Mothership Photography is on Facebook (please like me!)

I‘ve mentioned before that although I’m an early-adapter on a lot of social media platforms, I’ve never really warmed up to Facebook. I signed up for an account when it was first opened up, but aside from an early addiction to Scrabble when I was pregnant with Lucas in 2007, I never really found a lot of reason to spend time on Facebook. I’d even set up a page for the blog back in 2009 or so, back in the rush when everyone was setting up fan pages for everything, but I never hit the publish button as I really couldn’t see the point of having the same content in two places, especially when I was already pushing my blog content through my personal FB account.

Even at work where I manage our Facebook, Flickr, Twitter and YouTube accounts, Facebook was always my problem child, the one I knew we had to deal with but just couldn’t warm up to. Until now, that is. Cuz apparently I need yet another place to spent time on the Internet.

Oh dear. I’ve discovered Facebook.

It started when our school council decided to try setting up a Facebook page to communicate with parents. (At first I was cool to this idea, thinking a FB page for an elementary school seemed somehow wrong, but it’s the school council’s page for communicating with parents, not the school’s page. And I found some really excellent examples out there, and almost no reasons why we shouldn’t go ahead.) I’d set us up a blog earlier this year, and we’re using Constant Contact for e-mail news distributing newsletters, but Facebook is such an easy way to deliver quick and concise messages to a wide audience.

As I was setting up the FB page for the school, an idea was percolating in my obsessive-compulsive brain. A Facebook page for a blog seems a little too meta for me, but a Facebook page for a photography business — now that makes more sense! And let me tell you, it was waaaaaay easier to set up a FB page than it was to set up my portfolio website.

Ta da!

One of my mantras in the presentations and courses I’ve given on social media is that you should match your social media tool to your goals and your audience. Facebook works really well for my intended purpose of sharing my obsessive quest for more! more! more! information about all things related to photography.

I see it as a place not just for potential and current photography clients, but as a hub to share quick photo tips, articles I find on the Internet, and other things that may be of interest to other photographers or just people who are interested in taking better pictures. I’ll still post longer articles here, but Facebook is perfect for quick shares and conversations about links and other treasures found online.

I put the page together over the course of a rainy weekend, and was instantly gratified to see a few “likes” piling up even before I’d told anyone I set up the page. (And let me tell you, for an approval-seeking ENFP, there is NOTHING more delicious than having overt confirmation that someone “likes” your project. You like me? You like me!)

I hope you will both like and “like” my Mothership Photography Facebook page, especially if you’re interested in taking, sharing or discussing how to take better pictures. I’ll try to keep the duplication of content to a minimum, and I’m even considering some Facebook-only promotions.

Do you have any experience (pro or con) in setting up a Facebook page? Any tips to share or pitfalls to avoid? Suggestions for me to keep my online empire from imploding? What say ye, bloggy peeps?

Photographers at play

Do you know Kym? She’s one of those warm, energetic people that you feel you’ve known your whole life within 10 seconds of meeting her, the kind of fascinating person you want to sit and chat with for hours about everything, because the conversation jumps crazily from topic to topic with a happy randomness of intersecting experience.

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She’s also the author of Relishing.ca, and for the last year or so she’s been working on a 100 Strangers project with a lot more vigour and enthusiasm than I was pursing mine! (She’s done 67, I’ve done 6. She meets people, gets to know them, and tells a full story in words and pictures for each person she meets where I chat, snap a picture or two, and am done.) In her own words, ‘It’s about style, but not just style. It’s also about telling the story of Ottawa’s people right off the streets of Ottawa herself. This town is more than meets the eye. Over the next several months I want to meet, talk to, and photograph 100 strangers. Pictures will tell one story. People will inspire the other.’

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Can you see why I wanted to be a part of her project? So when Kym asked on Twitter if anyone was interested in playing along, I finally found the courage I’d been seeking for months as I’ve been following Kym’s project and said, “Pick me!”

And then Justin butted in. Do you know Justin?

