kirk tuck has retired

Kirk Tuck has (mostly) retired, and in the process has taken down his old Visual Science Lab blog. I’ve know of Kirk for a good long time, going back to when I was transitioning to Olympus four thirds and then into micro four thirds. It was Kirk’s blog that I enjoyed reading as he was/still is kinda a working professional photographer. He didn’t just talk about hardware, he talked about how to be a photographer by using said hardware. Over the years he touched every major manufacturer, and wasn’t shy about strengths and weaknesses about everything that came his way.

If you want to still follow Kirk you can read his new blog over on https://groundzeroart.blogspot.com .

Update

kirk tuck has left the building, again

counting down the days

In exactly one week I’m having knee surgery on my left knee, in which the partial replacement I received back in 2012 will be replaced with a full replacement. This makes the second knee replacement with this surgeon; he performed a full replacement on my right back in 2016, and it’s been fine ever since. The right knee was an out patient procedure, where I went in early morning and was back home by mid-afternoon. My wife drove me home. After a period of recuperation and physical therapy I’ve been fine ever since. Not so much the left knee.

In any event the left partial will get replaced and I’ll find out if the left will go as well as the right.

If you ask me what my attitude is right now, I’d say a combination of apprehension and fatalism. I’ve had more examinations and pictures made in the past four weeks than I’ve had in as many years, so that everyone concerned has all necessary and up-to-date medical information about me. That’s a good thing.

And I’ll be going back to the same surgery center I was in back in 2016. That, too, is a very good thing. If either the doctor or the center weren’t up to scratch then they wouldn’t be around.

The length of time between procedures is also comforting if for no other reason that major advancements in joint replacement have been ongoing. Unless something unknown should occur, I expect this left replacement to be my final replacement.

But I’m still nervous.