TomT wrote on Feb 23
rd, 2020 at 2:35pm:
Spartan2 wrote on Feb 23
rd, 2020 at 11:21am:
But the one photo I have of Dorothy is precious to me. Photography was so different back then--a finite amount of film and you didn't see your results until much later on. If I had had a digital camera I probably would have taken 100 shots on the Isle of Pines.
So true! Photos carried more weight and were "rare" back then. Not everyone had a camera or even took pics at all in the days before digital. Then there was that mystery of "I wonder how it will come out?" after you took the pic only to wait literally weeks before you would see the result that you couldn't crop or edit but only throw away or stick in an album. I have many albums at home of all the vacations I took and I'm so glad I took the pics/memories. It's a whole different thing in today's world.
Our first trip was six days from Crane Lake to LLC (no tow, no use of mechanical portage), and then the Namakan River Loop in Canada. 1971. I took a little Kodak camera and ONE ROLL of 24 frames. As you said, it was weeks before I saw them, as the days of "one-hour" processing were far in the future. I made a little scrapbook with narrative and my few photos, a map, etc., and even fleshed it out with some post cards from the Namakan Narrows.
I think on my last trip in 2013 (which was only three days as we decided to bail due to poor health and really cold weather) I probably took 400-500 shots. One loon encounter on Brule Lake took up at least 60-70 shots, most of which were later deleted. Instead of a photo album or scrapbook format, I made a nice book on Snapfish.
Canoe-tripping was what piqued my interest in nature photography, and I have enjoyed some success in a variety of settings with my camera. But still, those first shots on that 1971 trip are very precious. Photography is keeping the memories alive. It doesn't matter if it is skillful, artistic, crisp examples, or just a quick snap of something interesting or fun.
I love the POD's and it is one of the very first things I check each morning on my computer. I love today's shot!! It reminds me somewhat of the Kelso River.