Blog Archives

The narrowest street

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This street is said to be the narrowest one in Canada. Some construction work on one of the adjacent buildings made it feel even more narrow, with scaffolding blocking the light. My excellent tour guide, Ehpem showed it to me. I am pretty sure I wouldn’t have found it on my own…

Fan Tan Alley
Victoria, British Columbia
photographed 8.3.2014

Don’t just dream

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Sometimes the best advice is unsolicited and painted on a wall. Like the one I found in Lubbock last winter. Or this one Ehpem and I found the other day in Victoria.

(Although, if you really want to know, I sure did want to find some spray paint and correct it.)

Victoria, British Columbia
photographed 8.3.2014

Uncharacteristic

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It was an early morning: we left at 4:00 a.m. to head out of town to shoot the sunrise over the desert.

This is looking south (why look just to the east, especially when the sunrise is less than expected?) toward the Sandia Mountains, the tops of which are shrouded.

Santa Fe Photographic Workshops
near Madrid, New Mexico
photographed 7.2.2014

After the season

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It’s pretty quiet at the soccer complex this time of the year, between seasons.

There were several rabbits, some birds, a toad, and (literally) a snake in the grass. But no soccer players or soccer coaches or soccer moms. Just the wildlife and me and distant storm clouds.

As a warning to anyone who might be considering a visit out here: the far end of the bottom bench has become un-welded from the frame so if you sit down on it, down is how you’ll keep going for longer than you might expect. (Want to guess how I know?!)

Burl Huffman Soccer Complex
Lubbock, Texas
photographed 8.16.2014

Drive safely

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It wasn’t all that long ago that the only way to purchase a six-pack was to drive out into the county, where there were a lot of small beer stores scattered around, most of them featuring covered, drive-through lanes. In May 2009, voters approved package alcohol sales within the city limits, and these beer stores weren’t able to compete. After all, who’d drive all the way out in the country to get beer when it was readily available right here in town?

This place was one of those old beer stores; it had the requisite drive-through lane and looks to have featured Budweiser quite prominently. I can’t explain the mattress wedged into the building, but the “Drive Safely” sign is a thoughtful reminder.

(True Story: the first round of permits for in-town alcohol sales kicked off in September 2009. My spouse and I were on vacation when the fateful day arrived. When we got back to Lubbock, we stopped at the grocery store on the way home just to gaze at the booze for sale RIGHT THERE. We felt, finally, like grownups.)

Lubbock County, Texas
photographed 8.17.2014