Category Archives: Photography

Launch Delay

There was supposed to be another Starlink launch out of Vandenberg on a Falcon 9 tonight about 21:00 local time.

It’s been grey, gloomy, drizzly, cloudy, and overcast here for days, but I started watching our western horizon about sunset and we’re looking great!

See those two tall, thin, phallic Italian cedar trees on the right? Falcon 9 will rise just to the left of the left-hand tree, arc up at about 45º behind that stand of palm trees, have first stage cutoff, stage separation, and second stage ignition just to the left of the palsm, and  then go over that telephone pole about halfway between the top of the pole and the top of the picture. From there it will arch back all the way to the southern horizon off to the left.

Double checking after sunset, we’re looking spectacular. T-3:00:00!

And then they scrubbed for unknown reasons and re-scheduled for tomorrow night / Thursday morning, with the window opening just about 01:00.

I don’t even have to check the weather forecast to know what that means.

Clear all day tomorrow…until about an hour before the launch window opens.

Some days if it weren’t for bad luck, I wouldn’t have any luck at all!

 

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Filed under Photography, Space, Sunsets, Weather

Water & Desert

We’ve been to Lake Havasu a few times back in the past. Not always the best of circumstances, but I always liked the juxtaposition of the water and the desert.

 

I also liked the storms that would come up out there, often violent thunderstorms that were over and gone in just a few minutes, travelling off to create flash floods elsewhere.

Los Angeles is set in the desert and I’ve been here almost fifty years – but it’s faux desert, calmed by a ton of water, concrete, and freeways. The lizards, ravens, and coyotes are the last wild things.

We’ll see what this year brings. It won’t be Havasu, but in many ways, for reasons practical, spiritual, and economic, the desert might be calling.

 

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Filed under Forever Home, Photography

Accusatory Plumbing

That one! THAT pipe/valve/plumbing thingie is the one!

Also, SHIT! I’m getting age spots on my hands…

Which, I guess, beats the statistically most likely alternative.

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Filed under Health, Paul, Photography

Pink To The East

Sometimes you need to remember to look behind you.

Normally when I’m checking to see if it’s a pretty sunset I look out that front door there and look to the west, where the Sun’s setting. On this day it was clear as a bell and unremarkable as far as sunsets go.

But there was still sort of a cotton candy pink neon glow coming from somewhere…

Ah, there it is! I crossed the street and found all of the clouds piled up over LA County and the Santa Monica Mountains, and they were a very nice selection of shades of pink, orange, and red.

Check your six!

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Filed under Photography, Sunsets

Disappointment

I really, REALLY need that part for my printer. And I double checked, and, YES!, I ordered a new one..

To their credit, when I called they passed me straight to a supervisor who immediately refunded my money as well as asked for pictures so he could go see who in the warehouse had so obviously messed up.

But they don’t have an actual new one. Office Depot will let me order one, says it’s “in stock,” but when I try to order says its expected delivery is in March. I called to verify and had the most fascinating discussion about the meaning of the term “in stock.”

The end is near! Or at least that’s what the maintenance daemon in the printer driver tells me.

Planned obselescence raised to the Nth degree!

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Filed under Computers, Freakin' Idiots!, Photography

About 25 Years Apart

Looking for something to share tonight, I ended up back in the pictures I took on my iPhone 13 just after Thanksgiving. We were visiting the Science Museum, primarily to see Endeavour, but also to see an IMAX film.

One of the pictures I took there reminded me of a picture I remember from just a month or so after I got my first digital camera, in 1999.

640 x 480 pixels. 100,512 bytes. Taken with an Epson digital camera that my dad gave to me. (He worked at Epson, got an early peek at these newfangled devices).

This is the entryway between the IMAX theater and the main museum lobby. Purple tinted skylight, several hundred gold balls hanging down.

It was July, 1999 and my three kids were with me, ages 9, 12, and 14. I was doing the single dad thing and it would be almost another year before I met The Long-Suffering Wife.

(There was no building out back with a Space Shuttle in it.)

4032 x 3024 pixels. 4,705,344 kbytes. Taken with an iPhone.

It was November, 2023 and two of my three kids were with me, ages 33 and 38.

The museum has grown considerably, and is quickly growing even more as the annex to hold Endeavour, the last flight-rated external fuel tank, and two flight ready solid rocket boosters, all combined into a vertical stack just like they would be when ready for launch.

The photographic resolution has skyrocketed. Today’s “older model pocket-sized supercomputer” (i.e., an iPhone 13) has forty times the resolution of yesterday’s cutting edge next big thing.

Welcome to the future!

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Filed under Los Angeles, Photography, Space

2024’s First Rainbow

Gotta love rainbows!

Gotta love daughters that send a text saying, “Dad, can you see the gnarly rainbow outside?” I had not seen it, being at my desk with the start of the new work year being somewhat “Set SCE to AUX!“-ish.

