Saturday, January 06, 2001

More stuff on Milleman Street, Palisade, Colorado

Here's the view from our front yard. It never ceases to amaze me! The pine tree is a Colorado blue spruce that we bought in a pot one year as a Christmas tree and re-planted. It seems that things here either don't grow at all or they grow very fast. Both of the trees in the front yard grew fast. I planted the globe willow on the right literally from a stick, which is why the trunk shape is so weird (see below).

Notice there's a tree stump in front of the existing tree? Our landlords had it cut down before we bought the house. Globe willows are gorgeous round-topped trees that grow like weeds here. This one got so big that the branches threatened the roof. When they cut it down, the wood was stacked for firewood, and as we got to the bottom of the pile, I found that some of the branches were sprouting, even though they'd been under the wood pile for many months. I brought one stick out to the location of the old tree, and planted it, like the phoenix rising. Lo and behold . . . it grew! So the trunk started as multi-directional springs from a branch.

I built this house for the chickens. Actually, it's right next to the spot where I found the sprouting willow branch. By the time I took this photo, the chickens were gone, but the house was still there. It was funny at the time, because we paid a couple of dollars for the chickens, but we bought new plywood of the right size for this house I designed with fancy folding doors to keep out the cold, so the chickens basically lived in a palace. It cost us a lot more than the dollar value of the chickens. Of course, we didn't measure the chickens' value in dollars. We got a couple of hens, and they were an endless source of entertainment for us and for the dogs. We had eggs, too, but for various reasons we didn't eat them very often.

Trying to grow plants in Palisade was a challenge for us. I'd been a lifelong Californian, and Marco's experience was from the Philippines and California. It took us awhile to figure out what plants would live, how they worked in the Colorado climate, etc. We had pretty good luck with snapdragons, and they were gorgeous in spring and summer. Here they are in January, still a little green. As you can see, we didn't get snow all winter or anything like that. If we got several inches at time, it was an event, and it didn't last long. Our biggest snows were usually in April.

Here's some more vegetation in January. It was always interesting to see what survived the winter.

The eye of Elvis

Fun with digital cameras. This is my cat, Elvis, and my room when I lived in Palisade, Colorado.

Thursday, January 04, 2001

Tapirs and home in Palisade, Colorado

Here's another photo of the balsa wood tapir donated to the Tapir Preservation Fund by Ian Rose. It came out a completely different color from the first photos.

Don't ask me why I thought they'd look good on this background. I was either just playing with the camera or trying to find something of neutral intensity to see what would happen to the color of the tapirs.

Elvis. What a nice cat - so pretty. I love her white bib and her eyes.

This is our back yard on Milleman Street. The place came with the big doghouse, but of course the dogs don't use it. The chickens do, though. They like to hang out there during the day. The mountain in the background is Grand Mesa, at about 10,000 ft. elevation, I think. I hope I'm not confusing that with its age, which is also about 10,000 years. The top of the mesa was created by a lava flow and there are "bottomless" lakes on the top along with some stunning scenery. They sometimes call it "the world's biggest flat-topped mountain," although I don't know if it is. I think there's another contender somewhere.

This is taken from our front yard looking west toward that hump at the end of the bluff, which is Mount Garfield. This location is so incredible, I can hardly believe I've been so lucky to have such a place to call home. When we initially rented the house before we bought it, there were only two places that fit what we were looking for and were in the right price range. This one allowed dogs and we wanted to get a dog. Also, we'd looked at Palisade and we loved the area. It worked out perfectly. It was such an amazing find after living in the Los Angeles area for so long.

Wednesday, January 03, 2001

My first digital camera that recorded dates

What a part of my life that has become . . . taking pictures with dates recorded by the camera. Above is the first picture I took with my new Olympus digital. It had a flat dark gray card (before the state-of-the-art SanDisk that everything uses now), and I don't remember how much storage it had. I'm looking back now, writing this in 2009. This first photo was numbered by the camera "P1030001.JPG." The photo is my computer in Palisade, where I spent so much time working on my web site and the Tapir Preservation Fund. The camera instructions are laid out in front of the PC, and a beanie tapir from Hungary is perched on the top of the monitor. For a number of years, we sold those in the gift shop. The window open in the lower right must have something to do with the camera. I don't recognize it any more.

This is the bulletin board above Marco's computer desk. We sat back-to-back in the family room/office that had been converted from a garage before we bought the house. There was a wood stove, and it was a cozy place to work or play interactive games. We were into WarCraft, the really early version, among other things. Marco was a whiz at AutoCad drafting, and had his own business working from home. We had a cat and two dogs. It was a nice time.

I remember wanting to buy something just a little exotic when I bought the hanging thing, wanting to spend money when I really didn't have it to spend. I enjoyed looking at it, although it never served any purpose. Sometimes those things are the best - just something simple to take pleasure in.

Besides being fun, the new camera served a purpose. I would now be able to take better photos of tapirs for the gift shop. These two balsa wood tapirs had been purchased in Peru and donated to the Tapir Fund to raise money on eBay. My photo stand was a built-in bench on the back deck. I could hang various drapes from the side of the house and experiment with various lighting conditions. It was often either very bright or too much in shadow. Still, I began taking good pictures for the online store and for eBay - pictures that actually showed the items quite well an brought compliments and sales.

Wednesday, June 24, 1998

Ted on vaction at a lake - sometime in the 1990s?


The top photo and the enlargement from it (2nd photo) were taken, as far as I can tell, sometime in the 1990s. The scans are from the only copies I have, which are printed from a computer. I believe this is a favorite place that Dad and Lois enjoyed visiting, or they were on vacation with some friends. I'll try to get more info and post the facts as soon as I can.