Monthly Archives: March 2011

The Disappearing Bike Shop

Subtitle: Google Maps approaches sentience

After all the cycling that has been happening recently, it’s no wonder our bikes needed a service. More accurately, after leaving it in a Sydney garage for three years, the Obsessive Cyclist’s preferred mode of transport, being a highly strung top-of-the-range model, said “No, shan’t” on the very first outing. So we took it to the bike shop for a service. That was about eight weeks ago, and cycling has been happening ever since.

By contrast, my trusty mountain bike, at half the price and double the robustness, was in reasonable working order. Nevertheless, after quite a bit of cycling since then, I didn’t like the squeals when I brake hard. And the tiny, annoying noise it made every time the front wheel goes round. And the fact that I found it so hard to change gears on the rear wheel that I generally made do with the middle ring only. So I started nagging The Mechanic to do something about it. “Ooh,” he said knowledgeably, “it’s probably the brake pads being worn out. It needs a service.” Several nags later, over several weeks, and he got around to booking my bike in. Same shop as last time, since they did well and were knowledgeable and friendly.

Today was the day, but, owing to work and opening times of shops generally coinciding, we meant to drop the bike off yesterday evening. Surely 45 mins between work and shop closing time is sufficient to drop a bike in the back of the car, drive it 7km down the road and leave it at the shop? We took our trusty iPad “just in case” but since we knew where we were going it probably wouldn’t be needed. We thought. Halfway down the six-lane highway in the middle of what passes in Brisbane for the rush hour, The Driver asked for a count-down on how much longer. I try to locate the bike shop on Google Maps. “Hmmm, that’s funny,” I think to myself. “I could have sworn that the bike shop was actually marked on Google Maps.” But hey, we had an address, and maybe Google Maps had updated meanwhile or the business forgot to pay them the fee for being on the map. Or something.

The street started to look more and more familiar. Both of us said “I’m sure it was around here.” Eventually we parked the car where we did last time, wisely left the bike in the car and had a look on foot at where we thought the bike shop had been. Empty shop front. Incredulously, we discussed how people who booked a bike in for a service less than a week ago could somehow fail to mention that they were so close to financial ruin that within days their business premises would look deserted with a “For Lease” sign on the top. Hang on… I spot a tiny piece of paper in the window, where someone had written in biro “We have moved!”, followed by an address and directions. At 5:46pm with 14 mins left to get there, this is not what you want to find.

Just as well I’d brought the iPad. I typed in the new address, and hey presto — the shop, at its new address, is marked on Google Maps!

The moral of the tale is, if Google Maps tells you something isn’t where you thought it was…. then it really isn’t there.

I’d post a picture of my bike to go with this post but I don’t actually have my bike owing to it being at the aforementioned shop. Instead, we shall make do with an artful photograph of a very lonely bike lock.

I can haz bike?

NB: The inclusion of at least one photograph in each post has nothing whatsoever to do with the fact that the Onswipe theme will “select” a photograph at random for my blog cover page if I don’t provide one.

 

Outdoor Concert

While the Obsessive Cyclist was climbing a mountain again, I wandered through the Botanical Gardens and found an extra bonus: an outdoor concert in progress, courtesy of Brisbane City Council, and stopped to spend a very pleasant hour sitting on the grass listening to Australian composers.

Notice the toy kangaroo on the stage, holding an Australian flag?

Afterwards, the Japanese Gardens are always a relaxing sight.

Excellent reflections on a calm day

These lizards found it relaxing, too, especially on stones conveniently warmed by the sun.

Yes, *two* lizards in this shot. Can you spot the second one?

To round off the wildlife sightings, a young bird scratching happily, completely ignoring people. Not sure what it is when it’s grown up — a lyre bird of some kind?

There's something interesting here...

 

Sunset Photography

Last Friday we decided on a few civilized evening drinks across the river, where most of the bars have just reopened after the January floods. It was not much of a success as, in some cases, “re-opened” meant “open if you don’t mind sitting among hastily-hired external cooling units because the new fridges haven’t arrived yet”, or “open if you don’t mind a very restricted selection of beer”. In other cases, it meant “open if you don’t mind eye-wateringly high prices for (admittedly excellent) beer while being squeezed like a sardine among the throng”. With hindsight maybe a Friday evening wasn’t the best choice to try out new venues.

