The Last Autumn

The Last Autumn in St Stephens Green Dublin

On Saturday I walked through St Stephens Green and it struck me that this is the last Autumn for this part of the Green.

By October next year these trees will have been removed to make room for a new Metro station. Personally in post Celtic Tiger Ireland I don’t see the need for the Metro or how we can afford it both financially and spiritually, for the Green is the heart of the city center and no cost benefit analysis can measure that.

They promise to restore the Green to its former glory after the building has finished. I believe they mean well and a lot of effort is going into documenting the current layout and structure of the Green so that everything can be put back where it was but no matter how much effort they put into replacing stones and railings it still takes 200 years to fully restore a 200 year old park.

Red Umbrella

 

Near my apartment there is a little lane-way towards the shops, beside the path has become a little overgrown, nothing awful just weeds and grass covering the back of the tennis courts. At some stage someone must have lost control of their red umbrella in the wind and either it broke or they lost it but either way it ended up discarded in the grass. It was a perfect picture, I didnt have to move anything or position anything, as you see it is as I found it. I edited it on the iPhone again and would have uploaded it straight from there but the WordPress app seems to be enlarging files to 3 times their size and making all the pictures square so for the moment I’ll have to upload from my laptop.

10-10-10 10:10


I had great plans to take part in Open House Dublin this weekend but a touch of the winter vomiting bug put paid to my adventures. Fortunately this morning was 10 October 2010 and I was well enough to go out and try to find a photo to mark 10-10-10 10:10. In fairness I could have probably gone out on other days as well but the stuff on the ground might not have been as pretty…

Our Indian Summer forcast last week does not appear to have arrived and some over night wind knocked an abundance of leaves off the trees around my apartment. I snapped a quick photo, made it my iPhone wall paper and then put the iPhone onto the pile leaaves the took a few snaps at 10:10. I then took some with the iPhone itself to tweet and suddenly the minute was gone. Next year it’ll be 11-11-11, a Friday and also Remembrance Day so maybe I can plan something better.

Dundrum Sunrise

 

On the drive to work this morning I was stuck in a traffic jam around Dundrum and half blinded by the reflection in my mirrors. The sun was rising directly behind me and the Luas bridge. Not moving anywhere quick enough to park and get out to take a proper photo but still not wanting to get arrested for using my phone in the car I just snapped a quick photo in the side mirror itself.  After a couple of quick tweaks in Photoshop Express on the iPhone I like it, even though I clearly need to clean the mirror.

Orangutan Tree

While visiting the zoo I went around on my own after the official tour ended. I stopped for a while at the orangutan enclosure. Compared to the chimpanzees the orangutans space looks much smaller and less interesting but I have the impression they are quieter animals than chimps and perhaps the space is large enough for them though I’m sure the zoo would jump at the chance to allocate more space to them if it was possible. One orangutan sat in the tree and it took some coaching from the keeper to get her to come down and eat lunch. Eventually she did come down but it seemed like she was only doing it to poke at the food and get rid of the annoying human.

Chimpanzee Breakfast

Yesterday a group of Irish bloggers and photo bloggers were invited to tour Dublin Zoo early in the morning to see the zoo before it opened to the public and while the keepers and handlers were getting the animals up and about for the day and feeding them breakfast.

For the tour the large group of bloggers was broken into 3 smaller groups and the group I was in was lucky enough to see the chimpanzees being brought out and given their morning treat of apples. The photos I took make them look sad as if they were begging for the apples but really it was more like they were demanding their apples, waving at the keeper and stretching out their arms saying “where is my apple, throw it now”.

I know many people dislike zoos but it is obvious that the staff of Dublin Zoo care for the animals and are passionate about conservation both in and in the wild. In some cases the goal is to breed animals in captivity so that stocks can be returned to the wild where they are extinct.  In an ideal world there would be no need to return animals to the wild but until man stops destroying animal habitats  and poaching to feed black market demands well run zoos may prove to be an ark preserving endangered species.

A big thank you to Dublin Zoo and the organisers of the tour, I was delighted to be invited to chat with some great photo bloggers whose blogs I had seen but who I had never met in person before. It was great to see so many old and new faces and I didn’t have enough time to talk to everyone I wanted to. Hopefully there will be more photo tours and walks organised and I’ll get to chat with everyone. I have lots more photos to process and I’ll be uploading more here and to my flickr or pix.ie accounts.