I’m in another one of my funky, can’t figure out how to do stuff, phases. You know how it is (or maybe you don’t), you’re bee-bopping along doing stuff you’ve always done and suddenly something doesn’t click.
Sometimes literally.

Earlier this month I questioned whether I should print my blog, as a way to preserve it. Several of you had ideas, and others of you had wondered about their own blogs, so were following along.
Last week I wandered around the PixxiBook site, (thanks Linda!) a company that prints blogs into hard covered books with a really easy interface. They have options of choosing which posts you want to print, or you can choose a specific time period.

My issue is, and always will be, the size of my blog. I’ve been writing here since 2006, with over 3,300 posts. Still I was curious.
So, after a few days of thought, I put my URL into their ‘go ahead and try it’ box and it started to go to work. Pretty soon I could preview the results, and I enjoyed very much reading the first couple years of posts in the format the printed version would appear.

Back then I had no images, and the posts were shorter than my ramblings of today. It was fun to reread all about being in grad school as an older student.
Meanwhile the PixxiBook machine was still churning. When I finally backed out of the site several minutes later it had made it through 30% of my blog, indicated there would be 40+ books and the cost was edging up over $4,000.

I smiled, because obviously there’s no way I can ever afford to put my entire blog into hard covered books. It would be bigger than an encyclopedia set! But I will print a few years worth, perhaps those early days in school. And there is potential to just pull the Katie posts out and put them in one book, though I think that will take some work on my part.

Then, later in the week, I was working on a Christmas present, putting photos from a summer adventure into a photo book for someone and I was struggling!
Now, I’ve one projects like this a hundred times, but this time things felt different. I couldn’t find the book template I wanted to use, I couldn’t find the save button, though I remembered that while making my Penny 2025 calendar the system had saved on it’s own, so maybe that was it, I couldn’t get the photos imported…nothing was working the way I remembered it should work.
I spent a couple hours and got only a quarter of the book built when I had to stop for the day.

And, you guessed it, when I went back the next day nothing I had done had been saved. And I struggled all over again finding the pieces I needed to build the book. In the end I did the best I could and the book is designed and ordered and hopefully soon on it’s way to it’s forever home. But geeze.

AND during all this my Lightroom photo editing system decided I’d run out of storage. I have both Lightroom and Lightroom Classic, which I pay a subscription for.
I’d always meant to use Lightroom Classic, because I don’t really want my photos to be stored by someone else in a cloud. But I accidently started with the cloud version, and I never wanted to stop and learn Lightroom Classic.

Franky, when I took the time to go explore Classic it seemed less intuitive and I couldn’t even figure out how to import a photo to it, so I stuck with the Cloud. But now my cloud is full and I really don’t want to pay more, especially with Classic sitting right there on my laptop. So I forced myself to figure it out.

And I’m slowly, very, very slowly, moving that way. I have edited the photos you see on this post using Classic. I’m not entirely happy.
And, speaking of not being happy, I have a new camera and I don’t have it all set up the way I want it yet. Because of course the new camera isn’t exactly like the old camera, otherwise, what would make it new.
Right?

So as I’m trying to take photos of this hawk that was hanging out on my deck and around my birdfeeders, terrorizing my little birds, I couldn’t get it to focus. That’s always been my problem with the Nikon Z series.

There’s a back of the camera focus button which I like to use v.s. using the shutter focus. I thought I had programed the camera to use the back button option, but while taking these photos, I’d focus using the back button, and when I actually pressed the shutter to get the shot it would REFOCUS and because there were so many branches it would focus on those instead of the bird.
Big sigh.
Lucky for me the hawk was concentrating on the little birds trapped in a briar bush below the deck and not me. He (or she) stood still for long periods of time. I finally just put the camera into manual focus and tried that way.

I still have to fix the focus problem, but that means figuring out more stuff. And I’m so tired of trying to figure stuff out these days. I might just go take a nap instead.
Here’s hoping you are having a much more productive and less frustrating month than I am!