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Justin is a very clever and talented wedding and portrait photographer, but I’d never admit that out loud cuz he’s also a bit of a pest in a little brother sort of way. He’s the antithesis of me as far as photographic style is concerned — he’s methodical where I’m random, strobist to my love of natural light, and sets shots up rather than shooting what he comes across.

When I said, “Pick me!” to Kym on Twitter, Justin piped up and said, “No, pick ME!” in typically annoying Justin fashion. Things denigrated into poking, hair pulling and tit punching, in a twittery kind of way, and there was talk of a cage match. In the end, we decided a big photographic playdate would be in order.

Do you know Younes?

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Younes is a friend of Kym and Justin, and one of Ottawa’s most respected photographers. I can’t quite tell you how Younes ended up playing with us that night, except I think Justin roped him in so he’d have a ride. And Younes brought Amanda, who was smart enough to stay on the fringes of our little photo bacchanalia in the Arbouretum on a gorgeous spring evening.

The official purpose of our gathering was for Kym and me to meet, so I could participate in Kym’s 100 strangers project, but really, it’s just a lot of fun to get together with people who are as obsessed with your hobby as you are. And as the newest kid on the photographic block, I learned SO much even as we did nothing but bounce around and play like kids in the park. Kids with thousands of dollars worth of photographic equipment, that is.

Photojam6

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(Yeah, I’m pretty sure Justin is shooting Younes’ butt. I didn’t ask.)

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This next one is not my picture, it’s one of Kym’s, but I love it so much I wanted to add it to my post. It’s fascinating to me how different the look and feel of each person’s photographs are. That’s me on the far left, just a second or two before or after I shot the first picture of Justin I posted above.

The Ottawa Arboretum

You can see Kym’s full set on Flickr, and I’ll link up with her 100 strangers post when she posts it.

This next one is one of Justin’s. All of that lighting kit is his — intimidating as hell and a bitch to carry, but I have to tell you, after working playing with Justin and Kym, I’m really going to have to re-think my reluctance to use my flash. Clearly, I am missing out!

Kind of a Big Deal

There’s some more great stuff, including some incredible portraits of Kym, on Justin’s blog. I have to say, I think that their pictures are on the whole better than mine — I still have a lot to learn — but I think I also had the most fun, so I’m okay with that. 🙂

And, if you STILL want more, you can see a few more of mine on Flickr.

Thanks Kym, for being the inspiration for this fun night out in the park. I hope we’re not strangers anymore!

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Project 365: Anticipating summer and sunshine

This was, even by my usual standards, an insanely busy week. It was the kind of week where a saner person might actually put down the camera and say, “Heck, let’s pass on the photos for this week, there’s just too much else going on.” Instead, I continued to snap madly, and just let them pile up on my hard drive, but still managed to pick out a favourite for each day.

The week started out with a bit of an “oops”. I forgot to dial down the ISO when I was shooting this one of Lucas and Beloved, but I worked it until I had recovered it a bit and noticed it had a bit of a vintage vibe, so I played that up.

135:365 Up Daddy!

More cuteness for the sake of cuteness. Forgive me.

139:365 Lucas on the play structure

Lucky for me, the only thing in more abundance than cuteness was nature’s glory, finally blooming after a long, drippy spring. I took these ones with one of those screw-on macro filters. They’re only about $20 for a set of four on eBay, great fun if you want to dabble in macro photography and get a little closer to your subject. These have very little post-processing, aside from creating the diptych in Photoshop.

136:365 Tulip macro dippy

And the same tulips straight on the next day. (You can tell they were taken on different days, because an overcast day makes the colours more even and more saturated like the first shot, whereas the second one is very constrasty with the back-lighting.)

138:365 Tulip trio

Who knew spring had so much fiery orange? It’s ordinarily a colour I associate with autumn, but there’s a lot of it going on in my yard right now. These are the baby leaves on our red maple, just waking up for the season. (Apparently I’ve also got a backlighting theme going on this week!)

141:365 Wake up, little leaves!

