Today I went and bought yet another lens cap. I seem to lose them on a weekly basis lately. This time the shop owner convinced me to buy the white balance lens cap. He says it makes using the custom WB feature a breeze because you don’t have to cart around a gray card. Sounded good to me. You just snap a photo with the lens on and set it. I tried it this afternoon for the first time and this is the result.
Doesn’t seem very accurate in terms of colour and light to me. But I actually like the effect. It gives Chrysanthemum a very surreal, Alfred Hitchcock look.
Here’s one using the gray card method. Colours are more realistic. Creepy chicken though.
Portrait of a chicken
18 NovIceland
18 NovI’m someone who hates the cold. I really despise it. I escaped Canada due to the arctic, snowy winters to come to the Mediterranean climate of Italy. And I have to admit that it has come to the point that even Italy is too cold for me. It doesn’t matter that I have palm trees in my garden and we experience summers with 40 degree weather. In the winter it has become COLD. A decade ago when we arrived in Italy the winters were mild and almost spring-like. Fast forward 10 years and now, by law, we have to put winter tires on our cars due to the ever increasing snowstorms. And it doesn’t help that the houses aren’t well insulated and are full of stone and marble (you don’t even want to see what get-ups I wear in my house to keep warm…or our monthly gas bill). So obviously when we go on vacation we tend to go to places that are warm and semi-tropical. BUT…this following video is so dang cool that it has made even me want to visit, of all places, ICELAND.
Spare time
17 NovWhat do I do in my spare time? Ironing for my family of five? Mopping floors? Reading one of the classics? Cleaning out the chicken coop? The answer to all of these should be an obvious yes. But this is what I’ve been doing lately. Somebody help me.

At least you see in this photo that I’m not exclusively spending all my time painting acorns. Notice the homemade applesauce spice muffins, mini brownies and bagels!
Fotografia week 4
16 NovWhite balance was on the menu for our 4th photography class. WB has always been something I’ve wanted to learn more about. I was always so confused by those blueish photos that would appear in my view finder from time to time.
Now I’m finally familiar with the term grigio medio and I actually understand the theory behind it (I think). There was lots of talk about kelvin colour numbers, warm and cold photos and tungsten lights. I’m ashamed to admit it but it’s the first time I’ve ever even heard the word tungsten.
Our assignment this week was to take different kinds of warm and cold photos (using the WB features on our cameras of course)
Cold photo on a bright and warm sunny day.
My garden shed looking pretty arctic.
I’m hoping with all the orange hues in this photo it would be classified as warm.
This photo was taken in the pitch dark on a walk down to the lake. It was actually T who took it.
The Accidental Neutering
10 NovA few years ago the sweetest little smoky grey cat strolled into our yard (and hearts) and managed to get three little kids to serve him a buffet of freshly roasted chicken, a can of foie gras and a three litre bucket of milk. The kids were smitten. So was I. Papa T not so much. In any case, after such a welcome party I was pretty much convinced that we could call him ours.
After a few months of these visits and even several sleepovers we decided it was time to get him fixed. He’d grown into a large muscular tomcat that we felt could be a nuisance to un-spayed local she-cats.
We found a cardboard box and cut out some holes. We tracked down Fumo (as we named him due to his beautiful smoky coat) and started the adventure of trying to get him into the box. His fur was puffed out, the hisses were non-stop and the scratching was brutal. Imagine a box with a cat as it’s lid (with the 4 legs stretched taut over the edges). That cat did NOT want to be put in a box. But then again, who does?
After at least 30 minutes we got him stuffed in the box with the lid closed. We all went off to put on our shoes and jackets to take him to the vet. Meanwhile Fumo was punching his paw through one of the little breathing holes we had made for him. The hole was getting slowly bigger. Then suddenly Fumo busted out of the hole with all his might. We were back to square one.
Finally after several other attempts with several other boxes we managed to get Fumo into a box and stay there (it was one of those industrial strength cardboard boxes so there was no way he was punching his way out of it).
We get to the vet and are waiting our turn. Fumo was howling louder than all the other animals in the waiting room. And the box was thumping back and forth with his constant attempts at escape. The kids were starting to get a bit embarrassed.

The vet came out and called out “Fumo De Groeve” with a very puzzled look on her face. I guess Italian vets aren’t used to cats with foreign last names. We entered the room and the vet and her assistant started opening the box. Within seconds Fumo rocketed out of the box and started running cirles around the room. Stainless steel bowls were crashing. Rolls of bandages were unrolling. And the vets were chasing around trying to get this blasted foreign cat under control.
They finally managed to catch Fumo and tried to calm him down by holding him. After a moment or two both the vet and the assistant were bleeding. Fumo was wildly trying to get loose all the while screeching and yowling at a volume that even shocked me. At this point the vet noticed the three kids plastered against the wall with looks of absolute shock on their faces. She suggested they go wait in the other room so as not to have nightmares about rabid cats for the rest of their lives. At this point I was starting to feel a bit ashamed of this wild beast I had brought in.
The vet decided she needed to pull out the big guns. Something she said she had only had to use 3 times in her 15 year career as a vet. The cat straight jacket. I just nodded my head and told her it was maybe a good idea for me to leave and that they could call me later to let me know how the neutering went. She agreed.
Later that afternoon the vet called to say Fumo was fine and that the operation was a success. He was ready to be picked up. The kids were too terrified to come along to the vet (there goes the chance of one of them becoming a veterinarian later in life) so off I went to pick up Fumo. He was groggy and quiet and sweet. The vets (very) happily passed him over and said he should be a calmer cat from now on. I paid the bill (which seemed to be much more expensive then they had originally quoted) and left.
Fumo stayed the night and slept off his drug induced haze. By the morning he was back to his normal self and itching to get outside and explore. After this it was several days before he showed up again. When he finally did show up he had a new collar on with one of those little message capsules attached to it. I took it off and slowly unrolled the note that was inside. It said: Mi chiamo Dak e ho gia un padrone! (My name is Dak and I already have an owner!). They had also written their address and telephone number. It was one of our neighbours. Yes, we had accidently neutered the neighbours cat. I feel so much better now that I have gotten that story out in the world. 
Mercatino usato
9 NovOne of my favourite things to do on a rainy day is visiting the various mercatini usati (second hand shops) in the area. There aren’t so many around but the few that I know of always have many treasures to be found at a very low price. Lately I’ve had a fixation for soup terrines. I make soup a lot in the winter and I was always annoyed at how ugly the big pot looked on the table and that the soup usually went cold after a few minutes. So…considering soup terrines aren’t the most “in” thing and that they are actually really hard to find new, I went hunting in my local mercatini. And I found a nice one.
Definitely from the 50’s or 60’s as you can tell by the pattern and colours.
While there I also found this sweet, tall, skinny teapot for my daughter. She loves to have an herbal tea in front of the fire and what better way than to serve it in this? Plus, it cost 1 euro…
Miniature
9 NovDuring my photo course last night I was busily pushing buttons in menu mode trying to figure out how my white balance worked. Apparently I must have switched it into black and white mode as well. Here’s the result of a photo I took this morning. The teapot is a beautiful cherry red. I was quite confused when I first saw this on my viewing screen.
I see some bokeh in this shot! And my beloved table that is full of woodworm…
Here’s the photo I had been originally going for.
Mini teapots and teacups. Mini creamers and sugar bowls. Mini Eiffel Towers. I just adore anything miniature.





