December 21, 2024 at 12:57 pm
Ahhh yes, those memory lapses, those ‘what was instinctive or intuitive yesterday, completely gone today’ things – the cause of some of life’s more dramatic moments. That’s right in line with ‘I put it somewhere that seemed right and easy to remember’ times. I guess life reaches the point where those become the adventures. Sigh.
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December 23, 2024 at 9:07 am
I’ve been putting things in safe places for years. Someday I hope I find them all again. I think my biggest complaint is the software folks feeling like they need to change things that were working just fine the way they were.
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December 23, 2024 at 9:07 am
I’ve been putting things in safe places for years. Someday I hope I find them all again. I think my biggest complaint is the software folks feeling like they need to change things that were working just fine the way they were.
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December 23, 2024 at 1:33 pm
Oh, yes, the moments when I open the MacBook to discover things are not what they used to be.
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December 21, 2024 at 12:58 pm
Your pictures look great to me – I don’t see the focus problems. *I forgot to say this in my previous comment. Sigh.
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December 23, 2024 at 9:08 am
LOL..thank you!
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December 21, 2024 at 2:03 pm
🎼Mama said there’d be days like this, there’d be days like this my mama said! 🎶
And that said, your photos are delightful and how lucky for you that hawk stuck around!!
Learning new stuff when you are not really in the mood to, is not conducive to learning!!
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December 23, 2024 at 9:09 am
I have found, as I age, that I am less and less in the mood to learn new things.
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December 23, 2024 at 10:25 am
I hear ya. Good for the grey matter, though 😉
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December 21, 2024 at 2:40 pm
I think your photos are great. Your photos are ALWAYS great, but I cannot figure out the second photo (not counting your header photo). Is the hawk’s head up or down? This hawk really gave you a run for it with his many poses.
Days like this, I just curl up with one of the cats and don’t even try to think about it. Yes, I think it is called ‘denial.’ But I call it ‘just taking a little break.’ Good luck, Dawn. Penny might need a walk, instead…
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December 23, 2024 at 9:11 am
In that photo you are looking at the hawk from behind, and he’s getting ready to take off, so those are his wings getting ready to flap.
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December 21, 2024 at 2:56 pm
40+ books? Yikes! I have written a lot, but I doubt it would fit 40+ books! But, then, maybe it would…
New programs and new cameras are never fun. Hope you get them figured out and have fun with it 🙂
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December 23, 2024 at 9:15 am
I don’t know how many pages each book is. And I stopped it when it was only 30% through…so who knows what the total would be. Way more money than I want to spend, for sure.
PS: I’m typing this on a new laptop. It has Microsoft 11 on it. Joy joy.
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December 23, 2024 at 9:57 am
Have fun with the new laptop… I have Windows 11 on one computer, but have been turning it down on the others.
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December 21, 2024 at 5:44 pm
Wow – 40 + books is a lot Dawn. I think my blog was 17 books when I tried it last year after reading Dave’s blog post. Like you, my earliest posts were all writing, no pictures and at that time my style was one paragraph-long posts and one-word titles in the very beginning. But with so many photos now, it is costly.
I like your photos of the Cooper’s Hawk – he sure was determined to get a meal. I hate those hawks. We have them at the Park which is bad enough, plus I don’t live in a rural neighborhood, but there is one that cruises the neighborhood looking for squirrels. A woman down the street feeds them and I’m sure it finds success there. I used to feed five squirrels at my house until 2020, when they all disappeared. I asked my neighbor if he’d seen my little buddies and he said “the Cooper’s Hawk sits in the tree across the street and swoops down for them.” (Well, ya might have mentioned that little fact to me and I’d have not made them sitting ducks.). When the hawk does a fly over, all the birds scatter to the wind and the Jays are the town crier until it is gone. I still shoot on automatic – one day I’ll learn how to use my Canon Rebel T6 on manual.
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December 23, 2024 at 9:17 am
I’m sure there are other programs that might be less money. But this one sure has an easy interface! And I like the idea of hard cover books. I’ll probably order 1 or 2 after the new year and see.
The hawk hangs around way too much. He’s pretty (or she?) but I don’t want to witness him getting anything.
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December 23, 2024 at 9:58 pm
I think it is good that you can cull specific portions of your blog to print out … that’s a great idea and maybe because they had a blog, they “get” that you may not want to print out the entire blog.
…
In the Metroparks Photographers FB site a few photographers have shown different hawks with a vole or even a squirrel. I don’t think it’s necessary to show that to be honest … okay, the Heron/Egret with its fish or a frog, but I don’t want to see that
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December 21, 2024 at 6:52 pm
Sometimes things are hard because we’re subconsciously distracted by important stuff. Give yourself all the credit you deserve for trying, but if you need to set it aside for a while, so be it.
$4000!? Wow!
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December 23, 2024 at 9:17 am
Yep, and now I’m in the middle of getting used to a new laptop, with Microsoft 11 on it. 😦
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December 21, 2024 at 6:52 pm
Sometimes things are hard because we’re subconsciously distracted by important stuff. Give yourself all the credit you deserve for trying, but if you need to set it aside for a while, so be it.
