Not a bad week. Some fun stuff. But upcoming are some travel pics, and you know how I love to take those. More about that tomorrow as we leave for Portland, Oregon, just after noon. I think the three wooden people grab me the most this week. How about you?
- Tonight was our monthly Supper Club here at Trilogy. Eighty people came in hungry for our awesome chef Andrew’s cooking. This month featured German food, and it did not disappoint. It was just delicious. And it gave me a chance to do some crowd photography. I realize that for some, living in a 55+ community might seem like a cliché, but we love it. We’ve made so many friends here and have so much fun. Just like these people are.
- Today was a really busy day, so I forgot to take a photo. Pretty ridiculous since I have been up since 1:30 am. So, as we were sitting here starting to watch Slow Horses (a great show), I suddenly realized I hadn’t taken a photo today. I went out to the car to get my camera, where I had left it, thinking I might find something to shoot while I was out. As I grabbed it, I saw the front of our garage freezer, covered with more than 100 magnets. It’s one of the things we collect on our travels. Since our kitchen refrigerator is stainless steel, the magnets won’t stick to it, so they are in the garage. This is just a small number of what we have — little reminders of all the great places we’ve been.
- Way back on January 1, when I started this 365 project, I took a photo of Welcome Lake in the Lake of the Woods development about two miles from our house. I went back on April 1, July 1, and now October 1. I had hoped that the view would change with the seasons, but it pretty much looks the same in every photo. It would have looked different if I had gotten snow in the winter or colorful leaves today in autumn, but no luck. Most of the trees around the lake are evergreens. But I decided to take it four times, and here it is. If it snows before December 31, I will get another one.
- You get the weekly Keeley early this week because we are about to leave for SeaTac to pick up my brother and sister-in-law, who are here for four days before we head to Portland on Monday. I want to send this now because I’ll be very busy over the next few days. I love this one because she has that big grin on her face.
- I admit it. I forgot to post a photo yesterday. My excuse is that I took many photos; I just forgot to share one. My brother and sister-in-law arrived Thursday afternoon, and since then, I’ve been doing one of the things I enjoy most in the world—cooking for company. I have more to do today, but I wanted to get this online. We took them to the brand-new Seattle Waterfront. We hadn’t been there ourselves since they completed what must have been a billion-dollar redo. It’s gorgeous—a truly beautiful job. I captured a couple of street shots, an airplane flying among the downtown buildings, a very cool wooden carving sculpture of a family, and the Big Wheel.
- The Big Wheel
- Airplane
- Street shot
- Today was all about cooking. We started the day at Saturday Market, picking up vegetables for the dish you’re looking at. It’s an absolutely delicious dish you make with grilled veggies and cured meats. It’s called the Grilled Antipasto Vegetable Platter. I spent so much time on it that I had to photograph it for today.
- These are our surprise flowers. Earlier this year, we had a perennial in our front yard that died. Mainly because the landscaper we hired planted it in the shade. When it seemed to be completely gone, I checked and found out it needed full sun. We have absolutely nowhere in our yards, front or back, that gets full sun for more than six hours a day. So that one didn’t make it. I went out to a nursery we liked and asked for something that would grow in partial sun and mostly shade. This is what they recommended: a Japanese anemone. When we got it, it was a small green plant, but in the last two weeks, just as fall was setting in, it blossomed like crazy, as you can see. Truly beautiful white blossoms.
When you acquire an understanding of the science behind light and what governs it, then you can predict its behavior and control the lighting in photographs. – Roberto Valenzuela













Enjoy the Columbia. W e should have done it sooner. :)Sent from my iPad