5 Frames of Snowstorms and Coyotes

By Sneakerzoom

Scarborough, Ontario. January 25th, 2026. Minus 20 Celsius. It’s a blurry, flurry, bitterly cold day. There’s a snowstorm raging, but it’s calm inside. Suddenly, the sound of a cup of tea being set back on the table with more conviction than appropriate for a Sunday afternoon. “Let’s go out for a walk!”, she says.

Potted shrub covered in snow
Brrrr

Twenty minutes later, I find myself knee-deep in perfectly crunchy, blindingly white snow while my face is being scrubbed with ice-cold snowflakes. We passed a sign stating we’re walking into a ‘Coyote Hotspot’ area. Who knew… a coyote invasion at the end of our street. Let’s hope the mongrels like snow as much as I do and are wisely staying home huddling around a nice warm wood-stove fire.

Coyote Hotspot sign

Snap back to reality and of course there are no coyotes, no cozy wood fire, and certainly no nice walk in the park. This is pretty much my definition of ‘crap’. Thank goodness I brought a camera build just for this (crap, eh)! I’d like to refer to this great post by YEER31 right here on this website – a post that partly convinced me to do some more research and venture out to acquire this camera. Thankfully, eBay came through and since about a year or so I’m a very happy owner of a mint ‘Guv’ (Konica Genba Kontaku 28WB). Which I hardly ever use – because it’s not often required to bring such a workhorse to the scene, but today was one of those days.

The park behind our house covered in snow
Winter landscapes

While mobilizing for the trek into the great white outdoors, I had grabbed a 2022 roll of ‘Shanghai Light 400 ISO’ film from my expired film stash. I don’t have great memories of using Shanghai films; especially their old GP3 has disappointed me in th past. But this one came in quite a nice box, so I gave the Shanghai Jian Cheng Technology Co. another try. Aesthetics easily convince me, you see. The results were…okay – for a cheap film in a point-and-shoot camera.

Baseball diamond covered in snow Neighbours digging themselves out of the snow

The walk itself…was largely forgettable. It reminded me that my Gen X bones require more regular workouts to do this kind of thing ‘for fun’ without over-exerting myself. The snow was knee-deep and higher at times. The wind was punishing. But the camera worked like it should: silently, fast, and without a hitch even while covered in snow…though I suspect it had some trouble focussing with the amount of snow blowing around it. I yet have to find a better way to make use of its wide lens, but for unplanned, to-heck-with-the-weather outings, you just can’t go wrong.

Thanks for reading!

…just get closer on sneakerzoom.ca & Mastodon.

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About The Author

By Sneakerzoom
Very casual (read: lazy) picture taker from Scarborough, Ontario. Particularly fond of expired film and cheap cameras.
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Comments

Chuck on 5 Frames of Snowstorms and Coyotes

Comment posted: 10/03/2026

Thanks for your snow-day album. Sure looks like right here, Houghton Michigan, north of most Canadians and the south-east shore of Lake Superior. (Summers are very pretty here!)
Chuck
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sneakerzoom replied:

Comment posted: 10/03/2026

Thanks for your comment, Chuck! I've never been to north Michigan, perhaps I should some day. This snow storm was only the precurser of things to come...as since then we've had unprecedented levels of snow here. Toronto tends not to get this much (3-5 feet) because of the 'lake effect'...and most snow gets dumped either in Buffalo or north of Toronto. And I don't like snow much ;)

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Martin Siegel on 5 Frames of Snowstorms and Coyotes

Comment posted: 10/03/2026

This really is a lot of snow! Glad we hadn't that much here. Fine article, thanks for sharing.
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sneakerzoom replied:

Comment posted: 10/03/2026

Thanks for reading, Martin!

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Gary Smith on 5 Frames of Snowstorms and Coyotes

Comment posted: 10/03/2026

Haven't seen that much snow since I lived in Michigan. Thanks for reminding me that metro-Portland, OR isn't so bad (weatherwise). Walking through snow above my boot tops is something I don't miss.

Thanks for the wintery walkabout.
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sneakerzoom replied:

Comment posted: 10/03/2026

Thanks for your comment, Gary! Yeah, I'm not much of a winter person - especially snow. Two weekends ago I was in an area north of Toronto where it was even worse. I am 6'4" and I couldn't see over the snow banks. Ugh. A little story about that is in the works...

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Bob Janes on 5 Frames of Snowstorms and Coyotes

Comment posted: 10/03/2026

I need to break mine out - I'm amazed at how close the rear element of the lens is to the filmplane!
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sneakerzoom replied:

Comment posted: 10/03/2026

Hi Bob, thanks for reading. It's a nifty little and compact camera. It's ease of use and construction fills me with confidence I normally don't have as replacing even a point-and-shoot these days is a tear-jerking exercise. I hope to use it more this spring/summer.

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Jeffery Luhn on 5 Frames of Snowstorms and Coyotes

Comment posted: 11/03/2026

You did a good job capturing the cold! I'm curious if that camera is designed as an all weather camera. I'll check it out. The shots were nice. We had a record snowstorm in February here in the Sierra Nevada mountains. 51 inches in three days. Loss of power for a week and longer for people at higher elevations because of so many tree falls. But we are wimps compared to your sub-zero temps! Even with all the snow, it never got below 20F. It does make me wonder where the coyotes go. We have LOTS OF COYOTES here. Cougars and bears too.
Jeffery Luhn
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sneakerzoom replied:

Comment posted: 11/03/2026

Thanks, Jeffery! As far as I know, this camera (in a few variations and with a few different lenses) was made as a 'construction foreman' camera, and supposed to be able to deal with some rain, some sand/mud, and some knocking about. On top of that it's stealthily silent. Sounds like a winning combination to me, IF you can find one for a decent price as, just like every single thing on this planet these days, they're woefully expensive now. The Sierra Nevada sound like a superbly picturesque area to me. Toronto, and the former city of Scarborough next to it (where I live), is about as north as Paris, France, and with the lake below it it never gets super cold nor do we get tons of snow - with some exceptions like this year (we had a brief -22F stint this winter and more snow than Ottawa usually gets). But with all the pockets of nature within the Greater Toronto Area and the large bands of nature around it (Kawarthas to the north-east, Rogue Park, etc.), wildlife finds a way. Bears I have not seen here, but deer, coyotes, even snakes...all 'check'. Wolves and bears stay further north...as long as the seasons behave. No food means they're coming out for it and they've been seen as close-by as Aurora, 19 miles north from here. Fun fact: the summers here can get brutally humid and hot...in my opinion at least. My backyard view is south-south west and even though that makes for some beautiful sunsets it also means trying to keep your beer cold at 104F.

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