$4000!? Wow!
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December 22, 2024 at 6:37 am
I do like the idea of preserving the blog. But not the cost. And I like your sweet little bird.wishing you all the best, Ruth in Pittsburgh
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December 23, 2024 at 9:18 am
Thank you Ruth! Yes, I shouldn’t have let this blog get so big!
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December 22, 2024 at 11:03 am
You do realize Mercury was in retrograde from the end of November through mid-December, right?? And that retrograde kind of extends a bit earlier as well as a bit later than those dates, right? Well, shucks, no wonder you were having trouble!! I bet you’ll find you’re more able to deal with stuff like this after the first of the year … and before the next retrograde! (Still, I think your photos are wonderful, and I’m just a bit pea-green over your having a Nikon!)
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December 23, 2024 at 9:29 am
When we were shopping for a new camera (I had an old Cannon) we were looking at Sony and Nikon. Nikon seemed to be a bit more weather resistant and because I’m often out in all kinds of weather we went that way.
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December 23, 2024 at 10:51 am
I borrowed a Nikon for photography class back in the day, and I loved it!
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December 22, 2024 at 1:42 pm
Hi, Dawn –
I can relate 100%.
I’ve been closely following your posts on how to print/preserve your blog posts because that question has been at the back of my mind for quite some time now. But then, I quietly let it all lie in the “too hard basket”.
I’ve only been posting since January 2016 but still…that’s a lot of posts with more and more (and more) photos every year. ❤
Wishing you a warm and happy holiday season and a wonderful new year ahead.
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December 23, 2024 at 9:30 am
I have a huge pile of “too hard” stuff that I wish I could figure out but I don’t want to figure it out myself.
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December 22, 2024 at 2:12 pm
Hi Dawn, I know it will be hard to hand pick the blog posts and photos that you would like to save in print. I would have no clue even how to begin this process. Good luck – be sure to give yourself grace – this is a new “program” to learn and also identify its quirks.
I especially love the last photo of the snacking goldfinch (is that his tongue I see?!); the bokeh is gorgeous. 💕
Sending wishes for a very Merry Christmas and a happy, healthy New Year!! I bet that Penny has been a good girl and will find many gifts under the tree especially for her. 🎄🎁
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December 25, 2024 at 7:35 am
I’m hoping I can just cut and past the individual URLs into something on their site. We’ll see.
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December 23, 2024 at 9:37 am
I hope there are instructions for how to pick out individual blog posts to include in the book. Somewhere in there I read that that was an option.
We didn’t put up a tree this year, and Penny doesn’t know any better. She hasn’t seen a Christmas tree yet. Maybe next year.
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December 23, 2024 at 10:28 pm
I’m a retired Microsoft Systems Engineer (in all 7 subjects). I retired about 11 years ago and now much of my knowledge is out of date. I still know some stuff, but it has changed so much and, to my mind, changed so fast. I usually figure things out, but I’ve been known to threaten my computer with a very large hammer! Oddly, that sometimes works. 🙂
For my WordPress blog, I find all the free apps I can to run it, so I can switch when needed and it doesn’t cost anything to switch. Years ago, I bought two 1TB remote solid-state harddrives and keep all my photos and a backup of my blog on both of them. If the cloud (it’s just a web server accessed on the internet) gets hacked or photos/docs there get deleted, then I have my stuff safe and sound. When I go camping, I take one of the harddrives with me, the other stays home. There are so many options, all of them are good for different reasons. The bird photos are wonderful, Dawn. I always love those! 🙂
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December 24, 2024 at 6:02 pm
A very large hammer seems a distinct possibility. I never thought about backing up the blog on a harddrive. Hmmmm…that would probably take forever too, with 3300 posts….but maybe in parts. I know it takes forever for me to move pictures to the harddrive as backup.
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December 24, 2024 at 2:35 pm
I seriously think it’s our age. I get overwhelmed by certain things more easily now than I ever did before. I also agree that your photos are just great!!!! No lapses there!
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December 24, 2024 at 6:03 pm
Sometimes I think I am just too old to do new stuff. Even working the TV is now hard to do. I can still go to the library and check a book out though! But I haven’t learned how to do that on my kindle. Sigh.
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December 27, 2024 at 8:42 am
I just spent some time reading through your posts that you’ve posted since I was last reading blogs. I enjoyed reading your thoughts and admiring your photos. You’ve really built quite the community here. You have always had, and still do have, wonderful bird photos and this post is no exception. I hope you’re enjoying learning about your camera. I purchased my new mirrorless about a year ago and I am still learning. I wish I had more opportunities to get out with it. I highly recommend YouTube for help with finding settings and learning how some of the pro’s out there set things up.
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January 8, 2025 at 6:36 am
These captures are beyond fabulous Dawn!! Share with me how you go about turning posts into a book.. Sounds interesting.
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January 8, 2025 at 2:51 pm
So far all I’ve explored is PixxiBook…and not real thoroughly, though I liked what I saw, other than the cost. I might try them on a couple books, from the very beginning of the blog.
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January 8, 2025 at 6:46 pm
thanks Dawn
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