Two Years in Review
Our new LG enV 2 cellular phones arrived yesterday, so I spent some time sending two years' worth of low-resolution pictures off my good old Motorola, the tired one with the scratched face and floppy hinge, the one with 1,830 hours (yes, hours) of calls logged since January of 2007. (For the curious, that's an average of 2.5 hours a day.) I'll miss it; I get so attached to things, especially things that spend every waking moment in my pocket, especially things that enable me to have an unlikely and extraordinarily relationship with a wonderful guy who is far away (and who sent me a giant bouquet of divine yellow tulips today). As Brent pointed out, we fell in love on that phone, so it's no wonder I'll be sad to see it go.
I take a lot of pictures with my excellent Olympus digital camera, but there are times when it's simply not practical to carry it even though it's the size of a deck of cards. So the thing about a cellphone with a camera is that it catches rather unusual moments, images at the times and in the places I don't have my camera. I saved 38 of the 200; it's a bit tedious to send them one at a time to Verizon's Pix Place website and then download them to my computer, so some I didn't bother with because the quality wasn't good, and others just weren't that interesting. Here are a few of those that made the cut.
I take a lot of pictures with my excellent Olympus digital camera, but there are times when it's simply not practical to carry it even though it's the size of a deck of cards. So the thing about a cellphone with a camera is that it catches rather unusual moments, images at the times and in the places I don't have my camera. I saved 38 of the 200; it's a bit tedious to send them one at a time to Verizon's Pix Place website and then download them to my computer, so some I didn't bother with because the quality wasn't good, and others just weren't that interesting. Here are a few of those that made the cut.
Robbie hauling a ladder in the second stage flocculator basin, drained for cleaning and maintenance last month.
B.C. curled up on my back in my old apartment in the basement. The kind of picture I only got because my phone was in my pocket, since I couldn't reach my camera without disturbing him. (That's just a green Tupperware cup in front of me. I was drinking Crystal Light and reading a magazine.)
I didn't take this, somebody at Kate's texted it to me. That's the Strand Theater on fire in June or July of 2007.
Spring thaw on the Bear River 2007. So chocolate milk that we switched over to the reservoir for a whole month.
Marilyn on the family bus on our way to Greeley for Angie's senior recital at UNC, with her sister RaeDell's husband Ed in the background.
2 Comments:
I can't help but ask....is the Bear River a good trout stream?
Wow. To be honest, I had no idea, but I assumed probably not because I've actually never seen anyone fly fishing anywhere on the Wyoming stretch of the river even through conditions should be just right for them. I'd heard that people fish all over on the Utah side, which eventually runs into a freshwater bay in the Great Salt Lake called Willard Bay.
A lot of people I know don't like trout because of the bones and someone recently illegally introduced walleye, which are extremely aggressive and eat trout, into the City reservoir. For a while there was talk of poisoning the walleye and restocking the trout, but I haven't heard the status of that for a while.
Anyway, I checked out Trout Unlimited and guess what: http://www.upperbearrivertu.org/calendar It appears that we are lousy with trout and the people who love them.
Mom frequently fishes the Green River near her home and they get nice trout out of there, but that's to be expected. (Although lately because of the oilfield activity they've been warned to limit the amount they eat. Mercury in the Green. Yeesh.)
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