Friday, December 31, 2010

Swim Until You Can't See Land

    
    
#138
12.31.10
    
I started this blog on 01.01.10 with two basic goals.  The first was to demonstrate my firm belief that high-resolution photography isn't the only way to capture beautiful and interesting photographs.  I think that grabbing the closest camera, oftentimes the camera-phone in your pocket, offers a decent chance to trap a moment before it passes forever. 
    
The second goal was to develop the habit of writing every day, and more importantly to allow others to read that writing.  Those who know me best know that someday, if and when I grow up, I've wanted to be a writer.  That doesn't mean I want to quit my day job, because I enjoy that too... but to be a published writer would be a dream-come-true.  
  
I've been writing since I was a kid, and my folks even have a copy of my first short story somewhere in a box (may it burn to ashes!).  An ironic obstacle to my desire of becoming a published author is the visceral fear of others reading my writing.  It's worth mentioning that this blog isn't the type of writing that interests me, and I'm certainly not saying it was even worth reading.  What I am saying is that a principle goal in the whole enterprise was simply to write something, anything, every day, and then let it be read by whomever so chose.  I thought it might help me get over my fear and let others see some of my attempts at fiction.
 
Objectively speaking, the blog is a failure.  I didn't post a daily photo.  The string was broken at #98 on 04.08.10 upon the tragic passing of my amazing sister-in-law Michele.  Eventually I started posting sporadic entries until my mother-in-law Ruby passed away after a year-long battle with cancer on 06.28.10.  Those were two big blows that made this blog feel frivolous.  Even still, I decided to start posting yet again to finish the year-long project, even if I had to limp across the finish line.
  
There are other reasons this blog ended up a failure, too. I posted some photos that weren't worth posting, especially early on, just to meet the daily deadline.  Many times I didn't even write a word other than the song title and musical group.  And finally, very early on the blog sort of morphed in to an exploration of music, with the photos becoming more of an adornment.  

Upon reflection it is clear that the music actually pulled me along more than the photos or writing ever did.  In the end I've learned what I've always suspected; I can do without most of my hobbies or interests... but not music.  So perhaps I should change my aspiration of someday becoming a published author.  Instead, I'll aspire to become a late-night disc jokey on a listener supported radio station like WXPN, KNBA, or even an internet based station like SOMA-FM, or a satellite station like Sirius XMU.  Yeah, Podiatrist by day, and Disc Jockey by night.  Two jobs at the fringe of the Human Experience... that's just about exactly my style.
 
Thank you to anyone who has perused this little blog.  I hope that one photo, or one song, or one anecdote or written passage made you smile or think or feel 'something'.  I actually enjoyed it more than I thought I might, even considering its shortcomings.
   
Photos
 
I didn't have a good idea for a 12.31.10 final blog entry, though I've considered it off and on for months.  I simply ended up looking for a bright series of photos from the past year that I hadn't featured yet, and which might impart an feeling of optimism at the ending of one year, and the beginning of another.  
  
The photos I picked were all taken in the first week of July at Lake Powell in southern Utah.  It's where we went after those two leading ladies in our family passed away within a cruelly short span of time.
     
Once again, Nature found a way to help us begin to heal.
     
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
     
I think the little 2 megapixel iPhone 3G camera held its own this past year.  It has surprised me on several occasions, and helped me resist the urge to upgrade to the 3GS and 4 models when they came out.  Right now my iPhone is carrying 7,684 digital photographs; most of them taken in this past year.  The iPhone app Photogene was indispensable; I relied on that camera-based program to tune up many photos, and found that program superior to all the others I tried.
   
Music
 
Swim Until You Can't See Land
Frightened Rabbit
      
A close friend introduced me to this band and this song earlier in the year, and I've literally waited months trying to find an appropriate spot in which to feature it.  It makes me smile to finally post it in this the final blog entry.  
    
There can be many interpretations of the song... but in the end, all of them share the feeling of optimism, daring and adventure that I think most of us feel going in to a new year.  I think it is a challenge to face one's fears; 
Are you a man, or a bag of sand?
      
If my goal for 2010 was to put myself Out There publicly and to expose myself more than I thought I could (or 'you' may have thought I should)... then my goal for 2011 is to Swim Until I Can't See Land.
    
 We salute at the threshold of the North Sea in my mind
And a nod to the boredom that drove me here to face the tide and swim.
 
I swim. Oh, swim.

