Category Archives: Photography

No Context For You – August 05th

If it ain’t one thing it’s another…

I sort of truly hate the stupid little home maintenance issues that pop up around the house. But while it would be one thing on our Forever Home or at least on a home we owned, it’s a royal pain in the freakin’ ASS to have one after another on a house that we’re renting and still getting stuck with them instead of having the landlord take care of them.

It’s a hell of an incentive to find that Forever Home and get the move done, as much as that move will be Hell on Earth for months. Its a lot like all of the recent dental work I’ve been having done – it truly sucks, but it’s an ordeal that has to be endured to get to the other side. That whole, “The only way out is through!” thing.

Still doesn’t mean that I have to like it, and I have no intention of doing so. I get to bitch and whine and pout and I plan on doing so!

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Filed under Forever Home, Paul, Photography

Ahmanson – End Of Another Season

I’m often referred to as being clueless, so we’ll see if being here tonight helps.

I do wonder if the finale and resolution changes from performance to performance – has anyone else seen this production so we can compare notes?

LATE EDIT – I checked with one of the ushers about the ending changing from show to show. “Sadly, no!”

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Filed under Entertainment, Los Angeles, Photography

Diverse Neighbors

I showed pictures a while back of all of the tiny, horizontal spider webs climbing up the Italian cypress trees.

Today I noticed that in the spaces outside of those webs there are different webs. I’m no spider expert by any definition of the term, but I’m guessing that different designs and types of spider webs mean different breeds of spiders.

Assuming that’s true, our “spider high rise” has turned into a diverse neighborhood of arachnids.

And up above (fortunately still above head height) we still have the much bigger webs of the much bigger spiders, the orb weavers.

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Filed under Critters, Photography

Skyscapes – August 1st

We had some high-level moisture moving through today, but no rain and none in the forecast for the next ten days.

It’s not like there are spots in the next ten days where there’s at least a 10% chance of rain, or a couple hours where we have maybe a 20% chance.

It’s 0.00% every second of every day for the foreseeable future.

We could use the rain, especially up in Northern California where we have some HUGE brush fires going on.

But we’re on our own, no divine intervention on the horizon.

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Filed under Photography, Weather

The Train Not Taken

With the Olympics going on we’re seeing all of the stunning views from Paris, a place I’ve never visited before but would dearly love to someday. I was thinking about how I sort of had a chance to do a hit-and-run, overnight visit once, when I was on my trip to Prague and Brussels with my Pepperdine EMBA class. As we were finishing in Prague and had two days before we were to meet up again in Brussels, a couple of people decided on the spur of the moment, with no hotel reservations or anything else in advance, to jump on a train to Paris for a day before rushing off to Brussels. I declined, and had a most wonderful full day to cruise around Prague. But at times like this, I do wonder what would have happened if I had been a little bit more spontaneous and less rigid about my schedule and plans. The road not taken…

Gargoyles and flying buttresses.

They don’t build them like this any more.

Maintenance is constant.

Walking down from the castle and the cathedral, the city and the river are laid out below.

I don’t regret spending that day in Prague, it’s truly one of the favorite places that I’ve ever been. But I do need to get to Paris for a few days also.

Maybe next week…

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Filed under Photography, Travel

Oh Deer

While there are deer in SoCal (the Pepperdine campus in Malibu is practically infested with them, as is the JPL site in La Canada-Flintridge, and I’ve almost hit them on the 405 Freeway through Sepulveda Pass) they’re uncommon. Whereas in Vermont…

When we stayed at my mom’s place in Barre (this was a few years ago, like twenty years) we would see them every morning.

That’s an apple tree, and they would raid it around dawn every day. The only down side to seeing them was getting up at dawn, which even then was not my strong suit, but hey, DEER!

Cool! (Except for the ones, probably these, that would wander out into the road at night and threaten to re-arrange your radiator and give you a free airbag check to see if they’re still working.)

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Filed under Critters, Photography, Travel

When Did THIS Stop Being Fun?

And why?

Granted, my car looked like shit and desperately needed a wash and I had put it off for weeks for one stupid excuse or another. But for $8 and ten minutes, it’s done and I had fun going through the goops and suds and sprays and fans!

Take any seven-year-old on a trip through the car wash and their first words when you’re done will be, “Do it again!”

Adulting sucks.

