Making the Best of the View at Hand

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When I heard that the Polynesian would be under construction when we got there I was concerned that our view would be jacked up.

(not that you spend all that amount of time in the hotel room, anyway)

I actually didn't mind the view of the Bungalows under construction one bit. In true Disney fashion, when they are done they will fit in the environment as if they were always there!

Seven Dwarfs Mine Train

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This was a fantastic ride! Just enough thrilling to be fun for the adults but not too much so as to be overly scary for the little ones.

It is interesting b/c you can feel the train braking to keep a smooth speed and control descents.

Some interesting queue games as well.

If you can't get a fast-pass, it is still well worth the wait. Twice the sign said 90 minutes, and it was only about 60 both times.

With Eyes to See

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One of the things about being a photographer is I feel that it makes you more aware of the environment and more appreciative of the small things in nature / around us.    

I think it's that spacey-ness that we try to medicate out of kids and that formal education tries to exercise from people and replace with structured fact and knowledge recall.
But, I digress..
This little guy was flying around the pool between various plants and after I held still for a bit, he let me get pretty close to snap a shot.  

The only (slight) bummer was I had the camera shooting JPEG, not RAW but I was pleasantly surprised by the JPEG's quality.

Your Job for the Next Three Months..

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We stood around in the newer areas of Magic Kingdom, around from the addition, an area called Gaston's Tavern that sells frozen apple juice in collector mugs my kids fight over at dinner. (Though, we have spares now!) :)
This area wasn't really crowded, I guess the rains earlier in the day had thinned out the herds, somewhat..

Anyway, an employee was orienting two new 'cast members' and directed them to stand back a ways to get the best view of the fireworks as he advised, "This will be your job for the next 3 months, how cool is that?"

While I'm sure their jobs will involve a good deal more than watching fireworks I appreciated his enthusiasm.   
I was also way happy to be able to shoot fireworks, hand-held (with autofocus!) w/ a crop-sensor lens and get some very usable results.  If the A7R is this good, the A7S is going to be incredible for this..

Lines in the Green

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I'm going to write up some more detail in a day or so, however.. I have the A-Mount 24-70mm f2.8 from Sony. I love it. It's substantial, has a great feel, takes great images...

For a Disney trip I rented the EF Mount 24-70 f4 Lens. Reason being I had a credit @ borrowlenses and really wanted to try out the newer lens (plus not fool with the A-Mount to EF Mount adapter in a Disney Park)

I had kind of low expectations for the f4/ EF Mount version of this lens but I have to say that I am very surprised. It's quite a good lens for 1/3 the weight and lower price.

The Happiest Place on Earth..?

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They Say that Disney is the happiest place on Earth. I hope that isn't true. (a-hem, I happy to know the happiest place on earth for me is on a sailboat but that's for another time)

Disney's always been a cool vacation for us. I remember this band trip in High School, just taking rolls and rolls of film (and most if it not coming out)

Though, this will hopefully be our last trip here for a couple years. Time away, new things and all that..

Normally, I try to shoot the landmarks of the parts without people in the shots. Unfortunately my usual favorite spots are all screwed up with construction walls and equipment. So, this time, I'm working to find new (for me) favorite spots and methods.... I thought it would be different to try to capture the hustle and bustle of this many people, crammed in a park, walking over one another.

Some babies screaming, some kids laughing, some parents doing a little of both.

Again, probably not the happiest place on Earth but there are certainly worse vacations a person could take with kids :)

This was shot hand held so please forgive any slight camera motion!

Walkin' w/ a Teeny Camera

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I'm sure that you've noticed, dogs are (can be) territorial. At the dog-walking park or the Sunday afternoon Petsmart trip you often see dogs sniffing each others' butts if given the opportunity. You know, to check each other out. I'm really unsure of what information is exchanged in the event but I would imagine it goes something like this:

*sniff* gender determined

*sniff* indoor / or outdoor pet

*sniff* approximate age determined

et cetera..

Well, photography enthusiasts can be territorial too. Except, I mean, they don't usually do the butt thing. (Although I read about this one unforunate event in New Orleans... but I digress)

I'm serious on the territorial thing, though. Take your camera to a local oft-photographed spot and be aware of the eyes on you from passerby'ers or other photographers.

Thar be some judgin' goin' on Matey.

I mean, if you just rolled up with your fancy new 6D to the Fairhope pier for sunset shots, you don't want to be showed up by that one show off with the 1D X. You won't win the cool kid vote anymore. When we talk about cameras, their capabilities, specifications and attributes, there is an x-factor I think we often overlook or fail to discuss. What does your camera (and lenses) look like and what do you look like when using?

