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WEDNESDAY MORNING AT OUR HOUSE |
Tuesday evening's fast-moving thunderstorm left us with overcast skies this morning and a chance of more rain. Pheebs took Kelly and Ella for a walk around our Park and when they got back, Ella and I hopped into the Subaru and headed out to see if we could find a few photos. And, Ella had her own camera too.
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KELLY, ELLA, AND PHEEBS HEAD OUT FOR A MORNING WALK |
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AND HERE GOES ELLA AND I IN THE SUBARU FOR A PHOTO CRUISE |
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SAW THIS LADY PAINTING ON BAYFIELD'S BEACH |
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ON BAYFIELD'S MAIN STREET I STOPPED TO EXPLAIN TO ELLA ABOUT LOOKING FOR THINGS IN NATURE TO FRAM A PHOTO WITH |
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IN THIS PHOTO I TALKED ABOUT 'PHOTOS OF OPPORTUNITY' |
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IN THIS ONE I POINTED OUT THE COLORS |
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ON THE WAY HOME WE STOPPED AT THE ASHWOOD WHERE HER MOM AND DAD WERE |
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'HEY ELLA' - 'HEY DAD' |
Ella has an artsy side to her and I had noticed that when they were here last week so that gave me an idea. I have a number of older cameras here and one of those cameras was a Canon PowerShot A720 IS. I checked it out a few days ago to make sure it was working okay (last used in 2007) and it was, so I gave that Canon camera to Ella Tuesday evening. She excitedly busied herself right away taking photos of Pheebs snoozing on the floor. |
NOT THE BEST PHOTO BUT YOU CAN SEE HOW EXCITED ELLA IS WITH HER CANON CAMERA |
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YUP, STILL EXCITED |
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HER FIRST PHOTOS WERE OF PHEEBS |
It was 7 a.m. and I was the first one up followed closely by Pheebs, Kelly, and Ella minutes later. Another day was underway and it was off to a quiet start. As I sat here with my Asus Vivobook on my lap I thought how very different things are now compared to years ago. To my front left sat Ella on our couch with her IPad on her lap and to my right front sat Kelly with her Acer on her lap. Soft music in the background and all three of us lost in our own separate technical worlds of varying interests. Something didn't seem quite right about all that but yet I was content in the moment. It seems an odd world we live in nowadays compared to the world I once grew up in. I tried to think back to when I was Ella's 11-year-old age but drew a blank. I can only imagine what toys I might have had and been playing with at the time. Would my Mom and Step-Dad have been up yet, would my Uncle be awake, and would my Grandpa be stirring?? Gee, had I been writing a blog in those days I could maybe have looked back to find all those answers. But alas, the word blog wouldn't even be thought of until over six decades later. |
BREAKFAST AT OUR HOUSE THIS MORNING |
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ELLA WITH HER IPAD |
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HERE'S ELLA AND I LISTENING TO THE BAND 'TEARS FOR FEARS' ON YOUTUBE SINGING ONE OF MY ALL TIME FAVORITE SONGS....'EVERYBODY WANTS TO RULE THE WORLD' |
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AFTER TAKING THE PHOTOS OF ELLA ABOVE, SHE QUICKLY TURNED HER CAMERA ON ME |
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SHE TOLD ME TO SAY 'CHEESE' SO HERE I AM SAYING 'CHEESE' WITH MY MOUTH CLOSED |
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I GOT HER BACK WITH TWO MORE PHOTOS |
It turned out to be a hot and humid afternoon. (it later cooled down considerably) Rebecca, Ricardo, and Ella decided to head into Bayfield and browse around some shops. Kelly decided to go along but drove separately in the Subaru in case she felt like coming home sooner. I asked her if she wanted me to come along but she thought she would be alright. It wasn't too long before she was home again and feeling sick. After a much-needed rest this afternoon, she felt better. Below are a few photos Ella took on our photo tour this morning.Rebecca and Ricardo brought Ella over late in the afternoon and then headed out for supper. Kelly and I weren't keen on going out so Ella, Kelly, and I settled for a Pizza which I had picked up in Bayfield earlier. Ella spent the night at our house again:)) Al's Music Box:)) Reelin' In The Years is a song by American rock band Steely Dan, released as the second single from their 1972 debut album, Can't Buy a Thrill. The song was written by Donald Fagen and Walter Becker and features Fagen on vocals. In 2009, Rolling Stone described the track as "a prime early example of what would become Steely Dan's trademark vibe, marrying a sardonic kiss-off to an ex to a bouncy shuffle groove, and adding on some white-hot guitar dazzlement courtesy of Elliott Randall to bring the whole thing home." The guitar solo on the original recorded version, by session player Elliott Randall, was recorded in one take. It has reportedly been rated by Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page as his favorite solo of all time. In 2016 the solo was ranked the 40th best guitar solo of all time by the readers of Guitar World magazine. The four-channel quadraphonic mix of the recording has extra lead guitar fills not heard in the more common two-channel stereo version. On its release in 1973, Billboard said: "Easy sounding guitar solos lead into an easy sounding piano break which supports the voices extolling about culling life's experiences from tears to time." Cash Box called it a "winner highlighted by some expert guitar playing." In March 2005, Q magazine placed the recording at No. 95 in its list of the 100 Greatest Guitar Tracks.
GROANER'S CORNER:(( Three engineers and three accountants are traveling by train to a conference. At the station, the three accountants each buy tickets and watch as the three engineers buy only a single ticket. "How are three people going to travel on only one ticket?" asks an accountant. "Watch and you'll see," answers an engineer. They all board the train. The accountants take their respective seats but all three engineers cram into a restroom and close the door behind them. Shortly after the train has departed, the conductor comes around to collect tickets. He knocks on the restroom door and says, "Ticket, please." The door opens just a crack and a single arm emerges with a ticket in hand. The conductor takes it and moves on. The accountants saw this and agreed it was quite a clever idea. So after the conference, the accountants decide to copy the engineers on the return trip and save some money (being clever with money, and all that). When they get to the station, they buy a single ticket for the return trip. To their astonishment, the engineers don't buy a ticket at all. "How are you going to travel without a ticket?" says one perplexed accountant. "Watch and you'll see," answers an engineer. When they board the train the three accountants cram into a restroom and the three engineers cram into another one nearby. The train departs. Shortly afterward, one of the engineers leaves his restroom and walks over to the restroom where the accountants are hiding. He knocks on the door and says, Ticket, please."-----------------------------------------
- Health inspector: "I'm afraid you have too many roaches in here."
Restaurant owner: "How many am I allowed?"
- Did you hear about the old man whose birthday one year lasted only one minute?
It was his sixty-second birthday.
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