Photo of the Day – Flowers Near Pescadero

The morning started off with no coffee and a light drizzle of ocean spray and rain. The road, a cracked skin old person with many stories to tell if you just ride along at a good pace and listen. Farms with half deconstructed, salt washed fences, greet me every twenty kilometres or so. The beautiful flowers of yellow and deep purple grow naturally beside the flat highway that extends down the coast for hours and days. I don’t remember their smell, but I do remember how even in fog, they acted as the only obvious difference and border, between sea, sand and concrete. I also remember, that while at home, I never thought twice about stepping on living grass or dandelions, that I was cautious around this flora. I guess it was the unique drama they presented, the flamboyant contrast, the centre stage diva florified.

Flowers along the sea near Pescadero

Photo of the Day- A Church In Romania

Here is my first foray into Photoshop Elements and messing around with pictures I take on my 4 year old point and click camera. While most cellphones now a days have more megapixels than my old, full bodied picture taker, like any medium, you can have the best device to capture the world in, but if you have unlimited space, are blind to beauty and can’t listen to stories, your just holding images prisoner, some random composition that in 15 minutes you can’t remember where and when and who you were with when you took them. I’m guilty of it too. I am not trying to seem like a photograph elitist.  The Eiffel Tower or a farm in the country side has been photographed one billion times from every angle, at all times of the day, with every lens possible. Magazines show dolled of versions of places and products, with a high definition gloss and a professional’s studio nip and tuck. I try to photograph moments. It’s not a checklist for me to click click, smile, alright done. While the circumstances, the planning, the plane ticket, were made, the memories, the actually unexpected/unprecedented feeling and the awe are not. Made memories aren’t the ones I like. It’s the pyramids arising like mythical giants on the horizon ones that I am interested in.

Travellers seem to let this excitement, this catharsis, the journey’s adventure, go unnoticed. They look at their guidebooks, their outlines of all that is good in a city and believe nothing else worthy exists. They are too busy reading up on the facts, when the biggest fact about a lot of what man has made or what has naturally occurred on earth is the form and the experience. For every new place I go to it’s pretty much the same, but very unique deal. A church, let’s say. I’ll enter it, search for the English pamphlet, that they place at the front entrance on a wooden stand. Welcome to Blank Church, it usually says in bold black letters. I sit in a pew and read. When it indicates for me to look at something I will look. If it’s something that strikes my interested, my mind will wander and I will let it. Once I am finished reading, I will sit, I will smell, the airs flowing up from an ancient crypt below, the hollow grounds makes the floor an echo chamber for hard soled shoes that scuttle up and down the aisles. I look at everything, I learn every story, I feel every surface, because who knows if this will be my first and last time. My imagination melts my body into basic one tone colours and I walk in profile inside the frescos. No brush stroke is ever the same even in two paintings of the exact same thing done by the exact same painter and those minor reasons for subtly interest me as much as comparing decades. Okay, well, that kind of overdoes it, but you get where I am coming for? Anyways, then I will snap a few photos here and there. What are the photos for? So  I can cue my mind, close my eyes, relive those echos, smell the must of rotting holy relics, imagine me among the saints and sit in the moment once again.

My first Photo of the Day Photo. I was biking with Global Agents for Change for a charity bike ride to raise funds/awareness for micro-credit. In Romania, the rolling hills hid small towns, where kind people of the earth, tilled and worked their lands. Horse and buggy are the main form of transportation. Even bicycles seem somewhat of anomaly, but especially futuristic looking ones with GPS and waterproof panniers attached to them. People wave to you with the lines in their hand etched ever more deeper from the handle of a plough or scythe. Everyone, language barrier or not is willing to put down whatever they are doing to point you in the right direction or debate with others in their village as to what the right direction really was. I tried to listen to this random farmer who tried to help us on the side of a dirt path intersection, but the screams of his tied up goat from his cart, drowned him out completely. Didn’t really matter, because the only thing that would clue me into what he meant was his hands. Every town, no matter the size, no matter the set up, no matter the apparent wealth, had a beautiful church that seemed to be the focal point of the community.


The Vancouver Sun – Original Posted 07/03/2010

Beautiful, enticing, the perfect wake up like the time I went into White Spot and got for breakfast a Legendary with their amazing hash browns on the side. The Vancouver sun (we own it, you didn’t know? One of our astronauts put our flag on it) was up and about bright and early today, making the cherry blossoms sparkle strawberry pockys (weird reference, ay?). With 8 days or so left before the big adventure across the states and possibly beyond, I thought it best that I spent the day doing something productive. I must mention to beer enthuists, while it is a wonderful theory to think that you can drink beer and perform chores, its another thing to actually put that theory to use. I can definitely tell you that biking is hilarious drunk, unsafe, but hilarious, but it isn’t conducive to anything productive I can think of except possibly keeping drivers on their toes. So…today…it was time to test out my bike legs.

I hopped on the bike, packed my backpack with a few cards (some ID, a card that pretends to have money on it..etc) and headed out to my first destination. Where was that you may ask? Well my friends, our young hero was seeking adventure…and where better to find it than in Burnaby, voted the city to least likely motivate you to apply to a post secondary school. Kidding. Burnaby is pretty and junk. 25km and an hour and a bit later I was in Burnaby at a battery shop buying a longer lasting battery for my vidcam. I love these smaller retail shops. You enter to witness what looks like an eviction notice was given and the occupiers of this place had only 20 minutes to pack all they own in random cardboard boxes with no labels. But the gentleman behind the towering blue desk covered in a papermache-d level of paper was able to find the right battery, as well as give me some info about it. The Apple Store scares the shit out of me. Like all this tech stuff is for nerds, right… and they don’t even try to emulate a nerd’s layer. Everything is pristine, the computers are all laid out nicely and there is a lot of dead space. I always feel that whoever approaches me to see if I need help knows more about the new “The _______” album than computers. One of then was even sporting Crocs…not sporting…no…even wearing sounds like too good a word for Crocs. Just call them ugly loafers with holes in it. But they returned my stuff without a receipt and over the 14 day return window, so I guess I can live feeling that I am in the flight deck of the movie Apollo 13. Anywhoo…50 clix today and I feel great. Good to know my body remembers the being in shape thing or I’d be screwed. Ice cream is good in the fridge for a long while. Selling your old stuff is hard, but why not let it be someone’s new stuff to enjoy as much as you did when it was new to you…and was literally new.

Clocked Out

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