Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Ducklings and Slides


I spent most of yesterday morning reading about the secret lives of sunflowers -- which honestly aren't all that interesting. I'm in a portion of the book focused on their hybridization and modification as an agricultural crop, and I'm less personally concerned about sunflowers agriculturally than aesthetically. There were some interesting factoids -- for example, the International Sunflower Association bestows an award named for Soviet scientist V.S. Pustovoit, who is apparently considered the granddaddy of modern sunflower breeding. Probably too obscure to turn up on a pub quiz, but still, who knew?! Anyway, I've churned through all that now and I think I have just one more chapter to go.

After a simple lunch I decided to take a couple of bags of stuff to the local charity shop, and then head out for a long walk. I grabbed my stepmother's camera and walked down to St. John's Wood, where I picked up the Regent's Canal at Lisson Grove.

The canal in that area is lined with narrow boats that, as far as I can tell, are more or less permanently moored. The towpath is lined with potted plants, cafe tables, benches and other furnishings that show it functions as a patio for those living on the boats.


It's a beautiful little secret gem of an area, where I haven't walked in years. Past the boat moorings, the canal passes beneath some railroad tracks and a major road before running through Regent's Park, past some stately mansions with wide, sloping lawns running down to the water.


From there it connects to the boat basin where the floating Chinese restaurant is anchored, and then makes a sharp turn eastward toward Camden Market.


I passed this mother duck with 13 tiny ducklings (!) trailing behind her. I'm impressed by how well they keep up with Mom. As I began making this video, a mob of European high-school students descended some stairs from the street above onto the towpath, which is why I got jostled and why it's so noisy. They were all exclaiming over the ducks.


Here's the scene near Camden Market. You can see all the kids on the towpath ahead of me. I saw a surprising number of kids out and about yesterday. Don't people have school? This coming Monday is a bank holiday, but as far as I know yesterday was a regular old school day.

At Camden Market I went to check out the booth of the dealer who sold me Joan Tubbs' photo slides a couple of summers ago. Sure enough, he had another box of slides, and many of them seem to be more of Joan's work. I knew I didn't have them all -- in fact, I got a note on Flickr last July from a university art student who also bought some of Tubbs' slides in Camden, so I knew there were more out there. Anyway, the guy sold me the whole box for £20. He said he has tens of thousands of slides from multiple sources and if I come back next week he'll have more available. I may well do that, because I am insane.


I brought them all home (stopping along the way in Belsize Park for coffee, because by then my feet were complaining). I've only been through about a quarter of them, but I've already found some photo gems so I will have another post of rescued slides coming up soon -- after I get everything sorted. I'm going to look into getting some equipment to scan them myself. The big expense is always the scanning, not the actual slides, so if I can avoid that it will be worth it.

Ironic that I brought home this big bag of slides after taking two boxes to a charity shop. Stuff out, stuff in. That's the way of life, right? At least slides are compact and easy to store.

Seedling update: One zinnia down, courtesy of a guilty-looking slug, found beneath an adjacent rock. Otherwise, everything is still hanging in there, and we even got a smattering of rain last night and this morning!

65 comments:

  1. Isn't it great to see a Mama Duck with her babies? Those puffs of fluff are adorable. That looks like a great place to walk and hang out. All kids should be in school six days a week from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. so they don't bother us!

    Love,
    Janie

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    1. It's a beautiful area for walking. And I agree about the kids!

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  2. The boats you saw and photographed at Lisson Grove are on permanent paid for moorings. Any boats you see tied up on the towpath side will almost certainly not be paying to stop there and should move on within a couple of weeks.

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    1. Thanks for the info! I assumed they were permanent moorings.

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  3. We had dark clouds and that's all last night, this morning is dull.....

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  4. The path next to the narrow boats looks horribly messy. I would want to push all the rubbish into the canal, or to chuck it onto the respective boats at least. The ducklings are lovely. Maybe you should offer the market man fifty quid for all his slides. We walked part of a London canal, somewhere near Paddington Station. It was very pleasant.

