You haven't heard from me in awhile. It's been a whirlwind - first our cat Oliver died after being with us for 12 years (tribute here), then I conducted my first seminar in five years in Plymouth, Massachusetts at the end of April, then the next day we took the motor home on a month-long cross-country trip to California to visit my brothers and the West coast grandkids. Two days after that trip ended my granddaughter's Bat Mitzvah happened in Boston (and my wife did a lot of the baking in those two days!)
I'll share some pictures and some captions. Nothing award winning here or anything... (As usual, click on any image to view larger and sharper.)
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The first stop was at a relative who breeds show cats. There were about 13 of these beautiful cats in their house during our visit. |
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She's ready for dinner now. |
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Wellfield Botanical Gardens in Elkhart, Indiana |
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World's largest truck stop in Iowa. (Whoever made that claim was never in a Buc-EE's) |
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No trip through Iowa would be complete without stopping at a few Amish stores in the Amana colonies. |
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In Pella, Iowa (where the Pella Windows and Doors company is headquartered), we stumbled onto a local parade for their annual Tulip festival. |
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A close-up of one of their floats. What's a Brittish phone booth doing there? |
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No road trip is complete without lilacs. |
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This guy is 91 years old and still makes and sells his woodworking projects. |
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He made a cane with a saw handle. That's an unusual idea. I bought it. :-) |
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Still in Iowa. Stumbled upon a replica of a Danish Windmill in Elk Horn. Didn't know that newer designs have the equivalent of venetian blinds on the blades to control the speed. The attraction loses about $100K/year but the operator is hopeful it will bring in tourists and be an economic lifeline for the town. |
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A burger joint in Lincoln, Nebraska. |
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First Pony Express office in Nebraska. |
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Antique clock repair shop in Keenesburg, Colorado.
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(The rest of their store was a mess!) |
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Arches National Park in Utah. The snow-capped mountains were named "La Sal" ("The Salt") because the Spanish settlers couldn't fathom that the mountains could have snow when it was so hot out. |
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Drove through Vegas. I hate Vegas. This is the most interesting shot I took there. (Although their Neon Museum is really cool!)
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Stayed a week in Huntington Beach to visit the grandkids and see a couple of old friends. This is what the RV park looked like. There are people living here year-round! |
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Looking in the other direction at the RV park. |
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YACP (Yet Another Cat Picture). I'm including it just because it's so incredibly sharp. :-) |
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Me and Carol and the west coast grandkids. This high-dynamic range scene was taken with my phone. Had it been a conventional camera the windows would have blown out. Computational photography strikes again! |
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This grocer worked for Safeway supermarkets for 24 years. They fired him just a year before he was to collect retirement. He's now working for Sprouts for a couple more years. He purchased about 500 acres in Mexico for $50K, and he will be raising horses and cattle with his brother "just for fun" in his retirement. Is he bitter about how he was treated? "What goes around, comes around" he responds. "The people who fired me were out of a job when Albertson's bought Safeway." |
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Took the family to the Magic Castle (you have to know somebody to get in.) Cameras aren't allowed. And despite my background in the magical arts, I had no idea how the vast majority of illustions were done. |
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Carlsbad, California, where I met up with my brothers and their families. |
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Nice sunset, eh? |
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Went to a deer farm in Williams, Arizona. They got quite aggressive wanting to be fed. |
(Here's a video showing just how agressive they were. :-) )
In New Mexico, we went to a store that carried Native American pottery made by the Acoma tribe. This gentleman was kind enough to help us interpret the drawings and decorations.
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Cadillac Ranch, an art installation in Texas. Now overcome by several layers of grafitti.
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This is how it originally looked in 1974 according to Texas Monthly. |
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Really good light out the motor home window. (Yes, we brought some plants since there would be nobody to water them in our absence.)
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A few more blue hour shots:
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Cracker Barrel has a policy of letting trucks and RVs spend the night in their parking lot for free. It's a good strategy, as we often ended up eating dinner AND breakfast there before hitting the road. |
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Granddaughter's Bat Mitzvah. I did two things to maximize the chances of getting this difficult shot in poor conditions: 1) I moved so that the only light in the room was behind me, and 2) I shot an 8K video and then took a freeze frame at the decisive moment. (This is how Sports Illustrated captures their images now. I don't see that as cheating -- after all, I got the shot!!) An 8K freeze frame gives you 12.8" x 7.2" @ 300 dpi, which is more than good enough for most people's uses. |
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A big shout-out to the Chevy Van chassis. Although things in an RV cab are always unreliable, the 2015 Chevy 4500 engine and drive train have had NO issues since we bought it. Extra special props go to the tires, which didn't pop nor go flat despite being subjected to all of the potholes and uneven patchwork found on our federally-funded highways - highways that countries such as Germany would be ashamed to call their own. :-( |
We did more on the trip, but I don't want to bore you.