However, it was a gorgeous, warm evening, and just right for some sunset photography.

The rays of the setting sun on Story Bridge
Kangaroo Point Cliffs at Sunset
One of the skyscrapers in the CBD in front of a technicolor sunset.

Having had one beer at each of the likely-looking establishments on the North side we decided that South of the river is more to our taste and ended up back at our usual haunt a worryingly convenient 2-minute walk from our flat. An excellent choice of beers in a busy but not overcrowded bar, a civilized atmosphere and available seats all made the local choice a no-brainer for us.

 

 

HDR Experiments

This morning I’m idly reading through Facebook when one of my facebook friends describes his first forays into HDR. For those of you who are not photo-geeks, HDR stands for High Dynamic Range. It means taking several photos in quick succession of the same scene, at different exposure settings, then merging them into a single picture. My ageing Canon EOS 300D is perfectly capable of doing Auto Exposure Bracketing (AEB) — taking three photos at normal, -x and +x exposure (the value of x is up to you). It also turns out that Photoshop Elements 9, of which I am a proud owner, contains Photomerge, a plug-in that does the hard work of merging the different exposures. So, no real excuse for not giving it a try.

Doing the camera work was easy: Take a mini-tripod, use the menu to set up AEB, take a shot of a landscape photograph. (For a close-up subject, there are other – easier – ways to achieve a similar effect, such as using a fill-in flash.) The views from Mount Coot-tha were rather perfect for this purpose. Once downloaded, however, it takes absolutely ages to merge the pictures, even longer if you then mess around with manual settings. So I only did it for two sets of three, to give the general idea. For best results, click on the thumbnails to see a full-size version.

The first pair shows standard exposure, then the automatic Photomerge result. The second pair shows standard exposure, then the result of Photomerge augmented by me playing with extra layers, clipping masks etc to create a new picture. My very first exposure (ha, ha, pun intended) to HDR.

Glass House Mountains

We are trying to go somewhere new every weekend. Today we drove to the Glass House Mountains, about an hour’s drive North. The idea was to do some mountain biking, and some photography.

Turns out we did rather more of the latter than the former. We just cannot resist a sign that says “Mountain lookout —>”. So we followed. And followed. And more. At no point did the signs indicate how far the lookout was. Eventually we ran out of paved road. Some more up. We should have guessed that “mountain lookouts” are generally situated up. Finally, a tiny car park, mostly full, and a fantastic panorama greeted us.

Another sign we are suckers for: “Circular lookout path, 800m”. Naturally, we followed it. A lovely, winding path through dense forest, steeply falling away at one side. Not a guard rail in sight, obviously. Then, thumping noises to our left. Kangaroos! The first bit of wildlife we’ve seen in Queensland in the wild. They looked at us curiously, and eventually hopped off when some children squealed “Kangaroos!”. Hint: If you want to see wildlife, don’t yell.

Thus the day was a success already, but, we hadn’t done any mountain biking yet. We found a likely-looking (i.e. empty) car park a bit further down the mountain, with trails going off it, marked variously with “no trail bikes”, “no mountain bikes”, “no horse riding” etc. The Obsessive Cyclist located one that didn’t say “no mountain bikes” and went off to explore. I curled up with a book on a convenient tree stump. After a while, the noise of sharp braking alerted me to the return of the explorer. And couldn’t believe my eyes. He was covered in mud. Bike. Shoes. Shorts. T-Shirt. And had a huge grin on his face. It has been raining a lot recently, and apparently it was a tiny bit muddy. You don’t say…?

Somebody has to be sensible here, and we have a car with nice, comfy leather seats. I insisted he change his clothes (yes, we had carried a change of clothes — experience etc), then wash the bike with some water before putting it back in the car. From somewhere, a rooster turned up, eyeing up the muddy bike.

Anyway, here are some piccies of a successful day.