Monday, December 6, 2010

Amsterdam Photos






Great city. Lots and lots of bicycles. In fact your more likely to get hit by a bike than a car, bus, or tram! If I remember correctly there are some 500,000 bikes for every 650,000 people. The streets are narrow, no parking either so a bike makes sense. They race up and down the streets, back and forth, endlessly. When you hear the little bell, move fast because they don't expect to slow down for you. It wasn't pleasant most the time dealing with the locals. They all speak english but as a tourist they don't seem to like you very much. You can tell their patience has been tested and over tested long ago with the tourist scene in the area. I tried not to act like the typical tourist, but it's hard when your lost.

Saturday, November 6, 2010

Amsterdam


I took a different approach to travel this year. Instead of an isolated place as far away from the city as I can get playing in the ocean or trekking a jungle, I'm going to Amsterdam. And, it will not involve tropical weather with 85 degree ocean water. It will be cold, windy and rainy - but I've wanted to go for years to celebrate the festivals that take place there during November. And what better weather could there be for coffee shop(s), bar(s), some Heineken(s) and the cannabis cup - plus add thousands of fun loving people that just want to enjoy life with some smoke, music, art, film festival, coffee shops, and live music every night. Sounds like a good pre-cursor to the more serious trips I want to follow up with. I will get to Africa, Palau to swim in jelly fish lake, Thailand, Philippines - ah hell you name it I want to be there at least once. But for now, this is a trip I want to do solo without feeling lonely. I managed to acquire a good deal of airline miles and even had some extra points for my room. All together I am just paying for my judges pass and partly for the hotel, which is located right in the center of the Leidseplein. I expect to hopefully get some interesting photos of my journey. Obviously it won't be a seascape or any underwater stuff - but variety, novelty - all still around the corner. I'm going to pick up a 50mm fixed lense (fast for low light/indoors) and probably a fisheye lens as well because coffee shop shots (if I'm allowed) would be great with a fisheye - since reality is going to be a bit altered to begin with. I am a true Californian, I have no cold weather clothing, looks like I got some shopping to do.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Love and Hate

*click the image for full size*


Cabin fever, but I'm not in a cabin. Or in the woods. Let's see, "city fever?"
The "I gotta get the fuck out of dodge" feeling. Instead of a gambling problem I have a wicked travel addiction. Can't stop thinking about it. How does someone stay still. Not curious, other than a television? Really? The neighborhood?
Tanzania, Zanzibar continue to haunt me. If I booked the plane ticket to Dar es Salaam, Tanzania say November 20th right now - cost is so doable. But those Safari companies need an arm and a leg and well, is it possible to rough it in Africa?...without being eat'n by something?

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

"Do Not Mistake Temptation For Opportunity"




That was from a fortune cookie 8 years ago. I know it exactly because I had just left the music biz to work in post-production sound and kept it. As I was pacing around the house I've been sharing for those 8 years, mulling over the many memories that are being left behind, there it was again-sitting on the floor in the corner of my old studio, waiting for me to pick up and ponder again. It had fallen behind one of my book cases. When I first read it those years ago my life was in complete change and I was starting over. As I find it again today, it is ironic that I am again in a place of complete change and starting over.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

My Valentine

Redondo Beach. Huge waves.
Click on photos to view full size.





Monday, February 8, 2010

Sunset Point Beach

Weather in Los Angeles after a storm is wonderful. Clean crisp air all around.
I managed to pick up my camera and take some pictures. Haven't been feeling creative as of late and since I'm lazy, I chose to go to the water and take photos instead of finishing some damn music. I don't mean to say photography is easy, it just takes me alot less time than being isolated in a room trying to figure out what I want to say. With a camera, it's right in front of me. Just got to frame it and pull the trigger.


Below are long exposure shots, straight out of the camera. No processing or photoshop at all. I love my D300!






I am really finding a style I like by using long exposures to create a kind of Monet or watercolor effect. As the waves roll in and out and the light reflections during sunset change the color tones, you get a different photo each time. Within a minute or less you can take the same photo and the lighting is already different.




These 3 photos below are all favorites, but I can't say which one tops another. I like them all because even though it's the same frame, the end results are completely different. This first shot I prefer the colors and the reflecting light on the sand. Also the wave motion looks more dramatic.

Overall I seem to prefer the overall balance of this shot below. The ghosting of the water, the shadowing, and the color tones of the sea are appealing.

