Mike Cirba,
I have explained many times I have never been there and I don't know from where the photo was taken. Nonetheless Bryan and Jim repeatedly asked me to provide my thoughts on the matter based on the limited information I have. In such circumstances only a sleaze like you would pull the crap you do above.
And your routine is more than a bit tired. For the umpteenth time, you post a photo as if it makes your point self-evident, when your own evidence may cut against your point more than for it. The slopes in your new post do not match the slopes in the photo.
Maybe you are correct. Maybe if I had been there I would understand. But if that is the case, then a man of so many words as you ought to be able to put into words whatever it is about the photo that you think makes it so evident. Otherwise, this seems nothing but another lame attempt on your part to jump to your conclusion despite the evidence. And as we all know by now, your conclusion is almost always the wrong conclusion.
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Jim,
You said you thought the line I drew was "pretty good" Which line, and "pretty good" in relation to what?
Can you tell me on the photo where this drop from 150 feet down to 90 feet begins and ends? Because I don't see it?
Basically I am trying to determine where you place the edge of the ravine. Perhaps if you told me where in the photo you would place what you have called the Macadam road, I could visualize it better.
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Bryan
So, you would have us believe that Brown and Shelly both got the location of the photo wrong, and the camera man climbed the water tower to tke the picture and ws pointed at a different hole altogether, and that there was actually a water tower there when the course was just being cleared.
Give me a break Bryan. You can believe whatever you want to believe. I am just trying to figure it out and am not married to any particular theory at this point. But so far it seems that your interpretation does not match what I see in the photos. Among other reasons, way too much of the area behind the ridge is visible. I've asked you repeatedly to explain this and various other points, but you haven't yet done so, have you?
As for the captions, Brown and Shelly were no more there when the photo was taken than you or I. They may have had a contemporaneous source for the caption or they may not have. I don't know and neither do you. Besides, I don't see a world of difference between conveniently discarding part of the Brown caption as you do vs. throwing the whole thing out and starting from scratch. There were two equally high areas, the sixth hole and the one by the water tower, and both were about the same elevation.
While you call my assumptions (identified as such) flights of fancy, you seem to be making quite a few of your own. Perhaps you can answer a few questions about them?
- Did Brown and or Shelly have a contemporaneous source for the captions? If so, then how come you are second guessing Brown as to the presence of the 3rd tee in the photo?
- Obviously a bit of the course was "just being cleared" but how do you know the whole course was "just being cleared" at the time the photo was taken? PV was built in stages. Was the entire property cleared or was it cleared in stages? I don't know and I assume you don't either.
- I assume you agree that there was a tower built at some point. If so, when did they build the tower? Do you suppose they had a need for a water tower by the time they started seeding?
-How do you know the photo was taken when the course was just being
- Thank you for posting the log image. Now that you have done so, I trust you can see the difference in perspective from photographing logs from the same level and photographing from above them? If the photo was taken from standing at the level of the logs, then the lens was a wide angle, which you don't seem to think at all.
Don't know if it was the same negative, but while I haven't done an overlay it appears to be the same picture. The second is of such lower quality that it could have been a photocopy.
What kind of camera do you suppose was used? A Kodak Brownie perhaps?
Could be, but I have no way of knowing. The original brownie took a square photo. Very early 1900's it was 2 1/2 by 4 1/2. The photo is the brown book is pretty close to 2 1/2 to 4 1/2, but not quite.
My premise that the field of view was 45 degrees seems tp be wrong. So, I'm going with a narrower field of view looking more up the 4th.
I don't know. Here is a link to a couple of photos taken with a Browning 2A which I looks wider than you are assuming.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/43063706@N02/4418158650/in/set-72157624862754961/lightbox/