Blog Archives

Standing Guard

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We took a trip to Dallas to look at a park.

That’s not odd, is it?

(Never mind. I know it’s weird. Embrace the weirdness, I say!)

At the park, we saw a tight row of bollards, designed to keep kids inside the playground.

Klyde Warren Park
Dallas, Texas 
photographed 1.7.2015

Pittsburg Paints and the topiaries

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Painted topiaries add a whimsical note to the street, don’t they? They may well be the only topiaries in town, although I will admit that I did not do a complete inspection.

Abernathy, Texas
photographed 2.12.2016

So much in so little

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We were in a bakery, because it’s so important to support local businesses as much as possible. And also, cookies were involved.

Anyway, I looked out the window and spotted this wall on the building next door. Suddenly cookies didn’t seem that important.

For just a short stretch of wall, this one has a lot going on. In a good way.

Santa Fe, New Mexico
photographed 12.24.2015

Trash, and a burro

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There’s a one-block-long street in Santa Fe called Burro Alley; in the 19th century it was the place where firewood sellers would park their wood-laden donkeys. And then, apparently, the sellers would spend the money on booze and hookers.*

Now it’s just a little side street, with a burro-festooned gate and some trash containers.

Burro Alley
Santa Fe, New Mexico
photographed 12.24.2015

*Historical note: in over seven years of blogging, this is the first time I’ve used the term “booze and hookers.” I mention it because I thought you’d want to know.

Blocked

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The thing about going someplace like Santa Fe is that all the regular stuff has been photographed about a million times. (I’ve made those shots, too: it’s some kind of law or Photographer’s Code or something, I think.)

But after that’s out of the way, it’s time for peering down alleys. And walking around back.

And that’s how you find a short alley, blocked by a trash container, with a discarded Christmas tree in the far corner.

I like it a lot better than another photo of the Palace of the Governors.

Santa Fe, New Mexico
photographed 12.24.1015