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Sleepy Time Pal
Sleepy Time Pal
DebN2003


Photograph Information Photographer's Comments
Challenge: At Rest (Classic Editing)
Camera: Sony Mavica FD-81
Location: Twin Cities MN
Date: Sep 21, 2003
Aperture: NA
ISO: NA
Shutter: NA
Galleries: Candid, Animals
Date Uploaded: Sep 22, 2003

Ok here's the dog shot. You really have to know this critter to understand why this category suits him so well. If he's on a 9 foot couch, he'll take up about 8 1/2 feet. On a queen sized bed he'll only take 3/4 of it. And yet he loves to wedge himself next to one of us on the 5 foot love seat. That's our "Boober dog".

Statistics
Place: 239 out of 288
Avg (all users): 4.0556
Avg (commenters): 4.0000
Avg (participants): 3.8957
Avg (non-participants): 4.2376
Views since voting: 966
Votes: 216
Comments: 9
Favorites: 0


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AuthorThread
07/16/2008 02:58:22 PM
We never could have known that cold February day when we went to doggie jail what a unique dog we'd get. he was about the color,size and shape of a basketball. It was 2/3 fur one third dog. He was happy, feisty and ready to get out of that pen. We took him home in his namesake truck. Thus began a love affair that spanned 12 years.

He was a real beauty in his day. His thick red coat had triple layers when we lived in frigid MN. He was a soft yellow at the bottom.. It was so thick he never got fleas or ticks. But he always got burrs and foxtails when he'd run through the tall grass. He hated grooming but tolerated it.

He was a bolter. He chased cars. He didn't know his own strength. He was overshadowed by a bossy alpha female. He learned to chase a frisbee. His first love was the truck he came home in and he did anything it took to get a ride. He loved McDonald's hamburgers and Taco Bell Tacos. I always wondered how he could eat entirely around the tomatos and leave them sitting on the wrapper.

He was singularly the smartest dog I've ever known. We never did really figure out his origins. The best I could come up with was shepard mixed with akita. This dog, and I'm not exaggerating, understood human language. I could tell him to do things that I never trained him to do and he'd do them.

We hiked the coastal trails from Fort Ord to Big Sur to Fort Funston to Fort Bragg. He went camping in the Sierras. He hiked the mountains in Colorado, New Mexico and the BLM in Nevada. He hated baths but he loved to swim.

When I spent the summer on the big rig so did he. Ranger got to pee in 44 states. He learned to run off lead without running away. He learned to love other dogs and the pats of admiring truckers. He never refused a hand out.

He lived with us in the mine in San Benito county those 2 years. He chased off a mountain lion, chased frisbees daily and helped coax a very old, scared lost dog into our RV so we could contact her grateful owner. He napped in the sun in the winter and under the RV in the summer.

As our fortunes rose and fell he was there to help us through. Ranger accompanied Rick when he entered rehab. The residents helped hide him for 6 months. Everyone loved him. And then the owner discovered him. That was about the time I published a plea for a new home for this loving companion.

Ranger retired on a ranch in Coarsegold. He fell in love with someone who had never had a dog care for them. It was a mutual admiration society from what I hear. He came to love grooming after watching the horses curried. Of course! He wanted to be curried like his friends! He continued his great adventure bonding with a cantankerous horse, going to the swimming hole and fathering an orphan litter of kittens along with the Bernese Mountain dog who was nursing them.

They didn't tell us but his health was steadily declining over the last 6 months. He'd been on medicine for arthritis, that we knew. But they spared us the details. He was taken to the vets on June 16th after not being able to stand up. I wasn't able to say good bye to my four footed friend. I hope his journey was a good one. And I hope he remembers me when I whisper to him again, his secret cheer:

Ranger oodle skippy doodle rah rah rah.
******************
It was never meant to be a serious competitive photo. It's a casual pic of a beloved casual dog. And not bad for a less than 2 MP camera with no lights.
 Comments Made During the Challenge
09/29/2003 11:44:50 AM
THis picture is very similar to one entitled Lazy Dog. If you look at that picture you will see how yours fell short. This is really a bad picture and I gave it a 2. THe focus is offf, I'm not sure what, if anything is in focus. Sometimes the problem with focus is that the focal plane is not where you meant it to be (utofocus choses what it wants to focus on, not what you want). But when nothing is sharp the problem can be camera shake. It is surprisingly hard to hold a camera steady at the shutter speeds that digital cameras allow us to use. A tripod is hgihly recommended, especially in low light sitations like this indoor shot. Read the tutorial on the Rule of thirds - human nature, probably due to the biology of binocular vision, is drawn to the cross of the thirds lines. Notice what you have place at these points: an out of focus over exposed paw, the bit of couch under the dogs chhek, his ear and some fur on his back. Are those the most important visual items? Did you mean to emphasize them? To me, a dog lover, it is the eyes , face, and yes, those big paws, that I want my attention focused on when I look at a picture. I don't want three fourths of the image to be blurry body, and the cute face all the way to the left. maybe if you had cropped of the right side you would have had a better image. try it. Some post processing would have made a world of difference in making the darks truely dark and the lights less blown out. One thing you did right compositionally was that your leading lines, the stripes of the couch, the slant of the eyes and ears DO lead into the dogs face. Try it again, I bet this dog loves to pose like this.
  Photographer found comment helpful.
09/28/2003 02:59:18 PM
i don't think he/she likes how u are disturbing its rest. hehe. this shot feels too much like a snapshot. perhapst a different angle/perspective would have made this more interesting. taken too straight on. a softer light source would also be nice too versus the flash(?) used that flattens all the interesting shadows, etc.
  Photographer found comment helpful.
09/25/2003 05:32:30 PM
a nice snapshot type photo, thanks for sharing
  Photographer found comment helpful.
09/25/2003 12:45:54 PM
I like how one of his eyes is half open! Cute dog! :)
  Photographer found comment helpful.
09/24/2003 04:31:30 PM
I like the detail, good colors.
  Photographer found comment helpful.
09/24/2003 04:01:46 PM
//www.dpchallenge.com/forum.php?action=read&FORUM_THREAD_ID=45881 - this thread (the first post), if read in its entirety, should give you something to think about :)
  Photographer found comment helpful.
09/24/2003 02:18:17 PM
Poor lighting and focus hamper this shot. The face should be in focus.
  Photographer found comment helpful.
09/24/2003 07:45:28 AM
I recommend you to avoid the flash as your only source of litgh
  Photographer found comment helpful.


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