
Sunday, April 26, 2009
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Portland, Oregon
Sunday, April 12, 2009
Old Town

There was something that struck me when we flew in and that was how developed the land is - all under plow or with streets and buildings it seemed.
Lewis and Clark made their expedition between 1803 to 1806. By 1850, Portland was a pretty good sized town. By the late 1800' s, the railroads had tamed the West and the American Indians were all on reservations. Within a few more years a lot of the rivers had been dammed and a substantial amount of the forest logged. The entire area had been wilderness and now only remnants remain.
Two hundred years later it is all drastically different. I have always thought that change has accelerated in my lifetime but I am not so sure. At least you didn't see that much of a change to the landscape when the semiconductor was invented or the internet was invented (not by Al Gore as sometimes thought). To take a place from wilderness to tamed in 100 years is pretty dramatic. One hundred years doesn't seem as long anymore since I have lived more than 50 myself. I wish they had left a little more of it pristine.
I think I wrote once that the rain forest seems to go on forever in PNG. It must have seemed the same to the pioneers.
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Portland, Oregon

Monday, April 06, 2009
Commemorative 5th Anniversary Blog

About five years ago I started blogging for the first time. I know that you are jumping up and down to hear the story so I interviewed myself. Here is the transcript:
Q: So, how did you get started with this blogging anyway?
A: Well, it started when I went to Japan five years ago to start work on a new project and my Mother asked me to make sure and write at least once a week so she would know I was OK. I did, and just to let others know I was OK, I copied them on the emails I wrote. Tried to make them interesting too… One day, my niece Erica suggested my stories were interesting enough that maybe I could put them into one of those new fangled blogs. That was the first I ever heard of a blog but I tried it. Since then I have made over 500 entries had over 13,000 visits.
Q: That is interesting. What made you name it Lost in Japan?
A: The hardest part about starting the blog was giving it a name. But there was a movie out back then called Lost in Translation (starring Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson) and it was filmed in and around where I was living. At the end of the movie you can see the apartment building I lived in. Anyway, I kind of ripped off the title and it seemed to fit because sometimes I felt a bit lost over there.
Q: What a great story. But you don’t live in Japan any more, why don’t you change the title?
A: Like I said, coming up with a blog title is hard. Anyway, sometimes I get lost in Kingwood, Texas but not so much anymore because I bought a GPS that speaks and gives directions.
Q: Fascinating. What about the pictures you post in your blog?
A: At first I didn’t put pictures in. In fact, I just copied my emails into the blog. But at some point I found you could put pictures in and I bought a little 3 M pixel Canon point and shoot and started sticking them in when I had an interesting one. Japan is interesting visually so usually I could find something during the week and I always carried the camera with me.
Q: This really is delightful. So, do you consider yourself a photographer or a journalist?
A: Actually, neither. I am an engineer. But I like both writing and photography. Lately I’ve tended a bit more towards photography. I like techie gadgets. Maybe I am a photojournalist who does both. I really like a good picture but it has to tell a story. But a lot of the time you don’t get the story from my pictures without a few words.
Q: You are just as interesting in person as you are on the printed page. And your pictures really are of a professional quality. I just love your pictures of Australia.
A: Thank you.
Q: Let’s talk about your favorite postings in the blog. What would those be?
A: I like it best when I’m able to elicit a response from my readers. So anytime I get a comment or an email response I am encouraged to keep blogging.
Q: Who generally responds? I would have thought anyone reading your poetry and seeing the artistic visions you capture would be compelled to write back to you.
A: I’ve had comments from all over the world but most of the comments seem to come from a guy named Stu Monkey and Megan. I heard that Stu Monkey had a facebook page but he hasn’t invited me to be his friend even though he invited Megan.
Q: I wouldn't worry about Stu Monkey if I were you but I have noticed that you have fans from all over the world. In what countries are you most popular?
A: Outside of the United States, I get the most hits from Indonesia followed by a tie between Thailand and Australia. I don’t know why Thailand or Indonesia. Interestingly, I’ve had two visits from the Islamic Republic of Iran but only one from Latvia.
Q: Where do you get your topics?
A: I try to see something everyday that interests me visually or something that I would like to learn more about. There is enough reporting of bad news in the world and the blogophere is full of whiners, so to distinguish myself I write about good things.
Q: I see. Why don't you write about your work. That must be really interesting too.
A: You have to have a life outside work. If you are going to bring work up, I'll have to end this interview right now...
Q: OK, OK, don't get your knickers in a twist. Thanks for taking the time to share your insights on blogging with us.
A: No worries mate. Hasta la vista. Mata ato de.
btw, the picture at the top is an iris blooming in the pond in the little park across the street. It has nothing to do with the story, but I had to stick a picture in...
Saturday, April 04, 2009
Children Dancing, Papa Village

Dance to Commemorate Hail Storm in Kingwood, Texas
Hail Storm in Kingwood, Texas

Sunday, March 29, 2009
Tattoo

Tattoos are pretty popular in Australia, perhaps even more popular than what they are in the United States. Girls get them, guys get them, and sometimes it isn't clear what it was that got them. There is a a kind of Moiri pattern that seems popular. Of course in PNG they still do traditional tattoos in some spots. I don't know whether these fine fellows are tattoo artists, customers, or hanger-ons....
Sunday, March 08, 2009
Brenham, Texas