 
Dip the toe in the ocean. Oh how it hardens and it numbs.

The rest of me is a version of man, built to collapse into crumbs.
And if I hadn't come down to the coast to disappear
I may have died in a land-slide of the rocks, the hopes and fears.
 
So swim until you can't see land.

Swim until you can't see land.
Swim until you can't see land
Are you a man or are you a bag of sand?
Swim until you can't see land.
Swim until you can't see land.
Swim until you can't see land
Are you a man or are you a bag of sand?
 
Up to my knees now, do I wait? Do I dive?

The sea has seen my like before though it's my first and perhaps last time.
Let's call me a baptist, call this the drowning of the past.
She's there on the shoreline throwing stones at my back.
 
So swim until you can't see land.

Swim until you can't see land.
Swim until you can't see land
Are you a man or are you a bag of sand?
Swim until you can't see land.
Swim until you can't see land.
Swim until you can't see land
Are you a man or are you a bag of sand?
 
Now the water's taller than me and the land is a marker line

All I am is a body adrift in water, salt and sky.
 
So swim until you can't see land.

Swim until you can't see land.
Swim until you can't see land
Are you a man or are you a bag of sand?
Swim until you can't see land.
Swim until you can't see land.
Swim until you can't see land
Are you a man or are you a bag of sand?
        
For a final time; thank you for looking, reading and listening.
  
CCE
        

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Clementine

  
    
#137
12.26.10
    
Clementine - Sarah Jaffe
  


    
CCE
 

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

I Wish I Was The Moon (Tonight)

    
      
#136
12.22.10
      
I Wish I Was The Moon - Neko Case
               
My very first blog entry on 01.01.10 was the Blue Moon of the new year, 2010; and I posted pics of the Wolf Moon of 2010 on 01.30.10.  Obviously I never tire of gazing at the Moon.
    
 Last night I spent several hours looking at the stars, Venus, and the last Full Moon of 2010 through my son's telescope.  At the time I was listening to Sigur Rós's classic album Agaetis Byrjun, but this lovely song by Neko Case came to mind even then.  
              
Clearly these photos won't make National Geographic's glossy pages; but to shoot them with a 2 megapixel iPhone camera is something I'm proud of, just the same.  I think these photos are better than those taken earlier in the year, and I'm just kicking myself that I could not get a good photo of the lunar eclipse one evening prior.
  
This blog entry is in honor of one of my all-time favorite human beings, who just happens to be a fellow admirer of all things Lunar: J.Rasmussen.
         
   
   
    
cce
          

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Sea Sun: Winter Solstice 2010

    
      
#135
12.21.10
      
Hafsól - Sigur Rós
       
The past 24 hours have been stunning from an astronomical perspective.  
   
Last night we stayed up late at the Candlehouse Observatory to catch the spectacular lunar eclipse.  Lunar eclipses aren't necessarily rare (at least two per year)... but this one coincided with Winter Solstice, and that is quite rare.  The last time it occurred was 1638!  But I'm sure you've all heard that on your radio and  television news programming by now.
              
I had hoped to devote a whole blog entry to the event, but just couldn't get a good picture with the iPhone camera and telescope until the eclipse was nearly complete.  There is an odd curvature to my shot, the shadow looks concave instead of convex... and I can't explain why it looks like that.  It didn't look like that with our eyeballs through the telescope.
      
Hopefully many of you got to see the eclipse wherever you live, too.
     
     
The other reason these past 24 hours has been so significant everywhere, and perhaps even more so here in Alaska, is that this is Winter Solstice - the shortest period of daylight for the year. 
   

For Anchorage Alaskans that means Sunrise occurred at 10:12 a.m., and Sunset was at 3:43 p.m.  In case your calculator or slide rule isn't handy, I'll let you know that equates to 5 hours, 31 minutes of Daylight.  But please don't feel sorry for us; I think those of us who choose to live and thrive in Alaska really enjoy the long Winter nights... but we also look forward with great anticipation to those long Summer nights (19 hours, 22 minutes in case you were wondering).
 

The featured photo above was shot at 3:41 p.m. just before Sunset; and the following photo was shot at 3:44 p.m., just after the Sun dipped below the horizon.  It was a balmy 1 degree above zero.
 

