Five-Years Ago (26-July-2008) — Colorado

Summertime Nature in Colorado

Earred Grebe (?) in a Pond at the Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge in Colorado. Image taken with a Nikon D300 camera and 80-400 mm VR lens (ISO 200, 400 mm, f/8, 1/640 sec).

Earred Grebe (?) in a Pond at the Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge in Colorado. Image taken with a Nikon D300 camera and 80-400 mm VR lens (ISO 200, 400 mm, f/8, 1/640 sec). (David J Mathre)
Earred Grebe (?) in a Pond at the Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge in Colorado. Image taken with a Nikon D300 camera and 80-400 mm VR lens (ISO 200, 400 mm, f/8, 1/640 sec). (David J Mathre)

Wednesday (03-July-2013) — New Jersey

The Rise and Fall of Satellite Book Radio

Several years ago as I was about to do a road trip across the United States, I did two things that changed my life. One was to take a recommendation from my brother to get a DSLR to take pictures of the trip. I ordered a Nikon D200 camera with a kit 18-70 mm lens and added an 80-400 mm VR lens. The other thing that I did was to get a satellite radio for the car. In those days there were two options for satellite radio XM and Sirius. Just before leaving I got both an XM and Sirius receiver and figured that I would try both out during the trip. Just for baseline, I didn’t have a cell-phone (let alone a smart phone). The car radio received AM, FM and weather channels. It also played music from a cassette and a 6-CD player. I was looking forward to listening to radio as I drove across the country without having to constantly searching for channels. Searching for channels on previous road trips had a real pain if you wanted to listen to something other than top 40, country, or rural news about wheat, soybean, or corn futures. When I did find a NPR/APR station and start listening to a program (Prairie Home Companion) or news, I would have to be prepared to search for another station playing the same program as I moved from city to city. Thus, I really was looking forward to see what satellite radio could offer. Back in those ancient times the car radio/music systems didn’t have an auxiliary input for other sources. The two options for the satellite radio receivers were adapters that used a cassette module or converted the signal to a low power FM radio signal. I tried both, but found that the cassette module was more reliable. I started my trip across the country. It was great that I didn’t need to change channels as I passed from city to city – but there were too many channels to choose from. It was good to find that some of the NPR/APR programs – but was disappointed that they did not play NPR news. I guess that the local NPR stations felt that if NPR news was on satellite that their local fund-raising would dry up. For me the real jewel was to find Sonic Theater on the XM satellite channel. I could listen to unabridged Books and Radio Theater (including Joe Frank, and ZBS that I hadn’t heard since I was in Pasadena or Boston. There was also an old-time radio channel (I don’t remember if it was XM or Sirius). I could drive for hours and hours lost in the programs and find myself one or two states closer to my destination. After this cross-country trip, I was totally hooked on Digital Photography and Satellite Radio. Move forward a few years and Satellite Radio (Sirius) was included in my new car. I would time my commute to and from work to listen to programs on the Book and Old Time channels. I did miss a few programs on XM radio (including The Loft and Vin Scelsa’s Idiot’s Delight program) which I listened to on the old XM receiver in my house. When I got my RV (Road Trek) for my road trip to Alaska in 2009 it had an XM Satellite radio. For most of the trip to Alaska I was actually able to receive a signal all the way to Anchorage as long as the satellite antenna was on top of the RV (and in a few cases, I had to have the vehicle point south). Fast forward again, XM and Sirius merged – but still needed two radio receivers to get all of the programs. Book Radio became my favorite channel and I would time my commute to and from work to listen to the books being read. Last year after I retired and was no longer doing the long (1-1.5 hour each way) daily commute, I would go and sit in my car in the morning and afternoon so not to miss the books being read. It must have looked weird for the neighbors to see me sit in the car each morning and evening. When I upgraded my home stereo, I made sure it included a Satellite Radio receiver so I could listen to the programs inside. Fast forward again, I just returned from nearly two months on the Semester at Sea Spring 2013 Enrichment Voyage. I heard a comment on one of the Book Radio programs that they were going off the air in mid-July. I couldn’t believe it, but then heard it again on another program. When I did some checking on the Internet, I saw that Sirius channel 80 which had been Book Radio will be replace by Rural Radio. So Books and Radio Theater are being replaced by farm prices, and rodeos. I guess that I should have seen this coming since the advertisements on the Book Radio channel had been degrading to the same ones that show up on “late night TV” – thus Sirius/XM was losing money on this channel. For me, unless I find something else I like on one of the other satellite channels I will not be renewing my two to Sirius/XM subscriptions. Actually, the radio (and GPS) wasn’t working in my car for my recent trip to and from Florida so I have all ready started to withdraw from my daily fix from Book Radio. RIP – Book Radio

"The Other Boleyn Girl" Solarium Deck on the M/V Columbia Alaska Marine Highway. Image taken with a Nikon D3 and 50 mm f/1.4D lens (ISO 1600, 50 mm, f/4, 1/160 sec). (David J Mathre)
“The Other Boleyn Girl” Solarium Deck on the MV Columbia Alaska Marine Highway. Image taken with a Nikon D3 camera and 50 mm f/1.4D lens (ISO 1600, 50 mm, f/4, 1/160 sec). (David J Mathre)

Wednesday (19-June-2013) — New Jersey

Semester at Sea Spring 2013 Enrichment Voyage.

I am back home after an extended voyage on the Semester at Sea MV Explorer. Over 52 days the Spring 2013 Enrichment Voyage visited 19 countries (Spain, Monaco, Italy, Spain, Gibraltar, Morocco, Portugal, Belgium, Netherlands, Scotland, Northern Ireland, Ireland, England, Norway, Latvia, Russia, Sweden, Denmark, and Germany). The Garmin GPS that I carried recorded 24539 miles (10068 miles by air, 9216 miles at sea, 2457 miles by car, 1800 miles by bus, 819 miles by train, 46 miles by ferry, and 133 miles by foot). Using five cameras (including my smart phone) I took over 60K images taking up almost all of a 1.5 TB external hard drive. Internet access on the ship was slow so I didn’t make many posts. I plan to go back and post images from the trip over the next few days and weeks.

Spring 2013 Enrichment Voyage

Sunday (16-June-2013) — England

Gone to See Europe. Semester at Sea Spring 2013 Enrichment Voyage on the MV Explorer. Day 51: Southampton, England.

Queen Elizabeth (Cunard Lines) Docking in Southampton, England. Image taken with a Leica X2 camera (ISO 100, 24 mm, f/5, 1/200 sec). In camera B&W.

Early in the morning I saw a large cruise ship all lit up from the window in my cabin. The ship passed us relatively quickly. Once we arrived in Southampton we saw that the large ship that passed us was the Queen Elizabeth.

Queen Elizabeth (Cunard Lines) Docking in Southampton, England. Image taken with a Leica X2 camera (ISO 100, 24 mm, f/5, 1/200 sec). In camera B&W. Semester at Sea Spring 2013 Enrichment Voyage. (David J. Mathre)
Queen Elizabeth (Cunard Lines) Docking in Southampton, England. Image taken with a Leica X2 camera (ISO 100, 24 mm, f/5, 1/200 sec). In camera B&W. (David J. Mathre)

Wednesday (12-June-2013) — Germany

Gone to See Europe. Semester at Sea Spring 2013 Enrichment Voyage on the MV Explorer. Day 47: Kiel Canal, Germany.

I was part of a team of six photographers that took ~30,000 images as the MV Explorer (Semester at Sea Spring 2013 Enrichment Voyage) transits the Kiel Canal in Germany.Howard Ignatius used the images to create this time-lapse video of the passage through the canal.