Category Archives: Photography

Staggerwing

It’s a Beech 17 to be exact, but they’re referred to as Staggerwings. A bi-plane with a negative bias in the alignment of the wings, which improved the stability quite a bit near stall speeds. A stunningly gorgeous plane.

It made a couple of passes over our house today, giving me time to grab the camera as it took off back towards Van Nuys Airport.

Image credit: FlightRadar24

I suspect that this is the aircraft that used to be owned by Clay Lacy. The current aircraft registration shows a different owner, which doesn’t surprise me, given Clay’s age.

There are only about 200 of these aircraft left flying, and there’s only one dark red one out at Van Nuys that I’m aware of. It was out at Camarillo a couple of times when I was a regular at the CAF hangar there and I think I’ve got some close-up pictures of it. I’m surprised I haven’t posted them here already, but that can be fixed.

 

Leave a comment

Filed under Flying, Photography

You Can’t Take A Bad Picture Here – June 02nd

It’s shocking to realize that it will be twenty years in August since this trip. Niagra Falls, of course.

Like Proxmire said (more or less), “A decade here, a decade there, pretty soon it adds up to real time!”

Leave a comment

Filed under Photography, Travel

Don’t Fear The Dentist

Another hour-plus in the chair with needles and drills and suction and procedures that are as close to waterboarding as I ever want to get. (Tying up loose ends from last weeks’ root canal and getting a temporary crown.)

I get home and get past the nasty tastes left in my mouth from the topical anesthesia and the upset stomach from whatever I was swallowing, finally hungry. The anesthesia and the adrenaline wore off and I was hungry.

But do I need to have another meal of cottage cheese and applesauce? Or can I have a normal lunch? My eyes catch the poster I have on the wall to my right.

I must not fear.

Fear is the mind-killer.

Fear is the little death that brings total obliteration.

I will face my fear.

 

1 Comment

Filed under Health, Photography

A Multitude Of Colors

Even on the grey and cloudy days (which seem to be the only kind we’ve had for weeks) the wide array of colors over here can always bring a smile.

That’s probably going to be needed tomorrow and the rest of the week. Remember, tomorrow’s Tuesday, or in this case, Monday^2. It’s almost not worth having a three-day weekend. Almost!

Be good out there, keep smiling, and be kind. Everyone else is in the same boat and you don’t know what they’re going through, so cut people some slack.

Leave a comment

Filed under Flowers, Photography

Rose Petal Gradient

I might have let this one get past its prime by a day or two, but I’ve been admiring it every day when I go out to the yard.

Don’t worry, there’s another one coming down there, we’ll see if it shows the same pattern and coloration.

This one was spectacular, yellow in the center, pink and purple at the edges, with a subtle gradient from one to the other.

There’s also a lot of very fine detail in the petals, darker purple lines in the pale gold.

And all of those pistels in the middle! The bees have had a field day with these, which is a GOOD thing.

Leave a comment

Filed under Flowers, Photography

Fine Feathered Friends – May 27th

A picture I don’t often get a chance to take – one of our California Towhees someplace other than on the ground.

They tend to fly quickly from the bushes to the ground and back, short distances, and then hop from place to place on the ground. This one was up in the big backyard tree so I could get a good picture of his belly, chest, and tail. I was surprised to see so much color there. All of the ones I normally see are pretty uniformly a brownish-gray color.

Turns out that it probably means that this is a juvenile, only a couple of months old. Good to know!

I know that the Spotted Towhees are about as well. They’re seasonal, but I’ve seen a pair flitting about. I’ll see if I can spot them when I have a camera again.

Leave a comment

Filed under Birds, Critters, Photography

The Wrong View

When last we left our plucky hero, he was at a business “meet & greet” on the 20th floor of a huge skyscraper in downtown LA. The view was great!

The instructions to get to the event were detailed. Someone I described them to said it was like being in a Bond film.

Enter the parking garage here, here, or here. Park on this level. Take the elevator down to this level, not that one. Walk out into the center and take the second escalator up. There’s a relatively obscure, unmarked door next to this store. Security will let you in when you show them your ticket with the QR code. They’ll send you up on the elevator.

Okay, whatever. It’s a secure building. I follow the instructions, park, elevator, escalator, see the well-marked store in question and the unmarked door next to it with security. Security lets me in but never asks to see the QR code on my phone – whatever. 🚩 There’s a table set up there with folks with a list of names and a stack of markers and name tags. I give them my name, they give me a name tag to fill out, then they send me to elevator H. There are about a dozen elevators, but they have no buttons for up, down, or any of the floors. There’s a card reader, so if you work in the building it will let you go to your allowed floor, but if you’re a visitor you go to wherever security has programmed “Car H” to go.

The doors open and I step out into a party, just as expected. I spend the next three hours schmoozing, swapping stories with folks, taking a tour of their very nice, very new office. I have a couple of Diet Cokes (I’m driving, no booze) and a couple of “things on sticks” – shrimp, meatballs, and so on. I tell everyone I talk to about our mission at The ALS Association Golden West Chapter, and I listen to what they do. It’s a civil and structural engineering firm, big projects like the new SoFi Stadium, new terminals at LAX, hospitals, skyscrapers, and so on. 🚩 I hand out business cards, have several people interested in getting a team together for our LA Walk on November 12th. There are a couple of people who have family or friends who have been afflicted by ALS. I was a social freakin’ butterfly. I had fun.

