There are limitations, certainly, to photographs from that tiny lens on the IPhone 10 (or IPhone X). It captured the moments in this series. I take mine along even with the professional camera bodies, lenses and tripod, for this reason. These images are the unprocessed files.
Category: Adventure
Jenny Lake, Grand Tetons
Photographer at work, captured by his wife
Pam captured me at work on the shore of Jenny Lake, Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming.
Click photograph for the expanded view. To do this from WordPress Reader, you need to first click the title of this post to open a new page.
The header photograph is mine of a hot air balloon over our home last summer. I imagine us floating, the Jenny Lake below us.
Copyright 2020 All Rights Reserved Michael Stephen Wills
Black Canyon of the Gunnison
Photographer at work, captured by his wife
Pam captured me at work on the north rim of Black Canyon, Colorado. That is a Manfrotto studio tripod and hydro-static ball head.
Click photograph for the expanded view. To do this from WordPress Reader, you need to first click the title of this post to open a new page.
The header photograph is mine of a hot air balloon over our home last summer. I imagine us floating, the Black Canyon below us.
Copyright 2020 All Rights Reserved Michael Stephen Wills
Where a fort falls away
An abrupt emptiness
Here is the east side of the inner enclosure wall of Dun Aonghasa (Dun Aengus) where it ends at a cliff edge over the Atlantic ocean.
Visible are the last 60 feet or so of the limestone strata supporting the inner ring.
When first constructed, the inner ring was complete, the western side 1,000 feet from the cliff.. Today’s form of a semi-circle was created by nature when the force of Atlantic Ocean waves eroded the cliff, undercutting the strata.
Look close to see a fracture where the next block of limestone will fall into the waves.

Ancient fort wall with tourists and Cliff Edge of Dun Aonghasa (Dun Aengus)
Wishing a blessed All Saints Day (November 1st) for all my readers.
Click me for the first post of this series, “Horse Trap on Inishmore.”
Reference: wikipedia Dún Aonghasa, Sea Campion
Copyright 2019 Michael Stephen Wills All Rights Reserved
700 Readers
700 in the basket and room for more
Here is a list of the 85 countries you are from, ordered by number of reads so far in 2019. Thank You!!
| United States | India | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | Australia | France | Spain | Japan | Switzerland | Netherlands | Philippines | Italy | United Arab Emirates | Nigeria | Austria | Malaysia | Pakistan | Brazil | Sweden | Indonesia | Ireland | Greece | Russia | Finland | Kenya | Singapore | New Zealand | Guatemala | Poland | Hong Kong SAR China | South Africa | Saudi Arabia | Thailand | Azerbaijan | Portugal | Argentina | Mexico | Vietnam | China | Colombia | Guam | South Korea | Norway | Anguilla | Qatar | Bangladesh | Romania | Peru | Sri Lanka | Croatia | Slovakia | Gibraltar | Czech Republic | Turkey | Bosnia & Herzegovina | Denmark | St. Martin | Papua New Guinea | Hungary | Palestinian Territories | Belgium | Israel | Chile | American Samoa | Bulgaria | Serbia | St. Barthélemy | Macedonia | Oman | Nepal | Malta | Puerto Rico | Cameroon | Ukraine | Lithuania | Cambodia | Senegal | Côte d’Ivoire | Armenia | European Union | Iraq | Tunisia | Maldives | Guernsey | Bahamas | Laos |

Copyright 2019 Michael Stephen Wills All Rights Reserved
Exploring the Cancer Constellation: A Detailed Guide
Here are labeled photographs, detailing its major elements, and including visual guides for enhanced viewing.
Pam proofed my post, “When the Moon Dined from a Stellar Mangar”and found some improvements, including adding text labels to aid in finding Cancer constellation elements.
Labels!!
You will find I replaced photographs in the original post and well, all the major elements of Cancer are labeled. Here is an explanation of the new elements.
You can now trace the “Y” constellation pattern, with Alpha and Beta Chancri (Latin for “of Cancer”) the two claws and Iota the tail. Both elemetns of Iota, a visual binary star system, are there. They are wonderful viewed with a telescope. Near Alpha is M67 (Messier Object 67), another galactic cluster of gravitationally bound stars. It is quite faint in this photograph.

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