  
I intended to get some good Sunrise pics for the blog this morning; but we were downtown running errands (read: breakfast at Snow City Cafe), and missed it.  So I snapped a few pics from the car as we drove home, as the Sun came up over the Chugach Mountains.  I include the photo showing the dashboard to show the time and temperature (11:05 a.m. and 3 degrees above zero).  Forgive the worse-than-usual quality of the pics; they were taking as we drove at a normal clip.
  

  
  
  

I'll add a few photos I took at 3:40, 3:41, 3:42, 3:43, and 3:44 p.m. tonight with my Canon Xsi to show the Winter Solstice Sun dip into the Sea.  That frozen mass of water beyond the trees is the Cook Inlet.  It doesn't show up as well, obviously, in the iPhone shots above, but you can see the sea ice pretty well here.
  

  
  
  
  
  

Hopefully you've enjoyed the soundtrack to today's blog entry.  Sigur Rós is one of my personal favorite bands of all time.  Their name comes from the younger sister of one of the band members "Victory Rose".  They are from Iceland, and have an ethereal sound that could be a soundtrack to Me, lost and floating in space.  

They use EBows (electromagnetic devices to make their guitar and bass strings vibrate instead of actually strumming them, which gives the instruments a sound more akin to violins or cellos), and then they actually use stringed bows to play their electric instruments, too.  In this song, Hafsól, they  use drum sticks to play the bass guitar.  

My understanding is that Thom Yorke, Johnny Greenwood et al. of Radiohead "discovered" Sigur Rós and invited them along on their concert tours as an opening act.  Yet one more reason to be grateful to Radiohead!
  
The song is in Icelandic, and the English translation of the title is Sea Sun.  I'll post the lyrics translated to English.  An amazing song by an amazing band.
       
Behind a vessel of clouds, a sun wakes up from its lethargy
Refreshes itself with some little raindrops
Plays with the hot flames of the fire
Makes rainbows
  
cce
       

Monday, December 20, 2010

North Pole Man

    
    
#134
12.20.10
    
North Pole Man - Over The Rhine 
I keep expecting the Tiffstress to sing this to me when I come in from snow blowing... but that just hasn't happend (yet).
       
North Pole man
Come in from the cold
North Pole man
It's gettin' old
   
Cold hands, cold feet
Darn snow, darn sleet
It takes good friction
To make good heat
   
North Pole man
Come out of the storm
North Pole man
Gotta get you warm
   
Hot rum, steam heat
My lips taste sweet
I got warm cookin'
Spread the table, take a seat
  
North Pole man
Can you afford to?
You outta come here
Come south of the border
  
Come down real slow
It's warm down below
It takes perspiration 
to melt the snow
   
  
  
  
  
    
cce
   

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Born On A Day The Sun Didn't Rise

  
    
#133
12.12.10
    
Born On A Day The Sun Didn't Rise 
- Black Moth Super Rainbow 
 





 
Proper thanks go to the lobby ceiling at the Bear Tooth Pub, Anchorage, Alaska.
 
CCE
 

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Gold Splatter

   
      
#132 
12.05.10
  
Gold Splatter - Black Moth Super Rainbow
    
      
    
   
CCE
   

Friday, November 26, 2010

Wasted Daylight


  
#131
11.26.10
  
Wasted Daylight - Stars
  
Stars is yet another amazing band out of Canada.  Pound for pound, Canada puts out the best Indie music in the world!  Most (if not all) members of Stars are also part of the band Broken Social Scene, which in turn has spun off a few excellent solo recording artists including Jason Collett and Feist.

11.26.10 0830

11.26.10 0850

11.26.10 1050

11.26.10 1200

11.26.10 1620

11.26.10 1650

This series of photos was started at 8:30 am this morning through about 5 pm this evening.  The bright light in the early and late photos is a street lamp.  Our sunrise in Anchorage was 9:34 am and the sun set was 3:58 pm, for a total of 6 hours 25 minutes of daylight.  We're losing 4 minutes and 11 seconds of light per day, and it's very noticeable on a weekly basis.  We'll get down to 5 hours of daylight per day on Winter Solstice, 12.21.10 (sunrise 10:30 am, sunset 3:30 pm).  The Sun stays low on the horizon during daylight, which is great if you like long shadows and half-light like I do.

Most people think this must be terrible and depressing... we actually quite like the dark nights with bright lights from the sky, decorated homes, fireplace, etc.  Many people leave up their decorative lights through Valentines Day, or beyond.  This is one reason Anchorage is sometimes called "The City of Lights".
   
CCE
     

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