In Other News...
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Me at 15 |
Last year I applied for a professorship position at Tufts University and a smaller but delightful college in Rhode Island called Johnson & Wales. I'm pretty well qualified, and there's a resurgence of interest in darkroom photography which I was doing since I was 15 (and I have lungs full of Dektol fumes to show for it!). I've taught beginning and advanced photography literally around the world since 2007; have written more than 45 books on digital imaging, and I have the most incredible letters of recommendation: One from a National Geographic photographer who's been with the magazine for more than 40 years; one from the head of the Royal Photographic Society (UK), one from legendary photography publisher David Kilpatrick who is now publishing Cameracraft magazine (for which I've been Associate Editor for more than 12 years).
Despite all this, I didn't get the jobs because I don't have an Master of Fine Arts degree (just a lousy Engineering degree and 10 years at NASA). But you know academia - they have to keep their high standards!
Until next time,
Yours Truly, Gary Friedman
I found your trip photos very interesting. I'm a big fan of road trip photography. Sorry about your cat.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Andy - both for your condolences and for your appreciation.
DeleteI definitely enjoy the trip photos (even though I had already seen many them on Facebook). I hope to one day have an RV and travel, so your trip was inspiring! What is your favorite camera for travel?
ReplyDeleteGlad you enjoyed it! Without question, the RX-10 IV, despite its age, is my favorite travel camera.
DeleteI love the RX-10 IV! It is perfect for cruising, quick trips, family gatherings... pretty much any trip or event that I don't want to lug around four lenes and one or two bodies! (I was the one who asked the question, I just forgot to put my name, so it posted as anonymous). Thanks for answering!
DeleteThe RX-10 IV is definitely one of the most underrated cameras out there. It's the only camera I took with me on this trip (and the one to Norway back in February). It allows me to enjoy my travels just a little bit more. And that 600mm lens is awesome for sunsets!
DeleteDon't hate Las Vegas, it's a great basecamp for getting out and enjoying nature with an RX10!
ReplyDelete:-)
DeleteIt sounds like you enjoyed a great trip out west. But I wondered about your blanket condemnation of Federally-funded highways. Yes, there are Federal funds involved, but the Federal government does none of the actual maintenance work. That is the responsibility of the states and, I believe, even counties in some cases. A fair, overall assessment of the state of our Federal highways would involve crisscrossing each state, in some cases many times, driving hundreds of thousands of miles altogether, and making sophisticated measurements and analyses all along the way. And, of course, the Sysyphean nature of the task would be analgous to painting thousands of Golden Gate bridges . . . the job would never be done. One cross-country, month-long drive with nary a highway engineer in the vehicle cannot result in a meaningful critique. And I enjoyed the photos very much!
ReplyDeleteHi, Onkel. I chose my words carefully. "Federally-funded highways" are just that - the money trickles down to the maintainers and those who administer them. And my cross-country trip served as a random sampling of the major arteries - a statistically significant method from which one can definitely draw a conclusion without needing to traverse all the highways. I'm telling you, the roads were so bad I was fearful of popping a tire on several occasions. (The New Jersey Turnpike was the worst in this regards, that you have to PAY for the privledge of driving on it! It's reasonable to expect a toll road to be better than others.)
DeleteAgghh! You were within 30 mins from the house and didn't call 😱 Oh well, will catch you next time. BTW, niece went to Johnson & Wales.
ReplyDeleteWe live in Vegas. What, no T shirt? You didn't say if you enjoyed yourselves. I hope you did. We enjoyed seeing you in Vegas.
ReplyDeleteWe enjoyed seeing you too! I should probably emphasize that Vegas is distinctly different from Henderson and all the wonderful natural desert rocks that are out there and look beautiful at sunrise. Did we enjoy ourselves? I've always found driving the motor home stressful. Having said that, it's the best motor home trip I've ever been on. :-)
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