First Serious Snow of Winter 2014

View from our front door.

I suppose that to be precise it isn’t Winter yet, but it certainly feels like it. We had somewhere between 7 inches and a foot of snow.

Bench and patio table.

Leaves.

The above pictures were taken around 2:00 p.m., five hours into the storm and with about another 10 hours to go (although to be fair it did diminish significantly as the day went on). Shortly after they were taken the power went out. A fire and some candles made the situation somewhat more bearable. As a friend remarked it looks quite romantic. Yes – it was warm enough and quite cosy, but when you think that for us no power means no water (we have well water and without electricity the well pump doesn’t work) and no water means no functioning toilets – the romance kind of goes away. The power came back on around 5:15 p.m. – shortly after this picture was taken – so it wasn’t too bad.

Today (two days later) I went down to our other house to shovel the snow in the driveway and was surprised to find that there wasn’t any. What a difference 26 miles makes.

Dakar, Senegal 2003

Seascape.

I went to Dakar on a business-related trip in October, 2003. I was accompanied by a colleague who had never been to a developing country before. We arrived around 1:00 a.m. and after waiting a while our luggage came out – or at least mine did. Luggage kept coming out and gradually as passengers picked up their luggage there as less and less luggage on the conveyor. My colleague was really getting worried. She was sure that hers had been lost. Finally the very last of the luggage came out and right at the end, the very last piece, there was hers. Phew!

We left the airport to find what seemed to be around 300 mildly threatening looking guys with taxis. We asked one of them how much to go to our hotel and were told $300. Luckily I’d checked with some of our local staff in advance and been told no more than $2. We reached agreement with one of the drivers and he piled our luggage very precariously in a very small car trunk and off we went. I noticed that the windshield was cracked – in fact I subsequently discovered that every taxi we took had a broken windshield. We went down a paved road and after a few minutes the taxi turned off onto a dirt road. My colleague was very concerned at this point. She thought that he was going to take us out into the jungle and kill us. However, after following the shortcut for a few minutes we arrived at the hotel, which turned out to be about five minutes away from the airport.

From the price we were paying for the hotel I wasn’t expecting much, but was pleasantly surprised. The rooms were spacious: two floors with a living room downstairs and a bedroom upstairs and a fantastic view out over the sea (see picture above). My colleague remarked about so many people enjoying the sea. Actually they lived in shacks on the beach and were trying to escape the heat. Other than a place to serve breakfast the hotel had no restaurant of its own, but luckily there were a number of really good restaurants just a short walk along the beach away.

Since we were working we didn’t have a lot of free time, but we were able to take time out to go to Goree Island, where the rest of the pictures were taken and which was the last destination before the new world for many slaves. The slave house has a really oppressive feel to it – so much so that my colleague couldn’t take it and had to go outside.

Children swimming off Goree Island. Actually they were diving for coins.

Bus.

Slave Memorial Statue Ile Goree Dakar Senegal West Africa. This is significantly manipulated. In reality the background to the statue is a plain wall, but I didn’t like that and replaced with this one. I don’t usually do this much manipulation, but to me this fabulous statue needed a better background than a plain wall.

Painting. I know I bought one and my colleague bought another. I can’t remember which one this is. I bought mine for my wife, but I guess she didn’t like it much because it was never framed and I have no idea what became of it.

“We Are All the Same”: A Conversation with Josef Koudelka

Prague, 1968, Josef Koudelka. Gelatin silver print, 5 3/4 x 9 in. Image courtesy of the Art Institute of Chicago, promised gift of private collector. © Josef Koudelka/Magnum Photos

Interesting interview with Josef Koudelka. Eric Kim’s commentary on the interview is also worth a read: 7 Lessons Josef Koudelka Has Taught Me About Photography and Life. His seven lessons, which he explains in much greater detail in his post, are:

1. Create the conditions of your life
2. Follow your intuition
3. On composition
4. Photograph for yourself
5. Remain interested in photography
6. Empathize with your subjects
7. Separate yourself from your photos

“The Czech-born photographer on freedom, landscape, empathy—and why good photographs are so rare

By Laura Hubber and Annelisa Stephan | November 20, 2014 via “We Are All the Same”: A Conversation with Josef Koudelka | The Getty Iris.

Main Street, Beacon, NY

Tabernacle Church of Christ (I think)

I’ve been to Beacon a few times, but have usually limited myself to the walks down by the river. This time I decided to take a walk along Main Street.

It’s a long main street – much longer than the other Hudson River towns I’ve been to. It features a number of galleries, coffee shops, restaurants and even a theatre (The Beacon Theatre). One end borders on what seems to have been an old industrial area: Some of the old industrial buildings are in poor shape, but a number have been converted and renovated for other uses including the Round House at Beacon Falls, which is now a hotel, and conference center. I’ve eaten in the restaurant (Swift) twice and on both occasions the food was excellent – and the location near the falls on Fishkill Creek is hard to beat.

All in all a nice walk in very pleasant town. I’d like to go back sometime and try some of the restaurants and coffee shops.

Shop window.

Machine (I have no idea what it is) in a shop window.

Traffic Light.

Statue in front of the American Legion Post.