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    1. I like that path and would chase you with a stick if I lived there and you pushed any of my stuff into the canal.

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    2. Ha! I quite like the path -- I think it's colorful and cozy. I'd join River with a second stick!

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  5. Whenever I see that sign, "Cyclists Dismount" I always think it should read "Lovers Dismount". After all you don't want to be walking over such people when simply taking a side path. As for that pile of slides - I thought you said you had retired! That's a lot of work there old chap.

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  6. Years ago we found a negative album from c.1920 which had belonged to my husband's grandmother in our family house. Eventually, this led us to buy a good scanner (Epson Perfection V700 Photo) which can scan both negatives and slides as well as the usual stuff. We have had enormous pleasure from being able to access and digitize old photos. Consider giving yourself a retirement present!

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    1. Thanks for the scanner tip! We actually have a scanner but it doesn't do negatives or slides. I think I have another solution. (See subsequent post!)

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  7. That is a LOT of slides, if you disappear for days we will know why!

    Ducks are terrible mothers, they drag their babies all over the place and many don't survive, which is sad - maybe that's why they hatch so many to start with.

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    1. Yeah, I'm sure they have so many ducklings for a reason. On David Attenborough's most recent show, about British gardens, a duck had nine ducklings and ALL of them survived! So it does happen!

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  8. For many years I had a flatbed scanner with a special attachment for scanning slides. I ran thousands of slides through it too. But when I upgraded to my current computer, it no longer had drivers to support the scanner and so I had to get another scanner. I got one without the ability to scan slides and hope I don’t ever need to scan more of them.

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    1. And I hope I don't need to buy a second scanner! Ugh

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  9. The moored boats remind me of various crime/detective/mystery series I have watched over the years, set in London and other places in the UK with such permanently moored dwellings. Do you know The Chelsea Detective?

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    1. Great show which I am watching now, into season two already, I think there are four seasons?

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    2. Not sure - I know I have watched three... or was it four? Sorry, my mind is a sieve!

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    3. I haven't watched that show! I'll try to remember to check it out!

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  10. Oh Steve! 'Don't kids have school?' Spoken like a retiree.

    You know, I took a suitcase of old photos to a library in the town that seemed to belong to people from the town. I don"/ know why it never occurred to me to take photographs of some of them.

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    1. I know, I do sound like an old man. I hope the library is able to use and/or archive all those old photos!

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  11. The Mama duck hardly looks behind to make sure her ducklings are keeping up! I like the colorful reflection waving in the water.

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    1. I'm amazed how fast some of those ducklings can move!

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  12. Wow ... that is a lot of slides, scanning them should keep you out of mischief for a while. I love the canal towpaths, especially ones with the occupiers 'patio' being all set out for use. Unfortunately, along our stretch of canal it is all visitor moorings so there's very little in the way of tables, chairs and washing drying on makeshift lines.

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    1. This is an unusual area. Most of the canal through the city has only temporary moorings, I think.

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  13. Slides !! Hours And Hours !! Way Flipping Cool - Looking Forward To Seeing Whats On Them And Please Try Your Best To Add The Dates - And Good On Ya For Walking The Long Way Home - Yes To Retirement

    Keep Smiling ,
    Cheers

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    1. Yeah, I will definitely include any dates and accompanying info when I post the slides!

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  14. Make way for ducklings! I love that little film. Mothers of all types can be pretty amazing, can't they?
    Excellent colors in your photos today. That blue sky looks just about like ours does now.
    Enjoy your slides! I can see now that you are going to have no trouble filling your days.

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  15. We had a thunderstorm this morning! Most welcome (and annoying to drive through). I love that you rescue slides - can't wait to see what gems you found!

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    1. Some of them are amazing, most of them are terrible. LOL

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  16. I, too, was thinking stuff out, stuff in, but that's how life works.
    I love the walk along the towpath and the water; eclectic and peaceful.

