Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Through Space and Time

Driving across this vast and beautiful country is like watching the ever shifting canvas of a landscape painting brought to life. 

The low-angled autumn sun strikes the slopes and plains with a luminous glow, intensifying the colors of the changing leaves and dried vegetation. 

A diversity of geologic forms and textures undulate into and out of view as they tell their stories of creation and destruction. 

Drifting clouds decorate the wide blue sky with shades of gray, occasionally obscuring the bright white bulb of the sun.

Mirrored in the lakes and rivers are impressions of a deep blue watery world where trees and mountains ripple in the wind.

The hand of humankind is evident across the blacktopped roads and gently curving wooden snow fences, on the faces of history carved into stone, by the blanket of crops and scattering of cattle, and in the buildings and towns that rise above the horizon.

Each of us at the intersection of past, present and future, moving through space and time, counting down the hours and the miles as we marvel at the miracle of it all.

Lambs Canyon, near Park City, Utah
Along I80 passing through Rock Springs, Wyoming
Late afternoon outside Casper, Wyoming
The Black Hills of South Dakota
Mt. Rushmore
Custer State Park
Sylvan Lake
Rapid City, South Dakota
Where the Great Plains and the Badlands meet
Badlands National Park
Near Alden, Minnesota
Naperville, Illinois

Sunday, December 22, 2013

A Year in Photographs

JANUARY brought an opportunity to share the winter beauty of Yosemite Valley with my whole family...



FEBRUARY provided moments to appreciate the coziness of a warm house on a cold day...



MARCH saw some much needed rain and a profusion of flowers...



APRIL was full of visits with family and friends in both Yosemite and Indiana...



MAY allowed time to reflect on the past and ponder my path into the future...



JUNE foreshadowed the forest fires and home repair projects that would persist throughout our summer and fall...



JULY offered an escape from the intense California heat to the cool shores of Lake Superior and a chance to hang out with my sister and nephew in Minnesota...



AUGUST afforded us a break from home renovating to explore the Monterey coast and Sierra Nevada high country...



SEPTEMBER was full of fun times with good friends in the Tetons and Oakland...



OCTOBER was a challenging time of transition and loss for loved ones back home in Indiana...



NOVEMBER made me grateful for unexpected moments of beauty and relaxing family vacations...



And DECEMBER has been filled with winter wonders...



Happy holidays to all and best wishes for the coming new year!

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Albuquerque from Above

We arrive at the balloon launch site around sunrise. As the pink cirrus clouds above begin to fade to white, a myriad of supplies are unpacked and three long rainbow colored carpets are laid out along the ground. A confusion of cables is unfurled and generator-driven fans roar to life. Jets of wind ripple into the gaping mouths of fabric as three immense balloons begin to take shape.




The burners are ignited and that’s when the magic starts. Hot pulses of air blast into the supine balloons changing their hummocky exteriors into taut teardrop-shaped globes. Finally, ever so gently, each balloon uprights to its full vertical stature and ten individuals are loaded, like so many chocolate Easter bunnies, into each empty basket below.


Objects of reference on the ground begin to fall away and shrink as the buoyant balloon rises into the air. A surreal sense of stillness abounds, made all the more palpable by the contrast of occasional combustive bursts from the burner. Everyone is transfixed by the beauty of the topography below, and by the rare opportunity to experience a sweeping aerial view of the world unencumbered by glass.



The air is cold and still, not even a hint of breeze. We fly parallel to the Rio Grande and see a flock of Sandhill cranes wading below, their long dark shadows cast across the flat surface of the river. The late autumn trees glow like golden torches in the morning light, sharply contrasting with the elongated strands of shade that darken the ground at their feet.




We drift south of the river over the intermingled neighborhoods and fields of Albuquerque. Densely packed developments of pueblo-style homes create a harmonious mosaic of rectangles. Large tree ringed farm plots are dotted with a variety of structures – houses, outbuildings, fences, fountains, pools, ponds, gazebos, orchards, gardens and paths. Each property a sprawling testament to the lives, occupations, and histories of the generations that have resided there. In that moment, a multitude of scattered dog barks filter up unhindered through the air to join in a morning chorus punctuated by the occasional rooster's call.



As the balloon slowly descends back to the ground, it passes over a mining operation. The juxtaposed gentle curves and stick straight lines make for a mesmerizing composition. Miniature dump trucks glide lazily around the sculpted piles of gravel and sand, shaping and reshaping a landscape created by an infinite accumulation of energy - eons of geologic deposition and centuries of human innovation. I cannot get the word ‘industrious’ out of my mind.



And then I am reminded of a quote I read recently, one which I could not understand fully until this moment, "It is from the air that the true relationship between the natural and the human landscape is first clearly revealed. The peaks and canyons lose much of their impressiveness when seen from above. What catches our eye and arouses our interest is not the sandy washes and the naked rocks, but the evidences of man." – J.B. Jackson


I marvel at all the ways across generations that the landscape has shaped us, and how we have shaped it in return.