And look at the scenic views I captured with my Nikon D40!

But what were they looking at?


Maybe I should update my funeral wishes to include using this mortician. . .


Thanks, Total Stranger, for taking this shot of Doug and me!






The Park Inn is a block from the Heartland Trail, a 49 mile multi-use trail for biking, cross-country skiing, walking, snowmobiling. . . skipping? The trail use to be train rails, and when the train stopped running in the area, the state eventually paved it over (as well as a number of other rail lines in the state) and developed it for recreational use.
Our room actually had a jacuzzi in it! Sadly, we're not exactly batting a thousand on our jacuzzis. This is the 2nd time we've stayed in a B&B, and the second time we chose the room with a jacuzzi. At the last B&B, there was no hot water.






And between the lilacs and the blooming chives, my frogs are looking intoxicated with summer-joy and bliss!

Be selective as you search for the best produce. Remember, shop local, and freshness counts.
Once you spot a nice cut of worm, pounce promptly. Be competitive; do not yield your find to other shoppers.
Remember to not slack off on presentation and make sure dinner is promptly served.
Since the theme of the week is "boys," here's one of whom I am quite fond. (I'd rather say . . . "I am fond of," but there's that proposition thing, and I'm afraid of the Proposition Police.
See this crowd crossing the bridge between Grand Forks and East Grand Forks? It's a crowd! (Around here, more than 3 or 4 people constitutes a crowd.) 22,000 people turned out for the Art Fest. Keep in mind, that the population of Grand Forks is only about 55,000.
There were giant puppet people roaming through the crowds. Grand Forks is such a funny place. I had my 70-300 mm lens with me, and because it's sizable, I think it tends to draw more attention to it than my smaller lenses. But over and over again, I'd notice that I'd stop to take a photo, would be fiddling with my settings, and would look up and see a whole line of people patiently waiting for me, not wanting to block my shot. It was kind of un-nerving! I found myself wanting to rush, not wanting to hold up 15 or so in either direction waiting to pass in front of me! Yep. Grand Forks warmth.
PS. About those birds. I will post a photo of the gold finches in a day or two, but would the nasty birds that keep flying over my laundry line, causing me to re-wash a load of sheets TWICE in one day, kindly refrain?




Perhaps more teeth really should be put in the "No Smoking" messages!
It may LOOK beautiful out in my yard, in JUNE . . . with bleeding hearts. . . .
and Lupines. . . .
. . . and Lilacs. . . .
. . . luring us out there into the stinking, rotten, North Dakota weather, of only 54 degrees, in JUNE!






And then we started getting stuck in snowstorms, my kids grew up and couldn't be torn away from their peer groups/school/work, and we stopped visiting. The book showed a visit that seemed like an "invasion", generating chaos and exhaustion, but cherished. Mary Ann and Bill always made us feel cherished. . . and Mary Ann would promptly mail back to Grand Forks all the stuff that my kids would forget and leave at their house.
Now, Doug and I can visit them, without kids, and are discovering the delights of playing with little kids that aren't your own. Here's Andy demonstrating self-protection while sliding down the steps.
And here's Joy, turning into an incredibly gorgeous little beauty.
My sweet, sweet sister. (Sorry, Mary Ann, about the flash going off in your face.)
And this is Bill, who has mastered photo-bombing with aplomb!
And as an aside. I can't believe I finally figured this out! I've been grousing about how much better my photos look in Bridge, than when I post them. Finally, I realized that something I read in a book about CS3 is just not the truth! The book said that CS3 automatically converted to sRGB in the save for web process. IT DOES NOT!!! So at least one of my miseries re: color angst has been solved! Today's photos are the first in months and months that are correctly in sRGB instead of RGB.