I was invited to the event by our banker, who I talk with on the phone all the time, but largely because of COVID I’ve never actually met in person. All night I’m peering at everyone’s name tag – no sign of her. 🚩 And I thought that there were going to be speakers or guests with some talks about the economy and non-profits. At first I didn’t think anything, figuring we would be social for a while and then have the speakers, but it never happened. Whatever. 🚩

Finally it’s wrapping up and winding down, so I go looking for where the parking validation is. I figured they would mention it because the detailed instructions were quite clear that our expensive parking would be validated. But the couple of folks I talk to don’t know anything about that. 🚩 Maybe it’s at the table by security downstairs. It takes forever to figure out how to call the elevator so I can go back down, but when I get down there the table is deserted. Okay, whatever. I follow my trail of breadcrumbs back out from the unmarked door, down the escalator, across the plaza, into the elevator, back to my car. I pay for parking and figure out how to get on the freeway home.

About 45 minutes later, just as I was getting off the freeway near home, my brain goes “click!” (I could actually hear the sound.)

No! That can’t be!

I get back home and the email invitation is still on my computer screen. Park, elevator, escalator, store, unmarked door. QR code, speakers, offices on the 33rd floor.

Oops. (When did you figure it out?)

I’m glad I had a good time! I’m glad I was a social butterfly and handed out business cards and chatted and ate things on sticks! But I was at the wrong freakin’ party. I had crashed someone’s “new office open house” instead of going to the bank’s meet & greet with a side serving of economic talks.

On the one hand, it’s almost hilariously funny. The Long-Suffering Wife wants to know if I’m going to have a side hustle crashing parties. My boss agreed and thinks I should go crashing random parties downtown and handing out business cards. Our banker thought it was the funniest thing that she’s heard all week. Everyone agreed that the story made their day.

On the other hand, it’s been a while since I’ve felt this stupid 🥴 and embarrassed 😳. I’ll live.

In retrospect, how many red flags did I miss? But while there were several, they all happened separated by time, noting to connect them necessarily, with none of them being sufficient by itself to force a “stop, wait, something wrong here!” moment.

I’m familiar with the concept. There have been a number of aircraft accidents that happened in a similiar way, a series of small mistakes which added up. None of them enough to cause an emergency, but when several folks make mistakes, misunderstandings, with no one having the big picture, all of a sudden they all combine to have someting catastrophic happen. (Look up the “Gimly Glider,” Air Canada Flight 143, an early 767 that ran out of fuel while cruising at 35,000 feet over Canada in 1983.)

This wasn’t catastrophic by any means, more a comedy of errors. Still, it’s a good warning to listen to those odd little warnings and 🚩 instead of passing them off with a “Whatever!”

2 Comments

Filed under ALSA Golden West, Los Angeles, Paul, Photography

An Uncommon View

Well, not for the folks who work there, of course! But for me it was a chance to admire a view I rarely get.

On the 20th floor of a skyscraper at 7th & Flower in downtown LA. A block away, on Figueroa, the tallest building is the Intercontinental Hotel. For reference, the Music Center is off to our right about six blocks, while the Crypto.com Arena (aka “Staples”) is off to the left four blocks.

It was cloudy & gloomy, but the view was still great.

Looking north. A lot of these buildings have pools and restaurants on top. They’re apartments and condos, not just office buildings.

Peering off into the distance is Hollywood. Through the haze, just above and slightly to the right of the black building in the distance you can see the Hollywood Sign.

I was here for a work “meet & greet” event. I had a good time, talked to a lot of nice folks. Just one… little… problem…

Leave a comment

Filed under Los Angeles, Paul, Photography

Less Pain Day

Thank god for drugs.

Not gonna lie, yesterday was unpleasant. But I’m happy to say that by this afternoon the discomfort is just that, a nagging minor ache, and biting down on the affected tooth (accidentally, I assure you, still eating everything on the other side, very carefully) is sore and a reminder to not do that, not an invitation to passing out. I even got to eat a normal dinner, my first real food in about five or six days other than scrambled eggs, broth, bananas, or cottage cheese.

Tomorrow the plan is to start cutting back drastically on the pain meds. I appreciate what they do, but I’m a firm believer in paying attention to the “as needed” warning.

The pleasant surprise of the day was this batch of bright red flowers around the mailbox. I don’t think I’ve ever seen them before.

(This, of course, guarantees that there are at least two posts here, probably about this time of year, where I said the exact same thing and posted extremely similar pictures. I’m consistant, if nothing else.)

Whatever they are, they’re lovely! Some kind of roses, maybe, but not like the ones over by the driveway? Time for a little research.

Leave a comment

Filed under Flowers, Health, Photography

Spring Thunderstorm On The Horizon

I was seeing the warnings from the local National Weather Service office on their Twitter account. Nothing near us (yet) but there were some big cells of convective activity (i.e., thunderstorms) popping up over the Antelope Valley and moving down toward Pasadena.

It was just a couple of minutes after sunset here, but those big thunderheads might be still above the horizon and lit up…

A quick walk down the “back side” of the hill showed that to be true!

I guess if you like seeing some active weather like I do, the Antelope Valley and upper desert were the places to be today! As Maxwell Smart used to say, “Missed it by that much!” (Where “that” is defined as 150-200 miles in this case.)

Leave a comment

Filed under Photography, Sunsets, Weather