Less color here below, but the ghosting effect of the waves stands out more. The grey-ishness and frothy white in the foreground-well, just the mood of this photo hits home for me. This one is best viewed full size-click on the photo(s) to enlarge them.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Respect=Weakness?

*excerpts pasted from Yahoo news*

"Obama on Monday was in China, having wrapped up the Japan leg of his Asia trip two days earlier. But Washington's punditocracy was still weighing whether or not the US president had disgraced his country two days earlier by having taken a deep bow at the waist while meeting Japan's Emperor Akihito."

"Political talk shows have played and replayed the moment from the second day of Obama's week-long Asia tour, which set the blogosphere on fire and chat show tongues wagging."

"I don't know why President Obama thought that was appropriate. Maybe he thought it would play well in Japan. But it's not appropriate for an American president to bow to a foreign one," said conservative pundit William Kristol speaking on the Fox News Sunday program, adding that the gesture bespoke a United States that has become weak and overly-deferential under Obama."

Another conservative voice, Bill Bennett, said on CNN's "State of the Union" program: "It's ugly. I don't want to see it."

"We don't defer to emperors. We don't defer to kings or emperors. The president of the United States -- this coupled with so many apologies from the United States -- is just another thing," said Bennett.

Some conservative critics juxtaposed the image of Obama with one of former US vice president Dick Cheney, who greeted the emperor in 2007 with a firm handshake but no bow.
(no, no, no that isn't BIASED opinion at all!)

"I'll bet if you look at pictures of world leaders over 20 years meeting the emperor in Japan, they don't bow," Kristol said.
(so much for being secure within yourself and your country-we should present ourselves as overbearing idiots instead?)

"Some said the gesture was particularly grating coming after Obama's bow to Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah at a G20 meeting in April."



Excrement.

I am an American. California native. Not particularly patriotic. The only time I ever entertained the idea of joining the military was during my high school years when I was having an inner argument about whether or not I was really going to keep music as a respectable hobby and pursue my childhood fascination of becoming a fighter pilot instead. I grew up around test pilots, math books, photos and models of military aircraft, and books about the history of war and aviation. My father was an aeronautical engineer working for Skunk Works. That also meant quite a few years of not getting to see him very often or knowing exactly what he did for a living. At first as a kid when I was told pops was an engineer, I thought he drove a train. He never spoke to me at all about what he did for a living.

I will not discuss politics with him. Ever. Again. First of all because although I have strong feelings and opinions about politics-politicians are a different story. Everyone knows it but we blindly elect them and pay our taxes anyway because, well, government has a way of eventually forcing it. Do we know where all that money goes? Nope. Each new generation gets a bit closer to the rat that's stinking up the joint called Washington D.C. though. - Secondly, you cannot change the older generations mode of thought. They have subscribed to certain institutions for their entire lives and identify with them. Even if there is a rat. And, what about that older generation in Washington D.C.? Well, think of the family fortunes and reputations at stake. Just because oil and plastics along with other man made fortunes is ruining the environment and sending the planet into an irreversable catastrophe doesn't mean anyone is going to step up and "respect" the land, the ocean, or fellow human beings. Which brings me to ponder: at what point does showing respect for others and their values amount to weakness? "Deferential" is a word the worlds leaders could spend more quality time pondering if they cared to. But they don't. Either they don't subscribe to deferential thinking because they have a mind that is already officially bought, or they're smart enough to know that the people who put them in office will swiftly get them removed. Career over. Secret bank accounts, gone. Lobbyist funded family vacations, over.

For me, only a political puppet would consider it offensive to show respect towards others customs in their native country. Respect is akin to strength. Strength is gained by an initial 'respect' for things you do not have the strength to understand or control. I want to applaud the President for showing respect and acknowledging validity in other cultures while travelling away from the United States. Without experiencing other cultures, people become blind in their own little space-ignorant of others struggles, beliefs, challenges, tragedies and accomplishments. When traveling abroad, our leaders image dictates much about how we are viewed and treated by others in other countries. In Belize, suddenly to be American was to be respected and admired- we elected a black president and ran with the iconic word (in politics) "change."

We already have an international reputation for being a closed off bully ready to explode and exploit any culture for our own benefit at any time. Why not throw this curve ball?
After all it's practically right out of Sun Tzu's "The Art Of War" if any conservative, warmongering politicians care to pick it up and learn something.

I know they teach it at West Point. But then again, how many politicians earned their way in to West Point?

Nuff said.