not strange bedfellows. They are perfect companions and they certainly seem to follow (or lead) me wherever I go. This photo is fitting proof.

Canon 5DIII 1/500s f/2.8 ISO400 200mm

10-04-16 Another Day

The sun has risen 22,936 times during my life. I’ve missed seeing most of those sunrises. How about you? (read more)

By Scott Shephard

It just occurred to me that while the sun rose only once in this place on this day it is otherwise always rising and always setting all day long every day. Of course, it’s more accurate to suggest that the earth revolves all day long as the sun stays fixed relative to our point of view on earth.

As a child I remember wondering how fast you’d have to move so that the sun would appear to stand still. Answer: 1,037.5 miles per hour.

But I wasn’t moving when I took this photo. In fact, I was transfixed. You would have been, too, if you had be up on The Rock with me a few mornings ago. The light you see in this photo lasted about 4 minutes. But it was worth the trip. . . .

Canon 5DIII 1/15s f/16.0 ISO200 47mm (5 frame HDR)

10-02-16 Change Is in the Air

It’s good and bad . . . (read more)

By Scott Shephard

I appreciate fall, of course, mainly because of all of the changing colors. But at the same time, the changing colors also signal the end of summer. Frankly, I like summer best, mainly because of the warm weather and the good sailing I enjoy on Lake Oahe.

But I’m not complaining. And to have been out on a perfect morning like yesterday trying to capture the idea of fall in the Black Hills is hard to beat, especially given that my good friend Bill Z. was there to enjoy it with me. 

Canon 5DIII 1/250s f/2.8 ISO200 100mm