Category Archives: Thoughts

A Lucky Find

Last Sunday we went for a drive to Hermanus having heard from Faith that there was a good bookshop there; so after the obligatory lunch at nino’s we popped into Hemingway’s. This place is not the kind of used book store where you pick up ragged copies of trashy novels for a few bucks. They have a wide variety of books including out-of-print collectables and in a section containing erotic and nude photographic works I saw a number of Sam Haskins’ works and an old copy of David Bailey’s The Lady Is a Tramp: Portraits of Catherine Bailey; a beautiful book but very expensive at R1,200, particularly since Exclusive Books lists it for R408, but perhaps it was a signed copy or special for some other reason.

I was looking more for technical and historical photography books though, rather than photo essays. Visiting stockists of new books these days is depressing because South Africa is such a small market that all they ever seem to have is a selection of books that rehash the same info about digital photography, and usually begin something like “Let’s assume you’re a moron that has never seen a camera before”. If you want to buy better, or more advanced, books you need to buy online and then you have no opportunity to browse and page through books to get a feel for them. I was pleasant therefore to browse through the small selection of older photographic books. Some were very old; yearbooks dating back to the 1960s,for instance, while others were a little more pricey than I was hoping for. I did buy four books though at just R220 for the lot.

The first two interested me not only because I want to become more profficient at working with models but also from a historical point of view. They date back to 1984 and were published under the Squire magazine banner and feature all South African models, including some old favourites from my youth; like Vanessa Wannenburg, Miss SA 1977. I have only a vagure recollection of Squire magazine and had never seen these guides before. No doubt they did not appear on the shelves of your local CNA and I was also not very interested in photography in those days in any case.

There were some other books on photographing and lighting nudes but as I have still to graduate to photographing clothed models with any regularity I gave those a miss and settled for a book on technique and one that might help me earn some pocket money from my photography and also contains some beautiful photographs to look at.

I’ll definitely be visiting Hemingway’s again, but I think I’ll wait for winter when it isn’t stiflingly hot in there amongst all the beautiful books.

Five Things Most People Don’t Know About Me

Meg tapped me to continue this meme.