This is Kym. I’ll tell you more about her in an upcoming post!

137:365 Relishing

I was really pleased with most – heck, ALL of my pictures this week, but the sentimental favourite gets the last-but-not-least spot. We won a family pass to one of those parking-lot mini-fairs in Barrhaven, thanks to the fine folks at OttawaStart.com, and we enjoyed ourselves quite a bit!

Funfair collage

This one turned out EXACTLY like I’d hoped it would. To replicate this, you’ll need to set your shutter speed to something slow like 1/30 of a second or slower (or if you’re shooting in aperture priority, make your aperture very small. The macro setting on your point-and-shoot might work, too.) I waited until the sun was indirectly falling on him and the most colourful section of the background was behind him, and since we were moving at the same speed relative to each other, the background came out blurred. It’s called panning.

140:365 On the carousel

He may be growing up way too quickly, but he’s not so big he can’t still enjoy the carousel. 🙂

Project 365: Sunshine, rain and dewdrops – a drippy kind of spring

we are at the end of the first week of May, and the leaves are still not quite unfurled from the trees. It’s the first week of the Tulip Festival here in Ottawa, but there are hardly any tulips in bloom. It’s definitely been a wet, cold spring here.

A lot of the week looked kind of like this. This is the red maple in our yard during one of the seemingly endless showers last week, just thinking about sending out some leaves.

131:365 Drippy

And this guy is either a really red crocus (based on his size) or a really tiny and early tulip. He’s another gift from the garden.

134:365 Flowers

Okay, so it didn’t rain the *whole* week. I shot these daffs near Watson’s Mill, and was delighted to catch that crazy triangle of flare. Erm, I mean, I totally planned that effect, right from the start. (!)

130:365 Daffy

You know what I don’t think I’ve ever shot in the thousands of pictures I’ve taken over the last few years? A shadow portrait. This is me and the boys, out for a post-dinner walk.

128:365 Shadow selves

Speaking of boys, you didn’t think I could go a whole week without pointing my big black monocle at them, did you? I love this one because I caught a *genuine* smile instead of a “humouring mom so she’ll leave me be” kind of smile. 🙂 I shifted myself up and down as I was composing this to make that shadow area end more or less at his shoulders, so the dark area would frame his head and accentuate the rim lighting that’s highlighting his hair. (I don’t know why crazy hair seems to run in our family!)

133:365 Tristan

This wasn’t even supposed to be a 365 picture. I’m helping a friend by creating a website for her cooperative child care centre, and we needed an image for a banner. In the end, I didn’t even use this, but I loved the fact that when I went to the crayon bin I found all these nekkid ones — Lucas has been busy at work peeling the wrappers off them.

132:365 Nekkid crayons

I was inspired to take this picture by one of my favourite photography blogs, MCP Actions. Jodie has great tips, tutorials and actions for photoshop and photoshop elements, and has been encouraging her readers to join her with a photo-a-week “Project 52” with a weekly theme. Last week’s theme was “first thing in the morning” and I thought this picture was perfect for the theme.

I looked out the window early Sunday morning and saw the lawn twinkling with a heavy dew, so I grabbed my camera and ran out in my bare feet and jammies to capture this. I opened up my aperture as wide as it would go and held my camera right above the grass. Those round circles you see are the out-of-focus points of sunlight in the dew drops, called bokeh. It only took two or three shots, and I knew as soon as I saw the viewfinder that this was a keeper.

129:365 Dewy [Explored]

Turns out a few other people liked it, too! Not only did MCP actions feature it as one of their photos of the week, but it’s been bouncing around in Flickr’s Explore all week, and is my most “favourited” picture ever. (It kinda makes me laugh, because I still think the photo of Lucas jumping in the puddle is a WAY better picture, and although it had even more comments and faves to start, it never made it to Explore.)