She had been watching for a bit from closer to Downtown LA and had a spectacular view of a full 180º rainbow. I later saw that others posted pictures on social media of  a full 180º double rainbow over West Hollywood.

From our yard in the west San Fernando Valley I could see a bit of it through the trees. Nothing like a full 180º, but very bright. But…trees.

So I took off down the backside of the hill we’re on to where the street turns in that direction and I could get a clear view.

It was starting to fade, but it was still worth the effort. Happy 2024 Day Three!

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Filed under Photography, Weather

Random Old Photos – January 02nd

It’s another of those years. One of the big ones, ending in a zero. And we’re getting to a point where we have to wonder how many more there will be.

Back in the day it was common to have three or four trips a year. Sometimes more. For example, in 2004 it was San Francisco, Vermont, Montreal, and Boston.

Then came the pandemic. It got unsafe.

Three years ago it was one trip to Las Vegas. And nothing else.

Two years ago it was one trip to Chicago and one to San Antonio. And nothing else.

Last year it was Winnipeg. And nothing else.

In 2024, COVID willing and we figure out how to pull it off, it’s Texas for the eclipse, Vermont, Buffalo, and Glasgow.

A bunch of “ifs” there.

“Normal” still isn’t.

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Filed under Photography, Travel

New Year’s Eve 2023

2023 has most certainly delivered its share of stress and angst, hasn’t it? But now it’s behind us.

Gone, but not forgotten, and its detritus and loose ends and ongoing chaos is likely to stretch all the way through 2024 and beyond. What worries me the most is that in 366 days (remember, 2024’s a leap year!) we’ll look back on today’s state of the world as “the good old days.”

But I’m something of an eternal optimist in the end. It’s probably a byproduct of my Catholic school programming, but I have to have faith that there will be good things (love, adventures, ball games, concerts, plays, travel) that will outweigh the bad (politics, wars, hatred, pandemics, Raiders fans). And maybe even some of those bad things will be defeated, or at least nudged back toward the light.

Despair is a danger. Getting so overwhelmed that we give up just allows the evil bastards to win, so I don’t recommend that course. It’s hard, but let’s keep our eyes on those good things, but let’s do it with our eyes open and our brains engaged.

New Year Resolutions? As we generally do them, it’s bullshit, so let’s not. Yes, we all want to lose 10 pounds and promise that we’ll exercise more. But we all know that by about next weekend we’ll be craving that pizza and not feel like getting off the couch on the weekend, so why set ourselves up for certain disappointment and depression? If you want a New Year Resolution that you can easily keep, try this one – “I’ll never vote for another Republican again, from President down to assistant dog catcher trainee, NO MATTER WHAT!” See, you’ve already improved the world and given yourself some peace of mind!

Instead of strict resolutions that will only get broken and make us feel like failures, let’s try to focus on self care and making our individual worlds better.

I had mentioned passions a while back – try writing down a few of those and thinking about how much you actually allow yourself to indulge or participate in them. When I did that I found that there are a lot of them that I’ve almost completely set aside (until “later”) because of “priorities.”

For example, “reading” is something I love to “waste” time on so much, but the To Be Read pile is growing much faster than things are being taken off of it and I’m not buying that many new books. I’m just not allowing myself the time to “waste” reading for pleasure.

“Flying.” Yeah, when was the last time I was in the left seat? It’s been years.

And so on. For me, “travel,” “music,” and “astronomy” are high on the list. While I make time every now and then for a taste, I rarely make time to really immerse myself and explore and grow.

So I recommend that we all spend 2024 actively, intellectually, passionately identifying the things that we’re missing, the things that we long for, the things that bring us joy, and putting in the effort to make time for those things in our lives.

Who’s with me? We’re taking back our lives! We’re taking back our passions! We’re no longer going to be satisfied with “good enough!”

WE RIDE AT DAWN!

Welcome, 2024.

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Filed under Fireworks, Photography

2023’s Last Gasps

It’s odd how we have placed into place such an imperfect, almost totally arbitrary system of numbering the years and months, and yet we simultaneously tend to put such importance on that same system.

Days and years are based in reality, the rotation of the planet and its orbit around the Sun, things that existed long before humans did and will survive long after we’re gone. But seconds, minutes, hours, weeks, and months are all artificial, as are the starting points of the year.

There is a loose association with the “new year” occurring about the time of the winter solstice. The days get shorter, the nights get longer, winter comes, and early humans start to get hungry and die with no knowledge or assurance that the Sun will return along with spring and summer. But then the days DO start to get longer. That right there is a known, measurable point to start the year. And perhaps it did at one time lost in the passage of time.

But the year isn’t exactly an even number of days long and over millenia the beginning of the year drifts away from the solstice.

Nonetheless, we stick with the system now and choose this not-so-special “special” day to reflect, to sum up, and to look forward. We make resolutions, vowing that on January 1st we’ll be better humans than we were on December 31st.

Sometimes we actually are.

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Filed under Astronomy, Photography, Weather