The person with a carbon fiber-legged tripod and gigantic precision head with the dials and markings of a Davinci contraption with that 8lb DSLR perched atop like a pissed off-Raven: That's a professional.

The person with the itty-bitty point-and-shoot-looking camera? Pay them no mind. Santa put that under the tree and they are taking it for a whirl. Move along, nothing to see here. /Amateur!

Since I've been shooting mirrorless for awhile, I've had a tendency to use the mirrorless cameras as my Harry Potter invisibility cloak. If I could spare the trade-off by using my APS-C sized glass, I'd go incognito mirrorless camera and no one would mind me any attention whatsoever. I could shoot in peace without folks commenting on gear. If I had the have the full-frame lense, then I'd carry my own pissed-off looking Raven (Nikon in my case, usually) amongst it's shiny gi-normous tripod.

You bet the comments come. "Wow, you must be some sort of pro-feshunal!" :)

Because, in photography we've been taught that bigger is always better. More length on the lens, more aperture, more megapixels, more ISO always means better gear, right?

I will admit, too, that if I were to pull up and shoot a wedding with a mirrorless camera, there would be some amateur-hour comments under the judgy breaths of attendees, regardless of the capability. Bring that D4 and that noise gets shut down with a quickness.

At any rate, my last 2,000 shutter actuations have been with a full-frame mirrorless camera and I'm almost invisible while using it. So far, not one butt-sniff and I'm okay with that. ;)

It's a brave new world where maybe smaller is just-as-good and I appreciate Sony's spirit of innovation bringing Full frame into the Alpha Mirrorless line. I'm not sure if the value will hold on the camera, not sure if it'll hold up to 200k clicks like my last 4 camera bodies but today, at least.. I don't care b/c I'm sure having fun with it.

Enclosure

Cloudy, with a Chance of Fruitcakes

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Buying & selling stuff on Craigslist and eBay sort of scares me, in a thrilling / adventurous way.   You meet all of these people that you maybe normally wouldn't.  I'll be honest, many of them are complete fruitcakes. In fact, I've often wondered that given the cross-section of humanity I've experienced buying and selling old stuff on Craigslist, what sort of relationships can be built from those people-seeking-people ads.   Just know, I'm not besmirching genuine mental-illness, so keep that dramatic hatemail to yourself.   

I should also pre-face this that I apparently possess a force-of-attraction for crazy.  in Example:  A friend and I were having lunch in Gulf Shores a couple years back.   This guy comes up to him (we are seated) -

"That is a NICE jacket.   Really nice.  (Long, lingering pause.....Like..a full minute...  then points to his truck) Can I have it? My dog is cold."

Jared looks at me, completely baffled.  My response. "Yeah, sorry man. It's me.   Happens to be all of the time.  I attract them, apparently."

So, in honor of the parade of Fruitcakes that I've met buying and selling stuff on Craigslist, I thought I'd compile a list of my favorite nuttiness for your reading pleasure.

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"My uncle was a co-founder of Kodak.  He invented the darkroom enlarger and has patents for most parts of camera internal mechanisms. "
    <- I asked his uncle's name..... He didn't know. Witness protection, perhaps? ;)

"I used to work in a secret government facility, experimenting with alternative energy during the Carter Administration.   We had devices that could generate 50kw of electricity per hour just by processing the water in the air.   I can't show you the plans because I'm under a federal gag order and they are watching me."

"I was in Nagasaki when the bomb hit, taking pictures. I used a Canon AE-1 Program."  
     <-  He was less than 50 years old in 2013.  The AE-1 program came out in 1981.   Math, mkay. :|

"Sorry, I can't pay you more than $400, KEH underpaid me for my gear."
     <- was wearing a $15k gold watch, $300 shoes, driving a beamer, wearing a freshly pressed San Destin shirt, bragging plenty about his uber-succesful career

"When I grew up, my dad was friends with the Shah of Iran, he had a place in Summerdale, we went over to his house all of the time."

"I'm a journalist and I found Pablo Escobar in Columbia in 199x.  He's after me now."

"I actually created Pac-man.  The Japanese stole it from me b/c my daddy flew in the Dolittle raids during WW2."

"Stephen Nodine was actually framed, it is a Neo-Nazi conspiracy because he had a falling-out with the leadership in Elberta."

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At least these fellow travelers in the adventure of life aren't boring.    :)