If you want to take a shot like this, all you need is a dewy patch of lawn and an early-morning sun. Set your camera to macro (the little flower) if it’s a point-and-shoot, or to your widest aperture (smallest f-stop) if it’s a dSLR. Make sure you are facing right into the sun so you get the maximum twinkle, and focus on a spot about 1/3 of the way into the frame.

And this week also happened to contain the end of April, so here’s my monthly mosaic of all the pictures I shot in April. (A few of you have asked how I make these. There’s a mosaic-maker at www.bighugelabs.com, and a handful of other fun things you can do with pictures, too!)

April mosaic

Despite being a long, slow and decidedly wet month, it’s kinda pretty in retrospect, isn’t it? Here’s to a warmer, dryer and equally lovely May!

Project 365: Beginnings and Endings

Oh my goodness, was Easter really only last weekend? Surely we’ve lived three lifetimes since then. Some weeks are just like that, aren’t they?

I can hardly believe that our Good Friday wander around Manotick was a scant seven days ago. It was cool but bright, and we enjoyed wandering around the Mill and inspecting the dam in the midmorning sun.

120:365 Bench

And it really seems like a lifetime ago we were colouring these eggs (although it did seem that the egg salad sandwiches for lunch might never end!) It was only after I was playing with this one in Lightroom that I realized that I had handed Lucas the little tablets of egg dye in random order and he had dropped them into the cups in an equally random order — and yet he managed to put them in the perfect ROYGBIV order of the spectrum. He’s an artiste savant! 😉 I was actually aiming to have the boys a little less in focus than this, but oh well.

121:365 Colouring Easter eggs

Not the shot of the day, but I rather liked this one of the tools of their trade, so I’ll slip it in here, too.

121b:365 Easter eggs

Am I taking advantage of your polite attention if I slip in just one more? Easter is so photogenic, and so much more transient than Christmas!

121c:365 Simon colouring

This is Bubba, my recently adopted fur-brother, trying to eat Papa Lou’s face for Easter dinner.

122:365 Doggy love

As if that weren’t already an incredibly photo-rich long weekend, it was Monday when lovely Baby H allowed me to point my camera in his direction. (There’s more from that shoot here.)

123:365 Toes!

There are some subjects I seem to be drawn to over and over again. Kids with books is one of them. Lucas is another one. 😉

124:365 Reading

(You know, the whole reason I launched my own photography business is because my kids were getting so sick of me pointing my camera at them. I simply need more kids to photograph!!)

And then, on a much more sombre note, we have the results of that incredible wind storm last week. Turns out it will cost us close to $1000 to have our lovely old poplar cut up, a few hundred less if we dispose of the wood ourselves. Anyone want some free firewood? Pull up a trailer and haul away what you can! (No seriously, if you want some, I’ll hold it for you — just let me know before Tuesday.)

126:365 Goodbye tree

There’s more pictures from the wind storm on this post, if you haven’t seen it yet. Worth a click to see where the crown of the tree ended up. The good news is, I now know the species of the rest of the trees on the property. We have a handful of Manitoba maples and two silver maples and a sugar maple and a red maple. (It’s a very Canadian yard!) We have two towering Eastern white pines and an equally-towering ash. And an ex-Poplar. Sigh.

I mentioned the untimely demise of my favourite Manotick landmark in my earlier post, too, and included a picture I’d taken with my iPhone to replicate more or less the original picture I’d taken of it. I wanted to take one with my camera, too, as a proper sort of commemoration. I don’t know why I am so drawn to this silo, but I am. Erm, I was.

127:365 Goodbye old silo

I’ll be the first to admit, I really like my pictures. I think most of them are pretty good, at least the ones worth posting here. But every now and then, I really nail one. This is one of those times, and possibly one of my favourite photographs ever.

125:365 Puddle jumper

Isn’t that fun? The rubber boots, the rain coat, his relentless hair, and the reflection. It makes me smile every single time I look at it. No doubt, it was a very long week — but a lovely one, too.

