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Rainy day road trip

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Off to Lincoln and Franconia today.

We have been wanting to visit the mountain wanderer book shop for some time now and today seemed like the perfect day for it.  Forty-Five minutes from Mittenstock and over the pass (where there was still plenty of snow) lies the town of Lincoln and the Mountain Wanderer book shop.  If you are a fan of the area and a hiker – this is a must visit. Owner Steve Smith is well known in the area as a well of information on all topics White Mountains. Do visit his blog for a fabulous resource of information on hikes and destinations you would probably not have thought of or even knew about.

We enjoyed a long chin wag with Steve and secured a new stack of literature for Mittenstock in the process.

After that we drove up to Cannon and had a look around. Cold, windy and wet (as it has been for so long this spring). I realized that I had not been back to Cannon for over 35 years. I had to stop to snap a shot of WG ridge as well as ‘Old Cannon’ where you can clearly see the face plant of the old man at the top of the slabs. Back in the day I climbed over his ear and around the cables, iron rods and epoxy that held him together.

Fun quick road trip despite the weather – with promises to return under fairer skies for future adventures.

The Whitney Gilman Ridge rising up into the clouds on a cold wet day
Cannon slabs with the pink rock scar from the collapse of the old man of the mountains.

May 16, 2019

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The sun is well on it’s way to the north now – Same as it will be in early August I am told. Cold start to the season, but still a sweet view and one I doubt I will ever grow tired of. I love the lone birch in the new lot. My spirit tree.

Boulder Looping

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A classic short walk – and a great time of year to do it. It is interesting to see  the recovery from the fire a couple years ago. The bugs are just coming out, as are the leaves. Saw our first trillium of the season. All and all a walk that does not disappoint.

 

More Squalls

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January 6 2018 from Michael Hassey on Vimeo.

(The video is downsampled to 4K – Click the gear in the player to up the resolution (if you have the screen for it)oh, and full size is best size. Just sayin)

We got first tracks again Sunday morning. There were flurries all the while we were on the slopes. It was like some giant was picking up the snow globe and giving it a good shake every time it started to settle down.  It was a warmish 35 and sunny at times back at Mittenstock.

Sally had left. I was waiting for the dishwasher to finish while packing up after a great weekend. I saw that Chocorua had slipped behind some squalls again so I quickly set up a D800 with a 50mm and hooked up the intervalometer.

Glad I did.

 

Dog Bone Ridge

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After getting first tracks this morning at the mountain we came back to Mittenstock and took the boys out to Dog Bone Ridge.
Great conditions. Relatively warm at 34 degrees with no wind. A nice early January day.

It’s just two miles.
It’s kinda a scar of a path ( a series of skider tracks)
But it’s right outside our door and offers a nice accessible terrain hike for us.

We have never done it outside of show shoes. So much opens up in the winter. After a few snow storms travel is effortless on pillows and the views open up considerably. No bugs, no Harley’s. Off trail on snow shoes is the game of the season for us.

There had to be north of 18” of snow. It was a little heavy, but it made for solid traction and a stable track out and back, up and down. Both of us were good for one tumbledown each this trip.

I shot only a 50mm 1.4 on the D810. I always bring all sorts of gear and just about never break it out on trip. Part of the problem is that once I get on trail I am overcome with a ‘let’s make time’ feeling and tend to not want to stop or break pace. I need to work on that.

The truly great thing about Dog Bone Ridge is the access. Put the pack on in the house – and off you go.

Sally, fifty feet from home at the end of the hike today.

Not sure what the name of this piece of ground is.

We call it Dog Bone Ridge because

 

Well, Dogs…

 

Moonset at Sunrise

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MoonsetAtSunrise from Michael Hassey on Vimeo.

I also shot this at 300MM

300mmMS from Michael Hassey on Vimeo.

I worked as a human intervalometer manually depressing the shutter every time I heard the D800 fire on the 50mm. The result was a wee bit bumpy. 100 frames on 6 seconds did not yield much. I ran the output through Final Cut with a stabilizer (Lock&Load) applied to eliminate the shakes from the long lens and bumpy handling of the frames.

Dec 22 Clearing

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Dec22MTL from Michael Hassey on Vimeo.

A single NEF file from the D800 averages 75 MB.
Thats a 7360×4912 image. This sequence was shot on a Nikkor 85mm at f/9 for 1/120. I capture in M and lock the WB as well as ISO.

I shot 850 frames on a six second interval for around one and a half hours of exposure – filling a 64GB CF card. After dumping the card, creating keyframes, blending and equalizing the exposure curve and then rendering to a movie I am left with twenty-eight seconds of 4K magic.

I use Adobe Lightroom and the excellent LR Timelapse .

I was multi-tasking and did not have a timer on it, but would guess it was around 3.5 hours of processing time to squeeze that 28 seconds out of my Mac.

If you are on a capable device and want to make sure you get all the pixels you so deserve be sure to click the gear on the player and set the resolution to 4K. Vimeo will default to 1080P or at least it does on my crappy internet connection.

Winter Cometh

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Bring it I say

Shot this end of November. We had some great early season snow for Thanksgiving.

HUGE photo, but fun if you have the bandwidth.

It had been snowing all day the day before, as well as that morning. Behind the snow was some gusty wind and more squalls. Here are two captures as a time lapse mash up.

Nov 21 Squalls from Michael Hassey on Vimeo.

 

 

Also shot this;

Nov29-2018 from Michael Hassey on Vimeo.

 

 

April 22

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A five frame hand held HDR shot off the bridge looking up at the brook

A quick walk up a FR off of Nanamocomuk yielded a great little jaunt for a Sunday morning.

Spring Conditions

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Perhaps the best run of the day was on 'North Conway'

And then it was spring.

 

Came over to MS to ski the last week our mountain was open.

It has rained a bit overnight – I got to the slopes around 11 AM as the sky was clearing. It was WARM at 53 and with the reflected sun it was crazy warm.

 

Back home and the doors and windows are open while the house gets a breath of the fresh air of a sunny spring day.