Showing posts with label Bad Back. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bad Back. Show all posts

Sunday, 17 January 2010

Bad backs and flu jabs...Ouch


Well I am now protected against swine flu - my arm is still hurting! It is not some great pain but more a dull ache. Talking of dull aches my back has flared up again. Oh the pleasures of getting old!

On the positive side the side has come out today - it almost feels spring like today - however it is January so it is a nice day - nothing more. Still it is nice to see the sun and makes you look forward to the better days ahead and forget the weeks of grey skills and cold weather. You just know that next week is going to bring more snow and cold grey days.

Wednesday, 16 December 2009

Young Wood Pigeon & Blackbrid...


A bit restricted at the moment as to what I can photograph so I'm having to make do with whatever flies into the garden.



Inspiring Portfolios...

Day three of the back problems - things appear to be getting better. So it is giving me time to catch up on some of the reading I have put off for a rainy day. One of the magazines I have been going through is the Silvershotz Folios 2009. As usual there is an impressive array of photographers work on display - however two have caught my eye:

Mare

This is a wonderful and simple collection of photographs of the waves crashing against the beach by Alessandro Puccinelli. I love the simplicity of the photographs and the sympathetic use of black and white to emphasise the details of the wave. Well worth viewing.

Vanishing Cultures

Larry Louie has a series of photographs in and around the great Djenne mosque in Mali Here the building forms a brooding backdrop to his exploration of the people who live and work around the mosque. Again, his use of black and white reinforces each photographs punctum by contrasting light figure or feature, such as the white of a young child's eyes

Tuesday, 15 December 2009

Immobile...

There is something about a bad back that from time to time you freeze - immobile in fact. This has happened to me on numerous occasions - quite often when I was at work - which more than once caused significant problems. However, that is in the past so all have to do is rest for a day or so and then try to slowly exercise my back so that the muscles relax and let me move again. Happily as I write this my back is recovering but yesterday was really frustrating. Most of the day I was immobile when what I wanted to do was get out and do something - anything but be stuck inside and I suspect I looked a little like our friend above. Lets hope the progress continues and by the weekend I can again get out and make some photographs.


Tuesday, 7 July 2009

Bad backs and insects...


Wicken Fen! What a wonderful nature reserve this is. You have access to acres of fenland and all the fauna and flora that goes with this. Quite a few of which seem to want to have a bit of you as well. So why bad backs? Well I have been nursing a sore back ever since I came back from Pembrokeshire. I thought it had cleared up and so went off to Wicken with renewed vigour. I could be found bending over, squatting and lying flat on the ground (perhaps the last was the only dignified position!). The upshot of this is that I have a recurrence of back acre. It is something I have had to learn to live with over the years but it does cramp your style. Hopefully this will clear up for the weekend when I'm off to Northumbria for a week. If it doesn't I will have to rethink what camera kit I take with me onto the Farne Islands.

So back to Wicken - why so wonderful? Well first off it is flat. I know this is stating the obvious but it does make getting around a whole lot easier - especially with a bad back and load of camera gear. The wildlife is varied but perhaps the stars are the cuckoo and the dragonfly. However, the cuckoo had already left by the time I visited - maybe next year. The dragonflies are a different matter. You have to get your eye in as these things zip around at an amazing speed. The best advice I would give is to find a small patch of water and see what comes by - however, it should be noted I am no expert on these matters and I am sure there may be better ways.

If you are interested in the smaller insects then you need to examine reeds and sedges a little close. However, the insect world is so abundant you are not likely to be disappointed.

I hope to visit the reserve more often over the next few months. If you want to see the photographs I made then click here.