Posts Tagged ‘Long Island’

Montauk Point in New York was wonderful last weekend …if only there was another way in — there isn’t — keeps it nice I guess

Montauk Light at Dusk My Dear Wife Susan and I attended a wedding on Long Island in Westbury this past Thursday afternoon. Debbie, one of Sue’s best friends from High School, had her son Brian getting married to Anna and we were lucky enough to be invited. It was all very, very, nice. Next morning we met Sue’s brother Alan and Debbie for a bite to eat at a local diner in Carle Place. Then we started out on the road. Sue and I were going to go to the furthest point away from Manhattan and the Boroughs on Long Island — Montauk Point. We stopped briefly in Rockville Centre where Sue Leffler had grown up, to photo­graph additional reference for drawing and painting. Then off to the east. It just kept getting more open and cleaner the further you were from New York City. Getting there was very straight­forward out Montauk Highway through Amagansett and the Hamptons to the town of Montauk. Really not a bad drive at all. If only there was a way to circumvent the very busy urban areas on the way in. Aircraft would most likely be the best choice eastward.Trawlers and Draggers gear points to the heavens

What a beautiful place! Their thousand dollar fine for littering has certainly paid off. It was truly spotless. Not what I’d pictured in my mind’s eye at all — this was just as if we’d been trans­ported to the New England coast. Really nice and a bit rustic with Apple Orchards and fields of Sunflowers swaying in the wind. QuiteThe dock in Montauk even had Sunflowers for sale picturesque. I loved it. We had nice fresh seafood to eat and Sue was able to get Lobster. Sue was unfor­tu­nately a bit under the weather with a cold and we sought relief at the only game in town “Montauk Medical Group” where Dr. Knott runs his business. Once diagnosed and prescribed medicine we went over to White’s Trawlers in Montauk, NY ©2009 William C  BeauchampDepartment Store where they also fill prescrip­tions in their Pharmacy in the back. Leaving a couple scripts to be filled we went across the street and had brunch on Saturday. Out on the overlook you can see across the scrub plant dune cover to sandbars that close off a large pond of salt water which is appar­ently flooded on a regular basis. Certain areas there have full tree canopy covering the road and a few times we saw the sun penetrating the foliage and illumi­nating the sea mist with focused beams of light. We call that “God Light”.Metallic Three Dimensional Fish on Sign

The only negative aspect of this trip was that Sue didn’t feel partic­u­larly well — she did take care of that — and that we had such a short visit with the end of Long Island.  I’d say that I’m pretty certain that we’ll go back to see it again. If not physi­cally, my mind will surely go back. I shot these images all in a few quickCoastal Plants bind the dunes together to prevent erosion bursts and I was surprised that the weather had turned out as nicely as it had. Initial forecasts had it raining Thursday with additional showers and temper­a­tures fifteen degrees below normal. It just all blew out of here on Saturday night. All night long a rumble punctuated sleep as a cold front blew through and building trim, Sue shot me standing in front of the Lighthouseawnings and windows shook. Couldn’t have asked for nicer weather. On the way back we stopped at the famous “Lunch” restaurant where you can get a “Lobster Roll”. I never had a Lobster Roll and was picturing something similar to a spring roll or an egg roll. It is a toasted hot dog bun filled to the brim with “Lobster They just call it "Lunch"Salad”. Lots of pink claw meat. Sue had that and I had New England Style Clam Chowder. I also saw that they cook Puffers (blowfish) there for the tasty bit of meat within. A really nice trip. Sue has yet to get over her ailment and I’m coughing as well now. It will pass.

Look at the color on the distant horizon...

Memories like this trip sustain one through the gray skies of winter.

September 2010
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Fourmile Canyon Fire

 
The Fourmile Canyon Fire continued to burn west of Boulder, Colo., in this image taken on Sept. 7, 2010, casting a long line of smoke to the east that was visible from NASA's Aqua satellite in its orbit around the Earth. MODIS, the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer, on NASA’s Aqua satellite captured this natural-color image of the fire at 2:40 p.m. local time (20:40 UTC) on Sept. 7. The red outline corresponds with the unusually high surface temperatures associated with an active fire. The thick smoke plume flows eastward. Over the plains northeast of Denver, the smoke plume casts a shadow to the north. By early morning on Sept. 8, thousands of people had abandoned their homes while the battle against the blaze continued. Image Credit: NASA/MODIS
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P1286839 P1286838 P1286933 P1286873 P1286920 Large, smooth, gourds with straw and smaller orange gourdes
P1286845 Angus Beef  P1286881 P1286882 Just the highlights of several pumpkins - Almost like Apples P1286877

Thursday, Sep 9
Fair
Currently: 60˚F
Feels Like: 60˚ F
Hi: 76˚, Lo: 56˚
Wind: 9, Gust: N/A MPH
Wind Direction: WNW (290)
Fair

Tonight: 56˚
Sunset: 7:19 PM
Moon Phase: Waxing Crescent
Partly Cloudy

Friday, Sep 10
Hi: 74˚, Lo: 53˚
Wind: 14, Gust: N/A MPH
Wind Direction: NW (323)
Mostly Sunny

Saturday, Sep 11
Hi: 79˚, Lo: 60˚
Wind: 6, Gust: N/A MPH
Wind Direction: NNW (339)
Sunny

weather feed courtesy of weather.com - thanks!

digitech camera repair

You never really finish the design on one of these blogs. Something can always be improved and made better.

I feel relatively certain that text here can be read more easily than over the paper texture that I had created before. Yep.