Project 365: Portraits, pinecones and pickies

You might have noticed I’ve been ignoring the blog lately. Sorry about that. It’s not that I haven’t had my face stuck to the monitor any more than usual, I’ve just been trying various solutions for my photography website. I downloaded a couple of different galleries, but couldn’t find anything I liked. Finally, after many hours of tweaking, I think I’ve got it to a place where I like it. (Take a peek and tell me what you think!) But, it hasn’t left me much time online to do any blogging or socializing. Darn this 24 hour day, there just isn’t enough time to get everything done!!

I did manage to take pictures every day this week, though, and I’m pretty happy with them! I know you saw this one already (several times if you happen to follow my RSS feed!) but for the sake of record-keeping, I’m including it here.

118:365 Laces

And even though it was a busy week, there was still time for some peekaboo!

115:365 Peek

A lot of my pictures this week were on a theme of waiting for a spring that seems like it might never arrive…

113:365 Waiting for swing, I mean, spring

114:365 Picky

And this one, too … evergreens are more winter than spring, but I loved the way the long needles gave this one a sense of motion.

119:365 Pinecone

I was just playing with the camera when I discovered this weird phenomenon. I call it “reverse bokeh.” Bokeh is the out-of-focus part of the shot — for example, the brown background on the thistle/bur shot above. In this case, the bokeh is in focus and the bottle I was shooting is out of focus.

116:365 Reverse bokeh

What really perplexes me about this image is the fully-formed reflection of Lucas in the bottom right corner. I cannot for the life of me puzzle out how that’s happening! For reference, here’s what the bottle itself looks like.

OOF 2

Weird, eh? Half a week later, and I’m still wondering how that’s happening!

And last but not least, my handsome middlest son Simon. He’s going through the fake-smile phase all seven-year-old boys seem to pass through, but this one was close enough to legitimate for me — I love this one! I think the browns work so well with his skin tones, and the blue of his jeans gives a lovely contrast.

117:365 Simon in the treehouse

Now that I’ve finally got the photography website back to a point I can stop tinkering with it for a while (until I can get a custom logo created, anyway) I’m hoping to play out here on the blog a little bit more. Erm, after I do a family photo session this weekend. And I have to write an election opinion piece for Canada.com. And, um, I should probably talk to the kids and maybe go for a walk or something. I’m thinking the dust bunnies are just going to have to wait another week.

Anybody got any spare time? I seem to keep losing track of mine….

118:365 Laces

118:365 Laces by Dani_Girl
118:365 Laces, a photo by Dani_Girl on Flickr.

(I’d originally posted this on Flickr, but by the time I was finished writing it, it sounded suspiciously like a blog post!)

Via Flickr:
My oldest is not good with change but even I was surprised by the depth of his aversion to even the most rudimentary changes. He wore through his school shoes (I’m happy we made it from September to April, I think that’s a new record) and when we went shopping we found a pair identical to the old ones, which he immediately picked up. I showed him a few other styles and suggested he might like to try one on, but no, the exact same shoe one size bigger was what he wanted.

The next day, as I was packing the new shoes in his bag, I told him to just throw the old shoes in the garbage at school — and he looked at me as if I’d suggested he set fire to them on the principal’s desk. "But they’re still good, they just have a few holes in them!" he said with obvious dismay. And that night, there they were in the bottom of his backpack.

I pulled them out to throw them in the garbage, and hesitated over the can. I dropped them on the floor, added the baseball, and now they’re memorialized. Good old shoes, thanks for putting up with a lot of boy stuff these last seven months. Then I buried them in the garbage a bit, so he doesn’t see them. And so I don’t have to look at them. Because I was tempted to just throw them in the closet, yanno, in case he needs a backup for his backup pair.

You can see why we won’t let him get a hamster.

Project 365 – April flowers and puddles

My dump of photos from the Vancouver trip superseded the usual 365 post last week, but I had a few that I snapped before I left and now a week’s worth since I got home, so I figured I’d cram them all together here.

These ones were snapped the weekend before I trundled off across the country. First, the first step in his career path to the NBA, courtesy of a discarded basketball net snagged from someone’s curb! (I love the yellow in the boots, the basketball stand and the jacket.)