By the time of the American Civil War, Washington County was the most populated area of Texas and Brenham was the county seat. There was a railroad up from Houston and it was for Texas a wealthy and civilized place.
Today it is a good sized country town that was obviously quite wealthy at one time, but a bit faded. I've placed some photographs in the slide show and while I hope they stand up on their own, I feel like I should explain them a bit.
I shot them with an extreme wide angle lens and to keep the perspective from being too distorted I kept the horizon around mid frame and shot a lot of the buildings head on. This tended to put a large expanse of the street in the foreground. The thing that struck me about Brenham today, a beautiful Sunday afternoon, was that there were very few cars and very few people. The pictures look like poorly composed postcards, but to me the empty streets that dominate the foreground are symbolic of the movement to cities that took place in the last century.
I was actually thinking about postcards when I took the photographs. I read an article in the paper this morning about an exhibition of postcards and about how individually they are usually pretty vapid - blue sky, green grass, local landmarks. Just like my photographs. What made the collection being exhibited interesting were the comments people had written on them and the overwhelming sameness and at the same time difference in all of them being posted together.
Click on the slide show to see it more closely. All of the pictures have empty streets, buildings in varying degrees of care, and what was at one time a new and very vibrant town. I wonder what makes one town grow, others shrink, and some to just hold their own?
Oh yes, the picture at the top is an old tyme ice cream parlor. After all, more than anything else these days, Brenham is famous for Blue Bell Ice Cream.
Sunday, February 22, 2009
The Scroll

I wrote yesterday that individuals don't make things anymore. That is isn't really true. I read somewhere that more photographs have been made since the dawn of the digital age than all time before. That may be true... Think about the gazillion mobile cell phones out there, not to mention the little point and shoots. I think I have made over 40,000 snaps between my D3 and D200. That is significantly more than I ever shot on film.
The thing is, most of them are just that - snapshots. Sometimes I shoot the same thing a dozen times the same way just to make sure I got it. Of course this just results in a dozen mediocre shots of the same thing.
I tell myself that what I need to do something different. Different angles, depth of field, light, etc. I need to think before I snap. Anyway, I am working on that.
The other thing I need to do is develop a style, just like the luthier. Something unique, that causes people to think of me when they see it. But for now, I'll just keep trying to make better pictures. If I take 100,000 snaps, somewhere in there is bound to be a good picture.
V=13,495
Saturday, February 21, 2009
Caution: Bassist at Work

This got me to thinking. Most people don't know how to repair things anymore, and a lot of things made today aren't really repairable. A hundred years ago, almost everyone was a repairman or woman. You repaired your house, farm machinery, your clothes, everything. People made things for themselves too.
By the time I came along, people still repaired and maintained a lot of stuff. We worked on the car, did plumbing, sharpened tools, and generally fixed things that needed fixing. Of course not everyone did that. I knew kids that didn't work on their car - rich kids mostly.
Today, hardly anyone does repair. They call the repairman. Don't ask my kids to replace the muffler on a car. Anyway, it was a good repair on David's bass I think (even though I didn't do it)...
Monday, February 16, 2009
Red-eared Sliders
Saturday, February 14, 2009
Sam Houston

This statue of Sam Houston is located at the entrance to Hermann Park.
The city of Houston was named after Sam Houston (of course). Old Sam was born in 1793 near Lexington, Virginia. To say the least, his early life was interesting and he lived with the Cherokees, became a war hero in the War of 1812, was a lawyer, a congressman and governor of Tennessee, a heavy drinker and a discredited politician who beat a adversary with a cane on Pennsylvannia Avenue.
Obviously, this was a man destined to move to Texas and he did so in 1832 as the Texas revolution was coming to a boil. As every school child in Texas knows, he eventually led a small Texas army to defeat Santa Anna at San Jacinto. Eventually Houston was elected President of the new republic (twice), and served as a governor and senator after it became a state.
The city of Houston was founded in August 1836 by two brothers, J.K. Allen and A.C. Allen in Houston's honor. Houston died in 1863 with wife Margaret by his side. His last recorded words were "Texas. Texas. Margaret".
State Bird of Texas

Little Train in Hermann Park

The miniature train has been there a long time, although I think the track has changed since when I was a kid. I believe there is more than one train because I remember one that looked like a diesel, although this is the one that was running today.
Happy Valentine's Day

I like the light in this photograph (believe me, I went to some effort to get it that way). I could have gone into Photoshop and cleaned up the leaves, taken out the ragged spots, and removed the imperfections from the petals. But that is how the stalks and blossoms look. So I left them like they are. You shouldn't look for perfection in a valentine - that is impossible to find (very, very good is OK, just not perfection :-)
Sunday, February 08, 2009
Gator!

This one, trying to gather a little sun on a large tree log, was 4 to 5 feet long and we saw some I estimated to be well over 10 feet. They have five toes but if you click on the picture to enlarge it you will see this fellow has lost one and has four on the front right.
For comparison, an Australian saltwater crocodile can get to 22 feet or so and 2500 pounds.
V=13,330
White Ibis

Saturday, January 31, 2009
Real Cowboy
Huli Warriors
People of PNG

I've posted more pictures of people I met on this trip in the slide show. Click on it or follow this link to see a larger version.
Sunday, January 18, 2009
Houston Marathon

Later on, when the sun came up, I got some better shots at least technically but not as interesting in my opinion. I had the wrong lens here - should have had the fast 50mm instead of the wide angle.
Teresa did well. Check out the results here: Marathon
Sunday, January 11, 2009
Williams Tower
Muscovy Ducks
Saturday, January 10, 2009
Pencil Sketch #1
Pencil Sketch #2
Pencil Sketch #3
Sunday, January 04, 2009
Buying a Car

Actually, the same applies to a lot of business. When the oil and gas industry shed all those jobs in the 1980s and early 90s and companies went under there wasn't anybody outside the industry feeling sorry about it. A lot of other jobs were "outsourced" over the last 20 years or so too. Most of the work I do for an American company is with companies in other countries.
What to buy? I am torn between a Corvette and a hybrid Escape. You can get a heck of a deal on a full sized pickup truck. I guess I am not ready to buy yet.