  1. I am adopted.
    I don’t know much about my original parents. Apparently I was a late arrival and as there were several siblings my parents could not afford the cost of an additional mouth to feed. I was put up for adoption and was adopted by the only parents I’ve known. I have never had any desire to meet my birth parents or siblings.
  2. I once single-handedly invaded Botswana.
    During my military service I was stationed for a time at Omega in the Caprivi Strip, a narrow finger of Namibia (then South West Africa) that juts out above Botswana. I was a Casspir driver and one day found myself alone in my vehicle, driving along the track beside the border. We had been warned when arriving at Omega that under no cicumstances should we enter Botswana as they were a neutral country and their defence forces would arrest any South African soldiers that were caught across the border. But when I reached the huge baobab tree that grew beside the border, just inside Botswana, I could not resist the temptation to drive over the border, around the tree, and back again. I probably went no more than 50 meters across the border and was never spotted by any of the Botswanan patrols we were warned about. And that is the story of my invasion of Botswana.
  3. My most embarrasing moment.
    When I was a young child, perhaps seven or eight years old, we lived in a small community where it was quite safe for young children to roam about. My father had been expecting a registered letter and when the collection slip arrived one day, my mother gave me the task of cycling to the post office to collect the letter. All went well until I was about half-way home and developed a desperate need to pee. Rather than simply going behind a bush as I should have, this being a rural area, I went a little way off the path to a toilet I knew to be in the bush. It was just a hut with a wooden box seat over a long-drop and on entering I had a dilemma; there was no way for me to hold the letter while I relieved myself. The toilet seat, being somewhat wider than the hole, provided a shelf that appeared to offer a solution, so I carefully put the letter down on it. I was in the process of relieving myself when a breeze blew through a crack in the wall, whisked the letter up and carried it through the hole, into the pit. I had to go home and report this sad state of affaris to my mother and father, who by then had returned from work. I was mortified but fortunately my parents saw the funny side and were not too angry with me. I do however recall my father using choice language when he had to use a pair of long sticks to mount a rather smelly operation to retrieve the letter. Due to the fact that the toilet was largely unused, the letter had not become saturated with the contents of the pit and could be salvaged.
  4. I celebrated my 21st birthday in the Angolan bush.
    I was in the army when I turned twenty-one, one Thursday in 1983, and was on patrol in Angola at the time with a reaction force from 201 Battalion. My birthday passed without much ado, but it turned out that the following Saturday was the birthday of the lieutenant commanding the patrol. As we usually did while not actively tracking insurgents, we lay up in the shade for most of each day to avoid the heat, moving from dawn until mid-morning and from late-afternoon until sometime after dusk. On this particular Saturday our commander decided that we should have a braai (barbecue) to celebrate our birthdays. We found a nice shady area to set up a temporary position and he sent out a small patrol of bushmen to find a cow. They returned with a small herd from a local village and a selected animal was slaughtered and the rest given their freedom. We collected wood for fires and detached the engine grilles from our Buffels to use as braai grids, something they were perfectly suited to. It happened to be the day of the Currie Cup final back home and our signaller set up one of the military radios to receive the radio commentary. We spent the afternoon listening to the rugby, relaxing and eating grilled meat, a welcome alternative to the ration packs we had been living on for the preceding weeks. As birthday gifts I received a warm can of Lion Lager from one friend’s backpack and a pack of Chesterfield from another buddy.
  5. I was once shot by a friend.
    When I was ten or eleven I was spending the weekend at a friend’s smallholding and we were out with our pellet guns (air rifles) late on the Friday afternoon. He had a mishap with his loaded rifle, which went off and I was hit in the throat from fairly close range. There was little pain or blood and for some insane reason his parents decided that they would not take me home or even allow me to phone my parents to come and collect me. I spent an uncomfortable and rather sleepless night and the next morning they took me to a doctor that I thought to be our family doctor, although I found out later that my parents had switched doctors because this one was rather useless. The doctor had x-rays done and after seeing the pellet in my neck, he concluded that that there was no need to remove it and it could remain where it was. He prescribed some mild painkillers and said I would be fine. I spent another sleepless night as by then I had started to develop infection and was running a fever. My friend’s parents finally decided to take me home on the Sunday morning and my parents were, as you can imagine, not pleased that they had not been contacted immediately. It being Sunday morning there was little that could be done but first thing on Monday an appointment was arranged with a surgeon, who saw me, had his own set of x-rays done and admitted me to hospital right away. I was put on antibiotics immediately and the pellet was surgically removed the next morning. It seems that I was very lucky to be alive and still walking around, the pellet having passed between my jugular vein and windpipe, and coming to rest only 1cm from my spine.

I’ll call on Shauna, Rob, Katie, Lush and emdot to tell us five things that hardly anyone knows about them.

Swimwear or Lingerie?

334359908_f00b314eb1.jpg

Is this woman wearing swimwear with lacy ruffles and bows to make it look like lingerie; or did she come to the beach without swimwear and figure that the lingerie she was wearing could pass for swimwear?

South African business needs to wake up

I was idly looking around for product info on the web and had a look to see if I could find a web site for the Photo Connection chain. I couldn’t despite going to their sister brand Incredible Connection‘s site and from there to the parent company Connection Group‘s site. I couldn’t find any link to a Photo Connection site. Their group profile page doesn’t even mention that the brand exists; strange considering the length of time that the brand has been trading, at least one year, perhaps even two.

Noticing that they have a Customer Feedback page I tried to leave the following comment.

Just wondered why there does not appear to be an Internet presence for your Photo Connection brand. This seems strange to me considering the fact that photographers are so tightly hooked in to the Internet in this digital age. Almost all investigation and a lot of purchases are done on-line so if you don’t have a presence there you must surely be losing out.

but when I submitted the form I got this error

Microsoft VBScript runtime error ‘800a01ad’

ActiveX component can’t create object: ‘CDONTS.NewMail’

/feedback_complete.asp, line 98

Sadly this type of haphazard approach to the Internet as an interface to customers and potential customers is all too common amongst South African businesses. A great number of businesses have no Internet presence at all and when they do these are often outdated, broken or written to work with only certain web browsers.

Companies, I’m tired of…

  • being unable to easily find information on your products
  • being forced to contact you by phone
  • reading in an advertisement that I can visit your web site at an some e-mail address
  • being forced to use a certain web browser to view your site

It should not be easier for me to buy products on-line from foreign vendors than it is to do so locally. The Proudly South African campaign would have us use local businesses to stimulate our economy. This would be a wonderful idea if only local businesses made it easier to do so.