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Filed under Deep Thoughts, Paul, Photography

Brain Sludge

That’s what I’ve got between my ears these days, or at least it’s what it feels like way too often. A huge factor is the whole “Forever Home” hunt. I have looked at so many houses on Zillow in the past three years. Literally hundreds. Probably not at a thousand plus just yet, but if Zillow had the stats to show me otherwise I wouldn’t be that surprised.

They all blur together, both individual homes and locals. This is the view from our hotel room in May when we went to visit the Apple Valley / Hesperia / Victorville (the “Victor Valley” or “High Desert” area) out on I-15 about halfway to Las Vegas.

There’s still a little snow on the surrounding mountains, and it looks very nice in the winter when there’s more. Sometimes they even get some here, being up at about 3,000′ elevation. But if you didn’t know, this could be Las Vegas, Phoenix, Tucson, Palm Springs, or anyplace in the Los Angeles area away from the coast (the “Inland Empire”). Huge lots of weeds, huge shopping centers, parking lots to the horizon, dotted with housing tracts, some “okay” and some really nice. But they’re all cut from the same cloth.

Now we’re seeing houses that we looked at in May which sold in June that are now dropping out of escrow and coming back onto the market, which confuses me even more as I’m trying to keep track of what we’ve seen, what the current price and status are, and so on. One place was “the dream house” and it’s absolutely freaking stunning, but not perfect and I have to wonder if the yellow flags are actually red flags and my “house lust” is blinding me to their true nature. Another that showed up today looks great on Zillow, but I remember going to see it in person and it was a bit on the “what a dump!” side. So never buy something sight unseen based on the Zillow listing. Those pictures might not be current and they might have been “cleaned up” just a touch, or selectively edited.

I would kill right now to have our ducks lined up on financing, pick a place that hits all of the “must haves” and has a handful of “wanna haves” and is more than just “good enough.” Then we could pull the trigger, get through escrow, and get through the ordeal that is going to be moving again for the very last time.

When that time comes, I think the biggest decision will be how much “good enough” is actually good enough. We’re looking at a range of houses and a range of prices, and there are $450K houses that I could live in if it were an emergency but they’ll never be my first choice, while there are also $700K “dream” houses. Of course, there’s a whole spectrum in between, with some $550K houses that are pretty nice and some $650K houses that I like a lot. Where on that spectrum do we take our shot? It’s a big decision, we’ll be there the rest of our lives if the everything goes to plan.

For those who have watched “Ted Lasso” (hopefully all of you) I would remind you of the angry and vulgar speech that Roy makes to Rebecca when she’s started dating and the guy she’s seen a couple of times is “fine.” Roy (correctly) reminds her to NEVER settle for “fine” because she’s spectacular and deserves nothing but the best. (It’s my second favorite scene in the entire series.) That sentiment haunts me when I’m looking at an array of potential houses. I don’t want to pay the mortgage on an extra $50K or $100K if I don’t have to, but I also don’t want to end up six months after moving having buyer’s remorse because the Forever Home we picked is “just fine.”

And it turns my brain to sludge. Anyone have any wisdom to share?

 

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Filed under Forever Home, Photography

You Can’t Take A Bad Picture Here – Statue Of Liberty

When we visited New York City in 2016 (my first and so far only visit) we hit one tourist site after another, including, of course, the Statue of Liberty.

I found the visit to Liberty Island and Ellis Island to be particularly emotional. And with Lady Liberty there, it really would be tough to take a bad picture there.

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Filed under Photography, Travel

DSKY

I’ve had the honor and priviledge of attending five NASA Socials, and in doing so I’ve gotten to see and touch and hold some pretty neat things. But flipping through old photos tonight, I think this one has to be at the top of the list.

This is a space-flown DSKY, I believe from Apollo 16. (Might be Apollo 15, it’s been a few years, but I think it’s 16.) It’s the “display and keyboard” that was in the Apollo Command Module for the spacecraft guidance computer.

Not a backup or a test item. This hunk of metal and circuitry flew to the Moon and back fifty-ish years ago. And they let us touch it and push buttons and so on. For a “space cadet” from age 5 like me, that’s pretty freaking neat.

This was at my first NASA Social, at Edwards AFB in November, 2014. (For more pictures and about five long posts with much more detailed descriptions of everything else we saw then, search “NASA Social” on this site.) They had this there because it was later used in some of their early work with fly-by-wire control systems on fighter jets.

Space-flown hardware is THE BEST!

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Filed under Photography, Space