Solar - Terrestrial Data

Thursday, October 29, 2009

The BIG 6-0 continued

My son Markus and his girlfriend Tuuli came up from Helsinki the weekend before my birthday to celebrate my big 6-0. On Saturday evening we went to a nice restaurant to have a good meal. Ingela's mom joined us.



Afterwards we went home to our place for coffee and three different kinds of desserts.



And then followed the unavoidable SingStar competition:


The old lead singer :)



Ian



Lukas and Markus



Lukas and Ian



Ingela, the very excited listener, sewing together her granny square afghan.

The party continued the following Friday, but that is a different story :)

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Wow!

Even the sun remembered my birthday and produced a new set of sunspots on October 23 :)

Solarcycle no 24 has been a slow starter so far but this set of spots are good looking. But I'm still predicting a cold winter here on the northern hemisphere.



Friday, October 23, 2009

The BIG 6-0

Still looking good... Eh?


Still feeling like 29 though I might well be looking like the autumn leaves below  :)


Or like my son Markus' impression of me looking into the mirror seeing the little kid I still am:

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Some cold resistant species

Despite the low temperatures the last days there are some species out in our garden that do not really care. I found some rucola flowers and the gooseberries are still hanging in there.





Sunday, October 11, 2009

-7 C and descending...

Last night the temperature dropped down to -7 C and the forecast tells us that it will continue to drop day by day now. Which tells me that whenever there will be a low pressure arriving from the Atlantic ocean we will have snow, lots of snow...
Anyway, the weather was crisp and clear this morning and the nature was beautifully glaced by the frost so I decided to take the new Tamron 90mm macro for a spin.
I am in the beginning of the learning curve how to use this new toy of ours and it shows of course.






Thursday, October 08, 2009

A new Toy in the family

Let me introduce you to Nikon D3000 and friends:



After a long time of procrastination, thinking and rethinking, searching for the best fit for our money and needs we finally invested in a new camera, a DSLR with a few lenses. The camera body is the new Nikon D3000 introduced in August this year, the lens included in the package is the 18-55mm standard zoom with Vibration Reduction. As extras I chose the classic Tamron 90 mm short tele with 1:1 macro, now available with built-in autofocus motor to suit simpler camera bodies like this. From another resource I found a cheap Nikon telezoom, the 55-200 but without vibration reduction.
Well now nobody here in this house can blame the equipment if taking crappy pictures with this stuff...:)
Well, if you take a look at the specs for this camera you will see that the sensor is just a moderate 10 MPixels and the "old" camera, the Olympus SP570 UZ is the same so what´s the big deal?
The big deal is that the physical size of the sensor in this camera is twice the size, width- and heightwise which makes the light receiving area four times bigger as well as the size of every pixel itself which provides for better sensitivity with less picture noise in low light. And the resolution of the lens itself can be better utilised on a larger sensor.

I may not have mentioned it before but (as so many other people involved in vacuum tubes, radio and audio) I was deeply involved in photography in the good old days. Back in the beginning of the sixties I would run around with an old box camera my mom got from her sister Hilda who was living in the USA and later on I got my own box camera.
My first girlfriend's dad owned a Yashica two-lens reflex camera for 70 mm film and that was the first camera I ever used that could take really good pictures. I learned how to develop film and got myself an enlarger, a second-hand Opemus III and started to make copies in B&W. The first 35 mm camera I bought was a Nikkormat FT2 in 1975 with a hefty 35-105 mm Sigma zoom lens that was something new and exclusive then. Later I bought a real pocket camera a Rollei 35S for 35 mm film and that was a nice little camera that travelled with me everywhere. Started to shoot color slides and traded in my old Opemus for a new Durst with a color head and started to make color copies of my slides.
Nowadays all that equipment is sold and all cameras in this household are digital cameras, compact- and bridgecameras and now this new Nikon.

Some samples taken with this camera and the Tamron lens:




 
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