Freighters, both lake boats and salties pass by us all day and night. Some of them are headed upbound, while others down. Theirs is a 24/7 kind of world, never stopping, never resting. These boats are easy to photograph during the day, but at night it is a whole another matter altogether. Even with a tripod, it is hard to get a good night shot of them. The problem is that the boats are usually moving and exposure times are by necessity long enough to cause their image to streak. This image is a normally impossible fifteen second exposure. Luckily, the Alanis is parked for night. It won’t be getting any closer to its home port of Naples tonight. There is an area, just outside the shipping channels that we call the parking lot. Ships, usually salties, park there while awaiting the arrival of a pilot from the Soo. It being Sunday night, apparently there is no pilot on duty and the Alanis has laid over for the night. Its motionlessness has facilitated a photograph that I have wanted to take for a long time now. On a calm night, like tonight, you can hear the deep rumble of their engines as they pass. If awakened by this noise and looking out the porch windows, you can see the boats glide by in the night. Usually, they are brightly lit up, like this one, with a row of lights running down their side. They look majestic. For some reason they also always remind me of the Titanic sailing off to its fate, except here during the summer, there are no icebergs on the lake to fret about.
Monthly Archives: August 2020
Lakeboats
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Blow the Man Down
We survived yesterday’s storm intact. Wind and waves couldn’t beat us back. Usually, rainbows appear after the storm has passed, but this time it preceded it. In the morning the weather wasn’t too rough, but as the afternoon wore on, the wind kept rising. It eventually reached such a fever pitch that the cabin seemed to shake. Certainly, not a good day to fly a drone. The center of the low was north of us, near Wawa and it radiated thin pinwheel spokes of squall lines that rotated around the low and kept sweeping over us all day long. We once headed out to walk the beach when the sun came out, but got caught by one of these squall lines and had to cut our walk short. Later, we ventured out again, but kept a weather eye out for the next one and were able to get back before it struck that time. Eventually, the pictured placid scene was transformed into a roiling sea. Waves crashed across the width of the beach. The little boat shown above was washed off of its rollers. So, not a very good beach day, but since we made it to the beach, still a beach day.
NASA employee: Oh hey, you guys are back early.
Astronaut: Moon’s haunted
NASA employee: What?
Astronaut: (Loading pistol and getting back on the rocket-ship) Moon’s haunted
—Dustin Couch (As seen on Dan’s t-shirt.)
Below, is a short video clip that Dan and Britt have created. This is the first one that they’ve published. They had shot it the day before, when it was still calm. It then took them most of the day to figure out how to do the processing of the film using Adobe Premier. It shows a flyby of the 19th-century lighthouse keepers place, which is still standing down the beach. Today, they went to Raco, an old Cold war era military airfield nearby. They were practicing maneuvering the drone across the open tarmac.
The Montagooses
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Million Dollar Cabin
Million Dollar Beach House is the new reality show that is now trending on Netflix. Although it is doing OK, critics are comparing it less than favorably to its more successful predecessor, Selling Sunset, another reality-realty offering from Netflix. In this showbiz duel for property value realization, it is the Left-Coast versus the Right, Hollywood versus the Hamptons. I would like to suggest a third alternative, as in the third coast. Sure, along these lakeshores are similar gold coasts, with the Zillow property evaluations to compete, but who really wants a three-peat? If you are going to go Midwestern then you might as well go rustic. That’s what we are best known as anyway. You’ve seen beach houses and cottages, why not a million-dollar cabin in the woods? And can I talk to you about sunsets? We have sunsets, big beautiful ones and almost every day. If you happen to be a morning person, the other side of the lake offers complementary sunrises. Who needs left-right coasts, we’re ambidextrous? That’s my elevator pitch. I’ve skated over the whole glam thing or lack thereof that was featured in the other two shows. I say bring on the beautiful people, show them chopping wood, hauling water or just using the outhouse. Believe me when I say that it will all sell well. With the pandemic shutdown of movie and TV production the need for show ideas will generate a tidal wave that even this pitch could ride. If anyone needs an aerial flyover of prospective properties, I have a team for you.






