How to know where you stand with your combine: googly eyes 

This sight during the Mandan parade on July 4th made me laugh. It immediately reminded me of a certain Saturday Night Live skit featuring Christopher Walken. I haven't actually watched Saturday Night Live in many, many years (is Dana Carvey still on the cast?) but someone told me about this particular skit. It was hilarious. It is one of the few things on SNL that isn't vulgar, so I invite you to watch:



After seeing this, I put googly eyes on the cactus in our office, since it was literally poking up a ceiling tile above it. At least now I know where I stand with it. After all, cacti have pricklers...

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Room with a view 

A lot of the old familiar abandoned farmsteads I've photographed since picking up my photography hobby are now lying in shambles. After all, a building leaning at a 45 degree angle can only do it for so long, right? So it's time to search out some new ones.

This one is my new favorite, I think...an ornate home, large for its time, which was at one time lined with brick outside. This front window overlooks a particularly scenic little valley. I noticed the remnants of an old chair parked by the front picture window. The drab and delapidated interior is an amazing contrast to the colorful glory of the valley outside and the summer sky.

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There are 10 kinds of people...those who can read binary, and those who can't 

I spotted this "leetmobile" in a parking lot a while back and had to nab a quick cell phone shot of it. I couldn't actually tell you if the binary code thereon means anything, since I haven't remembered how to read binary code since the 1980s. While I've blurred out the license plate, I can tell you that it's a ham radio operator plate. That means the owner of this car is likely quite tech-savvy, even beyond spraying ones and zeros across the hood of his little Ford.

Here's a little more information about binary code. It's basically a way of breaking down letters and numbers to the simplest form, combinations of ones and zeros. "10" means 2, which is why I made the joke in the title.

I actually spent way more of my time as an old Apple II geek using hexadecimal numbers and can still convert it to regular numbers in my head (although not quite as quickly as I could back during the Reagan era). It's commonly used to program website colors, which is why I like the joke "Roses are #FF0000, violets are #0000FF, all my base, are belong to you." That's also only funny if you get the corny 80s video game reference.

Okay, now I've illustrated my geekdom. No, it's not my car. :)

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Milky Way morning 

One of the primary reasons I got into photography was astrophotography, or photographing the night sky. I've always been a big stargazer and have quite the equipment for doing so (even down to an iTunes playlist, which I will share soon). I got my first camera to take pictures of Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights) in particular, and even got a few shots before the sunspots responsible for them fizzled. Since then we've been in a solar minimum, one with an in explicable lack of sunspots. I have been blaming myself and my camera purchase, of course.

Then I got my new camera and have had a very hard time finding some night skies. Usually when they were clear, the moon would pollute the scene with unwanted light. That or I just wasn't able to break away at night to try for some cool shots. This weekend I did get a chance to hang out with the new camera and some other gear. One of the reasons I wanted to upgrade my camera was for the new one's better performance in low light, and I was not disappointed.



This is one of my new favorite stargazing nooks, and as I grow accustomed to the features of the new camera I'm sure you'll see more of this lone tree or the hidden rural road featured in the first photo above. I was only out for a short time, but my friend and I saw LOTS of shooting stars and satellites. The Milky Way was quite visible until the moon started to rise on the east horizon. It was also getting cold and late, so we called it quits for the time being. Hopefully I will have plenty of stargazing photos to add to these over the rest of the summer!

The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament sheweth his handywork. -- Psalm 19:1


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Excellent turnout 

I haven't seen a crowd like this at the capitol Independence Day celebration in recent memory! It was a very uplifting sight. Just about everybody rose and stood at attention for the Battle Hymn of the Republic. The performance of this grand hymn was the most amazing one I've ever heard, with all the verses about Christ intact, and it was a breathtaking experience. The fact that thousands of my fellow North Dakotans stood to take it in as well made it even more special.

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