100:365 Future NBA career

Who knew on the first weekend in April I’d find not only flowers in my front garden, but flowers crawling with bees?! P.S. Have I mentioned that I love my new camera?

101:365 Bzzzzzzz

Again with the yellows. Can you tell I’m digging our emergence from the season of monochrome?

107:365 Man on a bike

And then, it rained. And rained and rained. Apparently April showers beget April mud.

108:365 Rain boots

One of my favourite new pastimes is playing “Ooo, what’s this new thing growing in my garden?” Thanks to my Facebook and Flickr friends, I now know that I have puschkillia and scilla creeping across my lawn.

109:365 In the garden

This is the most photogenic puddle I’ve ever encountered, as captured in the light of a barely-risen sun.

110:365 Loveliest puddle ever!

I liked it so much I went back for seconds!

112:365 Sunrise on my favourite puddle

And finally, a dose of cuteness from a quiet morning at the Manotick Public Library.

111:365 Morning at the Manotick library

Don’t you love the bronze statue of the kids? And yes, he’s reading Where the Wild Things Are. How have I made it more than nine years into my parenting career and never read that book before? It’s our new family favourite!

Postcard from Vancouver – bad luck travels in threes

I‘m laughing at your comments about the teaser ending to yesterday’s post. Hey, you think I haven’t learned a thing or two about story-telling and the value of a hook after all these years? Heh!

On my last full day in Vancouver, I once again found myself awake well before sparrow’s first fart. Fully dressed, showered and caffeinated by 5:15, I was out the door looking for photo ops just as the sun was breaking the horizon. It was worth the 10 block wander back down to the Burrard Street Bridge, where I found the marina at Granville Island just waking up.

Sunrise on Granville Island

On the other side of the Burrard Bridge, I found English Bay and these ocean liners sitting peacefully in front of the majestic mountain backdrop.

Morning at English Bay

I captured slightly different perspective of the same scene on my iPhone.

103:365 English Bay sunrise, Vancouver

I was back at the hotel by 7:45, keen to get started on the day’s conference events, when I checked my e-mail and received some horrible news: the sister of one of my dearest friends lost her long battle with cancer in the night. She died at 46, leaving two sweet young children behind. I was heartbroken for my friends, and angry at how helpless I felt far, far away on the other side of the country.

Not knowing what else to do, I sat through most of the morning’s presentations, but my heart just wasn’t in it any longer. Between the bad news about the daycare situation and the devastating loss for my friends, I kept welling up and blinking away tears. I even looked into changing my flight home, but since the conference organizers had paid for my flight I wasn’t sure how or if I could change it.

I slipped out for a walk at lunch to clear my head, and found myself outside the very same bike rental place I’d patronized the day before. I don’t think I walked there consciously, but when I realized where I was, I was happy enough to oblige my subconscious. I rented another bike and hopped on.

Coal Harbour

The day was brisker but clearer than the day before, and as I pedaled my heart lightened by degrees.

North Vancouver

Once again, I could not resist the urge to stop and photograph the Lion’s Gate Bridge. And this time, i filled my purse and pockets so full of sea glass that I had a hard time balancing on my bike, camera slung on one side and sea-glass-laden purse on the other. Note to self: next time, rent panniers, too!

Lion's Gate Bridge

This time, though, instead of cutting back through the park along the causeway, I continued the loop around to English Bay. I nearly fell off my bike from vertigo when I rounded one corner and found this breath-stealing combination of open sea, sky and distant mountains. For a girl with a tough of agoraphobia, Vancouver is one white-knuckled, gravity-defying view after another!

Flowerpot island

It was mere minutes after I stopped to watch this furry little fellow cross the path in front of me to hop down and forage for lunch among the tidal pools that things got really messed up. (Aren’t raccoons supposed to be nocturnal? This was practically high noon.)

Well hello fellow traveller!

