Monthly Archives: November 2014

The swings don’t, anymore

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Beside the old Route 66 is an old playground. It’s hard to imagine anyone playing here, with the hard ground littered with glittery bits of broken beer bottles, but maybe in the past someone did.

Maybe I did. Santa Rosa was on our family’s route from home to the mountains, where we camped each summer of my childhood. We didn’t stop often on these trips; Santa Rosa would have been the first stop since home, and I guess there’s a chance that my sister and I were shooed from the car to go use up some energy before the next part of the trip commenced. (I am almost positive that it was in Santa Rosa that my dad gave me, in the very early days of my literacy, a lesson on how to find the correct restroom. The one I wanted, he explained, said, “Whoa, men.”)

These days, the swing set and the rest of that playground don’t have any visitors. Except for a photographer or two, stopping by.

Santa Rosa, New Mexico
photographed 5.4.2013

Fresh, hot coffee

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I am positive that there IS a place to get fresh, hot coffee in Santa Rosa. But I am just as positive that this isn’t it.

Santa Rosa, New Mexico
photographed 5.4.2013

Sale or trade

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It’s really no secret to anyone who’s been around the blog for very long that I have a fondness for Santa Rosa, New Mexico…

Many years ago, I made quite a few trips between Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Lubbock, Texas; at that time all I knew about Santa Rosa was that was where to turn (right, heading to Lubbock; left, to Albuquerque). I never drove through town, a fact which is sort of embarrassing to admit. In recent years, my family have taken up scuba diving and (this doesn’t even sound right), there’s a place to dive in Santa Rosa. These days, I tag along on as many scuba trips as I can; while the divers are diving, I am exploring. The old Route 66 is a treasure of abandoned buildings (mostly gas stations, now usurped by big chain stations-with-convenience-stores over on the interstate.)

For the five years or so that I’ve been photographing Santa Rosa, the fluorescent lights inside the service bay at this old Exxon station have been on. I don’t know why. Maybe to illuminate that Sale or Trade sign. Just in case.

Santa Rosa, New Mexico
photographed 5.4.2013

High and Dry Show

I was happy to learn that my photo “Mundane” was accepted into the 14th annual High and Dry Show at Texas Tech University. The show goes up next week, and the opening reception will be held on December 5th at the International Cultural Center on the Texas Tech campus.

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near Abiquiu, New Mexico

The show is hosted by the International Center for Arid and Semiarid Lands Studies (ICASALS), which was founded in 1966 to foster research and education on improving the quality of life in arid and semiarid regions of the world. Most of the projects undertaken by ICASALS involve water supply and conservation, ground water management, irrigation, farming, urban and rural development, and the use of alternative energy sources.

Show sponsors include the CH Foundation and Tech’s Office of International Affairs. (My pal Brett Erickson is in the show, too.)

All rectangles (nearly)

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Here’s another photo that’s mostly rectangles – only that row of weeds breaks the pattern.

Midland, Texas
photographed 8.23.14