Monthly Archives: May 2015

The remains of last week’s offering

051115

My friend Ehpem lives only a couple of blocks from the Chinese Cemetery. I’d gone there on my previous visit but was so captivated by the ocean that I forgot to photograph the cemetery, an astounding oversight on my part.

On my recent visit, Ehpem and I were eating dinner when he interrupted his own sentence and said, “Look at the light! We need to get to the cemetery right now!” And off we went.

A bank of clouds meant that the light wasn’t quite what we were expecting, but we did what we could. And finished dinner after the sun was down.

There’s an interesting article on the cemetery here, if you’re interested.

Chinese Cemetery
Victoria, BC
photographed 4.23.2015

As if the rocks were holding them

051015

Rocks. Seaweed. Low sun. Ocean.

I don’t know what else to say.

Point No Point Resort
near Shirley, BC
photographed 4.21.2015

PS. I know: two color photos in two day’s time!

Fan

050915

My excellent host, Ehpem, just happened to plan our adventure in a way that included a stop at an abandoned house (he knows me well) and we spent an enjoyable morning exploring the place. You can see his first image from that stop here.

Are you surprised that this is in color? I am, too, a little bit, but those blues and greens were just too lovely to convert to shades of gray.

Jordan River, British Columbia
photographed 4.22.15

Clouds reaching toward the sea

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Planning a trip around low tide is something that wouldn’t occur to me, since I live on the High Plains. (We’d be more likely to plan a trip when the wind is generally calm, which we define as “below 45 miles per hour.”) Anyway, my tour guides, Ehpem and his lovely spouse, planned our day so we’d arrive at this beach at low tide. That gave us a view of the tidepools and rocks. The waves and clouds were especially accommodating that day, too, and all of us found lots of things to photograph.

Botanical Beach
San Juan de Fuca Provincial Park, British Columbia
photographed 4.22.2015

Disappears around the bend

050715

My tour guides took me to see the Kinsol Trestle, which is one of the highest railway trestles in the world, coming in at 44m tall. The trestle was operational from 1920 to 1979, and has been recently restored. But for now it’s for feet, not trains: it’s part of the Trans-Canada Trail.

Kinsoll Trestle
near Shawnigan Lake, BC
photographed 4.22.2015