beluga

beluga

Saturday, April 27, 2019

Taps for my camera

These are the last few pictures you'll see from my little point and shoot camera.  Always in my hand or my pocket,  my constant companion is now in a box ready to be sent for repair.    Don't feel bad for me, this one is my 4th.    I'm tough on cameras.   Because it's always with me, it is always in the elements.   Dust and sand and rocks are deadly to camera lenses and mine has been grinding in and out painfully for a while now.   I knew it wouldn't be long before the lens just refused to move.       Yesterday, along Onion Creek, it gave up the ghost.     Perhaps it was the sulfurous odor coming from the creek that made it stay inside.




I'm sorry, I know I've showed this to you before....but it makes me laugh


Onion Creek Road is one of our favorite drives in this area.   It is not technically difficult (although there are a few spots where the road is one lane only and they occur relatively high above the creek of course) but the scenery it passes through is a WOW.   The road crosses the creek about 34 times  (MonaLiza and I counted one time) and there is so much to see.    I won't write more about it, you've heard it all before.     The pictures that follow are taken with my phone :(






We misjudged the weather, or rather we believed the weather "forecasters".   It was supposed to be a sunny day.     We watched black clouds gathering over the beginning of our route, the way we had to get back.   Lightning split the sky ahead.     Luckily, the cell kept moving as we did so only a bit of the edge of the storm turned our dusty car muddy.

On the way back to Beluga we passed the entrance to Arches National Park.   The lines to get in, even in the late afternoon, were very long and two lanes wide.

hundreds of people waiting to get in to Arches National Park

This week is National Park Week, and seems to have drawn quite a crowd!   

This morning we had second cup with Lewis at our shady site and then Dave and I went into Moab to check out the Annual Car Show.



Dave is a good man.   He even held Lew's bone so he could chew it more easily.....
if Dave let go of the bone Lew would drag it to the grass to chew.....
The show was huge and very well done.   Lots of great cars from finely restored classics (and a few not so finely restored), funky rat rods, brand new showroom cars and highly modified Japanese models.     We had a good time but I really missed my camera.   It's no fun trying to capture the essence of these beauties with a telephone......



The "customized" wrecker used to get over ambitious or unlucky Jeepers out of bad situations was there.    Just for show mind you.     This particular guy (Rory) had just helped a man whose Jeep had overturned on one of the difficult trails.   The man lost several fingers in the wreck because he was holding on to the roll bar when the incident occurred.   Lesson learned.




This one's for you FRED!

so beautiful and clean.....

Afterward we had a yummy lunch at Sweet Cravings, did some grocery shopping and went back to Beluga.    Lewis was waiting for us.....he was hot.

can you get any closer to the fan Lew?
(pay no attention to the dust on the fan......)

7 comments:

  1. Glad the weather improved for the Car Show. The sun sure does show off those shines much better. Looked like a great day! Good you didn't get too much rain for the Onion Creek drive. I guess the long line into Arches was because it was Friday afternoon. Still I am surprised since the free park day was April 20. I don't think Arches will ever be enjoyable again unless one goes at sunrise or before. My furry boy is so cute:)

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  2. Great pictures eve with your Phone.
    That's why lots of Off-Roaders install handles inside their Roll Cages. It helps them walk out in One Piece.
    Be Safe and Enjoy!

    It's about time.

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  3. That line to get into Arches looks daunting. :-(( I remember fondly the days of no lines at all...and it wasn't even that long ago!
    So sorry to hear about your camera going belly up. But your phone photos are quite good!

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  4. Long lines into the popular areas is getting to be the new norm, arg! Nice car show, what was on top of the stretch VM van? Looks like a fold up shade ramada. A lot of nice cars there, I'd have guessed all built up Jeeps in a Moab show. My old Canon came back from repair last month, just can't get used to using a phone as a camera.

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  5. Makes me laugh too :-)) We have to do Onion Creek next time, it looks amazing. I'm never happy when I have to use my phone camera, but at least we have the pics! Nice that Lewis has some grass in the desert - even if his trusty bone holder is on the concrete.

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  6. I have been talking about getting a small point and shoot to carry with me for a while now because I just don't bring along my DSLR usually. But Kevin's cell phone just died and in the course of getting him a new one, we ended up trading in mine as well and upgrading. The cameras on the phones just keep getting better and better. I am blown away by how good the photos are, and there's even an app I can get that will allow me to shoot in RAW, so I can edit the photos more. So, I think I'm gonna stick with my phone going forward. Since I always have it, it's that much easier for me to take photos. Anyway, just something to consider if they can't fix your old camera. It looks like your current cell phone takes really good pics anyway, but every new phone has an exponentially better camera. At least from what we've seen so far.

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  7. Yeah, you returned to Onion Creek, we had a great time there also doing a photo shoot with our hubbies at that tree!
    Im so glad we have visited most of the National Parks now, or we would be unhappy waiting in line. On the other hand maybe not since we are early birds :)

    The way we manhandle our cameras makes them have a short life span. Phones do take good picture but I seldom use it now because of storage.
    Dave has nice feet, I thought it was yours :)

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