I came around a curve on the path and found a man unconscious on the path. I stopped my bike in surprise, and a rider coming up directly behind me stopped, too. We were on a fairly isolated stretch, but people had come at me from this direction less than a few minutes before — either he had just fallen, or they had stepped over him and kept walking.

We tried to wake him up, and I have to admit that my first reaction was one of hesitant fear. He was somewhere north of 60 years old, grey and a little grizzled, and it was hard to tell if he was hurt or maybe sleeping something off — although the middle of the path deep in the park is a pretty strange place to pass out.

He had fallen in the recovery position, so I adjusted his head ever so slightly to make sure his airway was open and made sure he was breathing, all the time mindful of the expensive camera around my neck, the great distance I was from home, and rather anxious that he might wake up and be very angry with me for touching him, and then we called 911 from my iPhone.

It took about an hour between the time I found him and the time I hopped back on my bike, but it seemed like three days. It took quite a while for the ambulance to make its way on the bike path down to us, and luckily a few local joggers had stopped and were able to take my cell and give the ambulance dispatch a more clear idea of our location than my “Um, we’re in Stanley Park, somewhere on the bike path near English Bay.” (It’s a 10 km loop around the park.) Another lady who stopped was a nurse, and she and her partner stayed to take over the first aid until the ambulance arrived.

We still weren’t sure what had happened to him until the paramedics arrived to put him on a back board and turned him over, revealing that the side of his face that had been against the pavement was bashed and bloody. They speculated that he had either misstepped on the curb beside the path and fell down hard, or had a stroke and then fallen. Hard. He never did regain consciousness, and the nurse said his neural response was very atypical for someone who had simply passed out.

The whole experience was rather surreal, but I had to choke back tears when the first constable on the scene stopped me just as I was about to ride away and asked me for ID and contact information, “in case he doesn’t make it.” In case he doesn’t WHAT? The very worst part of the whole thing was how much he looked like my Dad — same age range, very similar physical build. I kept thinking, “He’s probably somebody’s dad. Someone might be worrying about him.” I still wonder how he’s doing, hoping he’s home with his family and recovering well. I still feel a little guilty, too, for my first thought — that he was drunk and sleeping something off. He was hurt needed help, and for what seemed like a long minute when I first arrived, I almost didn’t want to stop.

Needless to say, I was completely unnerved and my concentration for the rest of the day was officially shot. I couldn’t stand the idea of just sitting around my hotel room waiting for the day to end so I could fall asleep, wake up and go home, so I walked. And walked. And walked. And while I was walking, I took more pictures.

The cherry blossoms are in full bloom:

Cherry blossoms

Sea planes are photo-worthy:

Sea planes!

And then, in that endlessly strange day, I stumbled upon a giant street party celebrating Vancouver’s 125th birthday. I’m not sure if the giant Lego orca was part of the 125 celebration or if it’s always there, but it made me homesick for my Lego junkies back home. (The stage to the left is a part of the 125 celebration.)

Giant Lego orcaHappy Birthday Vancouver!

And then, finally, it was time to go home. It was a great adventure, if not a little more stressful than it had to be. The flight home was just about perfect, and after all the spectacular scenery I’d been watching for days, it was the sight of the rolling flats of the Ottawa valley that once again brought me near to tears.

That’s my place, I thought as we flew over the muddy brown farmland just hinting to green. That’s my home. I belong there.

And I was practically bouncing in my seat with anticipation to see my family by the time we banked over downtown and I caught this once-in-a-lifetime (well, once in MY lifetime, anyway!) shot of downtown Ottawa.

105:365 Home!

Home.

Postcard from Vancouver – exploring Stanley Park

Tuesday marked the second day of my trip to Vancouver, and also the whole reason I was there in the first place — to give a presentation at a conference about social media in government and how we use social media at Army News.

I was keen to give the presentation. So keen, in fact, that my body refused to acknowledge the time difference between Ottawa and Vancouver (something to which I never quite acclimatized) and I was wide awake for the day at a little bit before 4 am. Hey, I’d slept in by Ottawa time zone standards! So, I puttered about the hotel room playing with my umbilical cord (erm, I mean, my iPhone) and getting myself dressed, and as soon as the sun was up I set off to explore another corner of the city before the conference started.

