• Members 440 posts
    Feb. 23, 2025, 5:13 p.m.

    Hi,

    Well, I finally went and did it. I got a Fujifulm GFX-100 Mark-I to replace my venerable Pentax 645D. I have an idea to return to the North Carolina coast over the course of this year to do another series of Lighthouse shots. This time at dusk with their lights on. The Kodak CCD isn't up to that being a bit too noisy. The 100 MP sensor isn't only CMOS with lower noise, it is Back Side Illuminated. We shall see how it does.

    In the meantime,having just received it,. I wanted to shoot something here on the farm. But, it's an ugly time of year being Winter. Now NC doesn't get much snow, but here we had some last week. Not as much as I had hoped for as you can still see the dormant pasture grass. But, it's as good as we are likely to get this year. And, I went out under the clouds because I knew what little white we did get was going to rapidly Go Away as soon as the clouds began breaking up.

    We grow hardshell gourds here for the arts and craft market. My wife being the super arts and crafts person. I'm into electronics R&D but grew up in farm country mostly growing corn and alfalfa for dairy cows, but I can help her when it comes to actually growing the gourds.

    _DSF1083.jpg

    View out the back door of the house. You can see the Gourd Arches, which is where we grow the small ornamental gourds. To the left is the chicken pen, but no chickens to be seen.

    _DSF1084.jpg

    View down the drive to the house. The gourd patches to the left are just out of frame. Nothing to see there right now anyway. You can see some of one patch to the right. I call this my front lawn, although it's actually five different pasture grasses.

    _DSF1086.jpg

    View from the far end of the gourd arches out back, looking back towards the house. The workshop has an upstairs where my amateur radio station is, hence all the antennas you see. You can also see the tractor shed which holds four machines, but it's a bit dark under that roof.

    _DSF1087.jpg

    Here is a view down The Backhoe Road which heads to the Cape Fear River. It's a narrow strip between two other properties until you get to the bottom of the hill where there is four acres of a nice place to go swimming and fishing. Once it gets to looking nice around here, I'll post a shot or two.

    I ought to explain The Backhoe Road. We do have a backhoe here, but the reference is to a short line railroad near here which ran from New Hill where the main line is North to Durham where the tobacco processing plants were. They called that short line Tobacco Road. It's a hiking/biking trail these days called The American Tobacco Trail. I like the name Tobacco Road better. ;)

    And we used both a backhoe and a bulldozer to create that road to the river, so the name fits that way as well.

    To get these ready for posting, I quartered each shot (reduced 50% in each direction) and Jpeg compressed them. This thing spits out a lot of data. The Raw files are around 90 MB each....

    Stan

    _DSF1087.jpg

    JPG, 6.9 MB, uploaded by StanDisbrow on Feb. 23, 2025.

    _DSF1086.jpg

    JPG, 5.2 MB, uploaded by StanDisbrow on Feb. 23, 2025.

    _DSF1084.jpg

    JPG, 4.2 MB, uploaded by StanDisbrow on Feb. 23, 2025.

    _DSF1083.jpg

    JPG, 7.3 MB, uploaded by StanDisbrow on Feb. 23, 2025.

  • Members 440 posts
    Feb. 23, 2025, 7:16 p.m.

    Hi,

    Thanks. We enjoy our small farm. There are a few 20-30 acre farms along the river. You have to build on a high spot because the river backs up into the lower sports every time we get rains from a hurricane here. So that limits the building areas quite a bit. All the large farms on higher ground are rapidly being turned into housing developments one farm at a time.

  • Members 440 posts
    Feb. 23, 2025, 7:25 p.m.

    Hi,

    Since the dim light prevented seeing any equipment hibernating in the shed, here is a shot from a few years ago where I got some of it out and lined up for a family portrait. This is with the Pentax 645D which has a different look from the Kodak CCD. The backhoe isn't in this one, though. I was showing a family resemblance here. The two on the left, one wheel tractor and one crawler, are really the same machines until the wheels wind up replaced with a track system. Same for the two on the right.

    The left pair are earlier, 1950 and 1958 and were my Dad's. The ones on the left are 1988 and 2008 and are ones I bought.

    Tractors.jpg

    Also, the gourd arches look so bare in the earlier shot. I dug up one taken with the 645D when we only had one arch up and not two. But that one is loaded up and you can see what they are all about.

    Gourd Arch.jpg

    It's a lot easier to harvest those small gourds when they are hanging in the air rather than laying on the ground. ;)

    They are made from cutting up some steel fence posts into stakes for anchors and then arching 16 foot long cattle panels between the rows of fence post stakes. The plants are in rows along the outside and the vines grow up the panels. With some help from the farmer to guide them up there.

    Stan

    Gourd Arch.jpg

    JPG, 8.8 MB, uploaded by StanDisbrow on Feb. 23, 2025.

    Tractors.jpg

    JPG, 9.5 MB, uploaded by StanDisbrow on Feb. 23, 2025.

  • Feb. 23, 2025, 8:27 p.m.

    Lovely poctures, Stan, and fascinating descriptions. Tell us more about your ham radio. Is it all DX these days? What bands do you work? How far can your transmitter reach?

    David