Computicket is spamming me

Since last night I have received multiple copies of an e-mail from Computicket to each of my e-mail accounts, suggesting that I should be wildly excited that the stage production of The Lion King is coming to South Africa, and that I should rush to book my tickets.  There are several annoying things about this.

  • I have no interest in this show.
  • It is being presented in a theatre roughly 1,800km from where I am.
  • I have never asked Computicket to include me in any mailing lists.
  • I am receiving the message through several e-mail accounts that I have never given to Computicket.
  • The e-mails display no indication of how I can unsubscribe from further notifications, something I understood to be a requirement under South African law.

If this show is as popular internationally as they suggest I see no need for this spam campaign.  I’m sure they could fill all the seats by sticking to conventional advertising methods.

I did not expect it to do that

I’ve been using Firefox as my browser of choice for ages but I still need to use Internet Explorer at work for testing the web sites we develop. The other day I installed IE7 for the first time and immediately hit a problem; it just would not run. It started up but while loading the home page it just crashed. Rebooting made no difference but a bit of googling revealed the cause. I use Google Desktop as my local indexing and searching solution and it seems that IE7 crashes if Google Desktop is set to index web history. Turning that off let IE7 get up and running.

Now what was it that I didn’t expect? As a long time Firefox user I’m quite used to the tabbed browser and will often do things like drag a URL from another program and drop it on the tab bar, but not on a tab, to open the URL in a new tab. IE7 has a cute little tab that functions as a new tab button and it seemed quite intuitive to me that to open a URL in a new tab you could drop it on this button. Unfortunately this did not seem to be an intuitive idea for the design team because it didn’t work, nor did dropping it on the tab bar’s background; with both of these actions opening the URL in the currently selected tab, precisely what I didn’t want. So here we have this shiny new browser but I still have to jump through hoops to do some things that have been around for a few years in other browsers; and people wonder why I prefer Firefox.

The Newbie

For some time I have been thinking about getting a compact digital camera. My DSLR and its paraphernalia are too bulky to carry around easily so I usually leave it at home unless I’m expecting a photo opportunity to arise. Today I took the plunge and bought myself a Canon Powershot A540. While not tiny enough to be pocketable, it is still smaller than any other camera I own and I will be able to carry it around with me in a little pouch that clips onto my belt.

It is quite a full-featured 6 megapixel camera with a 4X zoom lens providing a 35mm equivalent zoom range of 35mm to 140mm. It uses the same DIGIC II processor as the 350D, 400D, 20D and 30D DSLRs and has the same level of manual control as my DSLR does. It supports ISO up to 800 but is quite noisy at this. The picture of my son here is the first one I took with the camera and was taken at ISO800 in a fairly dim room, towards a window with the afternoon light streaming in. The image had a lot of noise and I had to run a de-noising tool over it twice, once before doing anything and again after adjusting the curves. This is why the image is a bit soft. I will play with it some more tomorrow but I think that this camera is going to serve me well.

Soldier

Me in June 1983 after a month on patrol in Angola Like most boys I wanted to be any number of action man figures when I grew up. Fireman, policeman, fighter pilot and astronaut were but a few. Of course I never got to be any of those but I did get to be a soldier.

At that time South Africa had a national service system for all white males and I was called up. Along with thousands of other frightened teenagers I was bundled on a train and shipped off for two of the worst/best years of my life.

We were treated quite well for the first day or two. Then we had our medical exams and as I came out of the medical centre with a G1K1 rating the fun started. Running, cleaning, running, PT, cleaning, running, lectures, PT, running, marching, cleaning, shooting, running, lectures, PT, running for three months. Somehow I made it through, lost a lot of weight and actually ended up feeling like a soldier.

Home for a short leave and back again for specialist training. Two thousand troops formed up on a parade ground. Officers calling out specialties and telling us where to form up. Mortars, sappers, signallers, chefs, clerks, “better get going or I’ll be a foot soldier for the rest of my time”, anti-tank, drivers “hey how bad can that be?” So off I go to become a driver.

Lectures, road signs, vehicle maintenance classes and finally the army considers me fit to learn to drive their vehicles. Run to the vehicle park, get there too early, no problem just run back and forth a few times and do some PT in the road. Finally we see our vehicle and “WHAT THE HELL IS THAT?”. A Bedford circa 1947, oh man I hope we don’t have to push to get it going. After much grinding of gears and beating about the head we get the hang of it. Once we have mastered this we’ll get to drive Buffels. “Hang on a minute, those are land-mine protected troop carriers, I might actually have to go to war.” Jump at the chance to be an HQ driver, will learn to drive SAMILs and get to stay near home.