I took some pictures but honestly, they weren’t even worth sharing with you. Although the rain had blessedly stopped, the light was still flat and uninteresting, and most of the shots I took never made it past mediocre.

My morning got considerably more bright when the conference started. The first presentation was excellent, and then I was up. I had a great time speaking, and got some fantastic feedback from fellow participants. Can I brag for just a minute? Here are a few of the tweets that greeted me after my presentation:

From @AndreaGulay: Listening to @DaniGirl – Example of Best Practices – So glad she is here! #smgov

From @shannonmcfadyen: A mobile site is cross platform vs apps that are proprietary. A great consideration – thnks @DaniGirl #smgov

and: Thanks @DaniGirl for an informative #smgov presentation. Your candor was refreshing

From @opportunityknck: @DaniGirl Great talk … well done and informative #smgov

From @chicken_scratch: A shout out to @Danigirl for an engaging presentation this morning at #smgov #yvr. Who knew the Canadian Army was so hip?! #pr #media

Isn’t that terrific? And during each break in the conference, people were coming up with me to chat, to know more about what we’re doing, and to talk a little bit more about the points I raised. One sweet woman even said mine was her favourite presentation and the most useful. Totally made the scary flight in with no coffee for five hours worthwhile!

We had 90 minutes for a lunch break and I was still twitchy with energy from my presentation, so I stepped out for a brisk walk and found the sun shining! I’d had it in my head that maybe I’d walk to the close edge of Stanley Park and poke around for a bit, and then wander back. I walked past a bike rental shop as I walked up Robson Avenue and popped in, thinking I’d find out what I needed to rent a bike and what it would cost to rent one after the conference was done for the afternoon. It was so inexpensive and so straightforward that, with more than an hour left in my lunch I just rented one on the spot and hopped on.

I tell you, while it was never on my life “to do” list to impulsively rent a bike to ride the sea wall at Stanley Park — but it should have been! First, after walking everywhere for two days, the sheer speed with which the blocks whizzed by as I rode was exhilarating. Then I hit the actual park, and started seeing things like this:

Totem Pole, Stanley Park

And this:

Stanley Park seawall

It was undoubtedly the most scenic bike ride ever, and a gift of a day because the forecast had once again been calling for rain.

I don’t know why, but one of the things I most wanted to see in Vancouver was the Lion’s Gate Bridge. And so when I came around the bend and could see it so clearly spanning the background, I had to hop off my bike and enjoy the moment.

My bike!

I poked around for a bit, and eventually hopped off the sea wall and wandered down to the boulders exposed by the low tide so I could take a few pictures like this one.

Lion's Gate Bridge at low tide

That’s when I made a discovery that made me gasp in surprised delight. You know what I found? SEA GLASS! Tonnes and tonnes of great big gorgeous pieces of sea glass.

Sea Glass!

Remember how excited we were to find it last summer in Nova Scotia? This put that bounty to shame. I quickly filled my pockets, but was precariously close to running out of lunch hour and had to move along more quickly than I would have liked.

In fact, rather than complete the full circle around Stanley Park, I decided to cut through the park along the causeway that leads to the Lion’s Gate Bridge and follow it back to downtown. By the way, I have never seen a park with so many rules for cyclists as this one — ride your bike here, don’t ride your bike here, walk your bike here, and god help you if you miss a rule because people will yell the rules out at you. Yeesh!

By the time I got back to the conference I was a little sweaty and well-exercised, but we had an afternoon of really interesting presentations.

All in all, it was a stellar day and I was totally forgetting to feel homesick — right up until the point just after the conference ended around dinner time that I got an e-mail from my daycare provider telling us she was quitting the business as of the end of the month. Sigh.

And that’s when things started to go really sideways. Cuz you know bad news always travels in threes.