
Gary_Yngve
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Everything posted by Gary_Yngve
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It was a little weird. There was a "reggae" band there consisting of a bunch of dread-less white guys. The crowd was n't that into it. But a better crowd than the meatpacker Red Something place a few blocks away. Toast, let's just say that I did not see the bouncer stop anyone (mostly skinny gals) who snuck through. I'm not going to admit to going through, just verifying that it was possible.
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The photog's shadow doesn't bother me as much as the bluish cast in the shadows. I'm actually growing to like the other two shots -- the seaside one and the one that looks like it's from Lworth. I like the strong slanty light and the ocean from the first as well as the climber's pose and good exposure of fore and back in the second. But they never wow-ed me up front. Maybe the people were too small or there was too much clutter (bouldering pads, bush atop the boulder, etc.) Thanks for the onslaught of your photos -- you have some good action shots.
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I discovered it is possible for my body to squeeze through the fence around their patio!
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I'm assuming you entered the fisheye of the boulder? I like the composition. The boulder is overexposed though, and the black clothes of the climber certainly doesn't help. That style of shot to me is a "person in landscape" shot, and the aspect of bouldering really doesn't make the shot any more special. It's the best of the bouldering shots available, but I would have hoped to see shots like Cam's ripped bod sendin'.
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Another point is that I have much less tolerance for technical and compositional flaws for bouldering than for climbing. Alpine climbing is under time pressure and tight restrictions for camera positioning. For bouldering, you have all day to figure things out, and the dude doesn't even need to stick the move for you to get the good photograph.
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I don't care if it's a diss or not. The fact is that the quality of the Scenic, Climbing, Ice, and Skiing shots are excellent, and the Bouldering shots are mediocre. Either get people to take and submit better bouldering shots or eliminate the category.
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Distel, these are the bouldering photos I'd like to see. Dynamic movement, and lots of muscle. http://students.washington.edu/ccharles/squamish/squamish.html I don't have any of my own bouldering shots, as I don't boulder. At most I have some "bouldering" shots that would count as humor.
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JosephH, thanks for your work, and good job keeping a professional tone about things.
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Would be nice in future years to have a minimum resolution established... at least 1024x768. Skiing #1 disappoints me: contrast is too blown out. Bouldering shots overall were disappointing. All were landscapish dude-on-boulder shots, nor with especially spectacular scenery/lighting. Bouldering shots more in the line of Climbing #8 would have been nice -- closeups of dynamic moves. But none were submitted? I say axe the category and put in more categories for climbing. There are several fantastic climbing shots.
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Borrowing from Scandanavian languages and dropping an umlaut, it's not that far at all from "good" to "god."
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There are far more women who climb than there are 5.12 WI6 Grade VII studs. For that matter, there are plenty of women who have been with strong climbers and are happier now with boyfriends who aren't as strong. Totally untrue. I know quite a few women climbers who are single and have been single for a while.
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I've heard that from other people as well. I really dig the movie.
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Nah, I don't need anyone to feel sorry for me right now. I'm out of the funk I was in last month. Besides, I now know that I'm not alone: I just read a study that basically said that grad students are more fucked in the head than undergrads. Between 40% and 50% of all grad students find themselves frequently or always overwhelmed or exhausted.
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No, I'll say something that is taken out of context and twisted against me. And then I'll get sucked into the hole of doom, unable to dig myself out.
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I'm keeping my mouth shut. Looks like there's some excitement in the skiier death thread though.
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The Grivel version looks interesting because it's just a handle, has a knuckle shield, and a retractable pick. Never tried it though.
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A ridge near Iron Mountain near Blewitt Pass. We were hoping to get a little closer to the Three Brothers, but there was an unexpected burly creek next to the road near Negro Creek that sent us toward forest roads a little further south, but there were nine of us and good views to be had. Quite windy up top!
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Volunteering is good. The summer of my junior year in high school I volunteered for Habitat for Humanity. On weekdays I balanced their books and on weekends I built houses. Learned a lot from those experiences.
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(depth of field enhanced in Photoshop) Kev on the final stretch to the knob. Kev skiing. Too bad he wasn't ready a few minutes earlier when the light was a little stronger. Robert skiing toward the knob. The snowshoers were presumably on the right side of the crags. Ponderosa country. Heading up the ridge. A gnarled frame. A shadow, a rock, a ponderosa.
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Maybe, maybe not. When I was 19, I had no idea that my 15-yo brother could have been depressed until I got a call one night that he was dead.
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Is he being bullied in school? Are there other people in school like him? (sons of immigrants?)
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google "Michael Layton Portland" turns up a phone number for an M.D.L.
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A smattering of Scandanavian mountain/water/storm paintings from the Norwegian national gallery: Anders Zorn Edvard Munch F. Willumsen Harald Sohlberg J.C. Dahl Peder Balke P.N. Arbo Theodor Kittelsen Thomas Fearnley Tidemand and Gude
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On a tangent note, social status in this country is closely tied to economic status. The easiest way to show economic status is to possess luxury items, bling-bling, whatever you call it. The corporations and media know this and hence do their best to market $200 Nikes, expensive haircuts/manicures, fancy namebrand clothes, jewelry, souped-up cars, the latest must-own movie, etc.