Twenty-six of us go off for six weeks of more lectures, servicing vehicles, driving practice, running, off-road driving, running, night driving, running. Back to our unit only to be told that twenty-four passed the course and they only need eighteen. Six will have to go to the border. “Ok, I’ll go. I wanted to be a soldier anyway.”

Middle of the night we leave for the air force base. Board the Flossie and try to get some sleep during the three and a half hour flight but I’m way too excited. Land at Grootfontein and can’t believe the heat. After six more hours on the back of an open truck we arrive at Oshivelo. Here we will undergo further training.

A week later we’re off to Ondangwa where we will spend the next three months. The entire base consists of tents and incredibly white sand surrounded by earthen walls. Crawl into my sleeping bag on the floor of a tent and fall asleep immediately. There will be no beds until the ou manne leave. BANG BANG BANG, shouts of “walle toe, walle toe”, BANG BANG BANG. Darkness, confusion, half asleep, fear, “where’s my rifle, under attack, I’m going to die and I just got here.” HA HA HA, ou manne laughing, calling us dom roofies. It was just the 40mm anti-aircraft guns practising providing a great way to scare the new guys.

My first patrol, get the Buffel ready, troops get on. Leave the base and head off into the bush. “Hey driver, stay in the vehicle in front’s tracks. We don’t want to hit a mine”. Anti-climax, no mines, no contact, not even a sign of the enemy. Many patrols, sweeping the roads for mines, still no contact, until… Picked up a company of troops in Angola and suddenly WHOOMP, a vehicle hits a mine, everyone off the vehicles, could be an ambush. No it was just a mine, just 7 kilograms of sudden death. Nobody hurt, life goes on.

Months later and I’m driving for a Romeo Mike unit. It’s night and I’m the lead vehicle, as I drive out of the bush and onto the road there is a bang and a flash of fire streaking towards me. The RPG misses and our troops open fire but the enemy just disappears into the night. And that was my only contact in sixteen months in the bush.

Border
The operational area in South West Africa (now Namibia) and Angola.

Buffel
An armoured, land-mine protected troop carrier based on the Mercedes Unimog.

Dom roofies
“Stupid scabs”, army slang for newbies.

Flossie
Lockheed Hercules C-130.

G1K1
Highest medical fitness rating. The G rating indicated the type of activities you could do and the K rating indicated where you could be deployed. G1K1 means you can do any training and be deployed anywhere.

Ou manne
“Old men”, the troops we are replacing will stay for a week or so.

Romeo Mike
Call sign for “Reaksiemag” or Reaction Force units. Motorised infantry units composed of South African officers and NCOs and native Owambo or Bushmen troops.

RPG
RPG-7, a rocket propelled grenade of Soviet origin.

SAMIL
A range of 4 or 6 wheel drive trucks based on the Magirus Deutz coming in 2-ton, 5-ton and 10-ton variants.

Walle toe
“To the walls”

New Canon Products

So yesterday’s rumours were true.  Canon has announced the EOS 400D DSLR, to be known as the Digital Rebel XTi in North America.  They have also announced two new lenses, the EF 70-200 F/4L IS USM, an upgrade of the EF 70-200 F/4L, which adds image stabilisation to what is already a popular lens.  Even more interesting, given the popularity of the EF 50mm F/1.8 and F/1.4 lenses is the announcement of the EF 50mm F/1.2L.

Canon EOS 400D

Canon EOS 400D It seems that someone in China slipped up long enough to let the guys at Engadget get a look at a page on the soon to be announced (tomorrow?) EOS 400D DSLR, successor to the 350D/Digital Rebel XT/Kiss N. As the page was in Chinese, the interpretation of the specifications is sketchy but it seems to have still have an APS-C (1.6× crop factor) sensor but that resolution is upped to 10.1 megapixels. Besides the resolution increase the big new feature appears to be ultrasonic dust removal, which will make it worth getting. It isn’t mentioned but I would also like to see it introduce spot metering as was done with the 30D.

So the question now is, do I start looking for falling 350D prices and pick up a bargain as an upgrade for my 300D, or do I wait a few months and jump straight to the 400D?