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  17. I wanted to live on a houseboat at one time though I didn't envision it being elbow to asshole. I'm surprised they are parked head in rather than longwise. Is there a dock between each houseboat or maybe every two? It's very cute along the towpath there. I wonder if it gets much traffic from non-residents.

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    1. I didn't notice if they all have docks but certainly some do. The canal is unusually wide at that point, which allows for the nose-in "parking."

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  18. I loved watching those tiny ducklings rushing to keep up with mom. What a lovely walk with the possible exception of the crowds of noisy young people. On one of my many trips to London, I stayed at a nice hotel in Belsize Park. That basket full of slides is a sight to see.

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  19. What a bundle of possibilities! I have a light table for looking at slides , of course it is in storage. My Dad switched to slides when i was a wee girl , They got lost in my brother's wife's hoard never to surface again. Had they been prints they would have survived in an album- there go childhood photos...

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    1. Also that is the BEST walk! What is that stone casltey looking building? I don't remember it.

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    2. A light table would be fantastic -- I need to come up with a good, even light source for when I scan the slides. The "Pirate Castle" is a place to rent canoes and kayaks for use on the canal.

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  20. It amuses me to see how ducklings almost skate along the water. I wonder how many will survive?

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    1. Maybe all of them! I think they're in a pretty safe environment on the canal, except maybe for the occasional cat or urban fox.

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  21. What a beautiful area, alongside those moored houseboats. Those ducklings are so sweet, the ones around here should be hatched soon. Looks like a lovely day.

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    1. It was an amazing day! I'm surprised ducks even try to have ducklings in your cold part of the world. Seems like they'd fly south, have them there, and then fly back north again.

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  22. I was quite surprised that the slides were in a bag! Yes get a proper scanner.

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  23. The nice weather makes for a perfect walk. River views and life are always of interest. The ducks are adorable. The streets are busy. Did most people take a day off to enjoy the day?
    The new slides will be fun to work with and having your own scanner sounds like a great idea.

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    1. I don't know why so many people were out and about! I was surprised!

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  24. You're not insane. You are retired. Just sayin' . . . And, I expect to see some pretty fabulous sunflowers on your blog in another few months! One of the things I didn't do in London and would like to is take a boat ride down the canal from Camden to Little Italy. Yeah, I know. Touristy. But I'd love to see it that way!

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    1. I've never taken a boat on the canal either, and I should! I've done it on the Thames and that was pretty terrific.

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  25. Aww the ducklings are so cute and they kept up so well.

    All the best Jan

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    1. They're full of energy for such tiny little things!

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  26. I've got to share you video with my "birder" grandson. He'll love it, just as I did!

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  27. I am always amazed by ducks and ducklings and their natural behaviors. I would have enjoyed it more if all those kids would have shut up. Oh, sorry. I also enjoy your rescued slides.

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    1. Ha! Well, I had the same reaction to the kids, but at least they were excited about the ducks.

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  28. I loved that boat village although I wouldn't personally enjoy living on a boat. :) More slides to look forward to--yay! What does Dave think?

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    1. Living on a boat seems like it would be very...damp. Doesn't it?

      Dave doesn't mind the slides because they don't take up much room!

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  29. Perhaps the kids were on a school excursion? I imagine Mama duck slowed a little, but I can still see the ducklings frantically paddling to keep up. The only slides I own are from my wedding. I have the same pictures in an album, so I don't need or want the slides, but none of my kids want them either. If I get to be 80 I will wrap the bundle in foil and bake them in the oven and then throw them out.

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    1. Could be that the big group was on a school trip from Europe, but I saw lots of individual kids out with their parents, too. Family vacations, maybe? Slides often last better than prints, and the picture resolution is very good, so re-think your baking!

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  30. P.S. I am currently watching a series titled "The Chelsea Detective" and he lives on a boat similar to those pictured here.

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    1. I saw Meike's note about that above -- I'll have to check out that show!

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