Blog Archives

Nooses? Yes, it looks like nooses.

082413

I don’t really know what would have gone on at the ice house (other than the making of ice, I mean), so I am not entirely sure why there’d be a row of big eye bolts on the outside of the building.

But check out the noose-shadows on the corrugated metal wall. I’m not saying that was my favorite thing I’ve ever seen in Marfa, but it’s right up there with this. Oh, and here’s a wider view of the ice house, taken on a previous trip. Before I knew about the nooses.

Marfa, Texas
photographed 8.16.2013

What I didn’t photograph that day

082213

This was my first visit to Valentine. This is what happened:

I was in Marfa. I thought about going to look at the cemetery. And headed out that way. Then saw a mileage sign that said Valentine was 35 miles away. I ditched the idea of a cemetery visit and headed over to Valentine.

Not too much going on in Valentine, other than the famous (?) Prada Marfa scuplture (or, installation, if you will), which to be honest I didn’t look for because I was a lot more interested in the way the storm looked over the HiWay Cafe. Also, the sculpture/installation has had its picture taken a lot, and I wanted to try to make things right with the Cafe.

And, I am a little bit of a contrarian: if “everyone” takes a picture of something, you can be pretty sure I’ll aim my camera elsewhere. (Sorry. None of you really needed me to point THAT, did you!?)

Valentine, Texas
photographed 8.16.2013

The things I’ll do…

082113

Here’s another shot, from a different trip, of the very same wall in Marfa. This time, though, I spotted the yucca that had been very considerate to send its wavy stalk up right in front of the white line on the wall.

In the interest of full disclosure*, I want to point out that the yucca wasn’t the only, uh, spiky plant in the area. And that I wasn’t standing upright to shoot this. If you see what I am getting at. Also: red ants. There were a lot of red ants. And they weren’t all that happy to have an itinerant photographer show up and walk around their front yard.

Marfa, Texas
photographed 8.16.2013

*Or, as it is also known, too much information.

Say…

082013

I hope you’ve had the chance to have a friend that makes everything an adventure, who is keen to get off the beaten path to see what’s out there, who still laughs at every ridiculous thing that ever happened.

My friend Carlos is that kind of friend. We’ve known each other forever, approximately, and have had more than our share of good times. We’ve laughed together until we had tears in our eyes, and we’ve shared hard times, too, that also brought tears.

And, so this day: we were driving around outside of Austin, pretty much lost, taking skinnier and skinnier roads just to see what we could find. And we found an abandoned house. An abandoned house, without a No Trespassing sign, which was even better. And, there beside what used to be a window was this hulk that used to be a chair.

Later, that same afternoon, we stopped in at a roadside beer hall, where a chatty man struck up a conversation with us. “Say, where are you folks from?” he asked us. Over and over, he asked us. I played it straight (I know: that wasn’t like me at all. It must have been the heat.) but Carlos gave him a different answer every time. Old guy never seemed to notice. Later, a couple of beers (for us; way more than a couple for him), he tried to sell us the bar and the town it was located in. We declined. Then, even later, he confided that it was a nice enough place to drink, until night when the “cockroaches” showed up. Once we realized that was a racial slur and not an observation from the field of entomology, it seemed like a good time to leave.

Hays County, Texas
photographed 8.8.2009

PS – If you want to see Carlos almost pass out from laughing, ask him about the time I rented a van….

See it. But don’t believe it.

081413

Another view of a movie set in the wilds of West Texas that I featured earlier this year.

As with the previously-featured building, this one was disconcerting: the exterior looked old, with the hitching post out front and that porch roof made of branches*. But on the inside, modern-day plywood was visible…

near Lajitas, Texas
photographed 1.20.2013

*Correctly called latillas, which I could pretend I knew all along, but which actually I only just now looked up. We strive for honesty here at One Day | One Image. Unless an exaggeration** or cheap joke seems more appropriate.

** Actual comment, from my spouse to me, said without irony: You always exaggerate.