Welcome to the first time that I’m hosting Monochrome Madness. For more information on the challenge, please visit Leanne’s site. The theme I’ve picked for this week is Night-time (or possibly, nighttime, or night time, depending on your dictionary of choice). Night-time photos can be … Continue reading Night-time in Black and White and more Black
Last photo on the SD-card in my mobile phone (taken by my grandson): a tree trunk fire dying down. Last photo on the SD-card in my camera: The lindwyrm guarding the entrance to the town of Lindenfels, home of the German Dragon Museum. Last on … Continue reading Fiery Endings
Yesterday was night of the Lärmfeuer – around the Odenwald bonfires are lit to commemorate a method of communication of old. It is said that villages warned each other of comming danger by lighting fires on hilltops – you’ve seen Lord of the Rings and … Continue reading We Warned Them!
This photo was taken at the signal fire event in Hilsenhain im Odenwald. The children of the village set the huge pile of wood alight.
I would like to continue a discussion about the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), the European law that came into existence in 2016. Are we allowed to take a photo of this? Obviously, this is a European Union discussion because it is really about the law. But if you have an input with a general point of view, please feel free to voice your opinion. I know that in the US it is usually said that there can be no expectation of privacy in public places (although this is not as clear-cut as one is often led to believe).
I am today more wary to take pictures of strangers, particularly children. The regulations make little distinction between taking the picture and publishing it. But in this case I think it is allowed as it was a public event, a performance if you will. However, I did single out this particular boy in this shot. I picked the shot where his face was least visible though, because I’m not completely sure about the actual law.
I tried to light a fire. I really tried. I failed. The wood was wet. My neighbours objected. The local by-laws wouldn’t allow it. And then there were children. Lighting a fire. Much better at it than I ever could be. No “light a fire” … Continue reading I failed.
All the photos used in this collage are from a Lärmfeuer night in the Odenwald this March. Before there were phones or even telegraphs large fires were used to send warnings over long distances. These days fires are lit in the Odenwald in early spring … Continue reading Alarm!
Saturday was Lärmfeuer Night in the Odenwald. High wood piles were erected and set alight at sunset. In the olden days these flaming beacons signified danger, nowadays lighting them is cause for a small celebration. I’m a Fan of …
If you read Lord of the Rings or seen the movie triology you might remember how the city of Gondor asked for help from the Riders of Rohan – they lit beacons on a chain of hills between Minas Tirith and the plains of Rohan. … Continue reading The Beacons Are Lit