Light/Breezes

Light/Breezes
SUNRISE AT DEATH VALLEY-Photo by Tom Cochrun

Thursday, July 7, 2011

SAFE FROM THE DEER

LUCKY BLOOMS
      Frequent readers know of our travail with the over populated and savage deer in the
area.  In the post, linked above, you will recall I was worried about maintaining the Lily of the Nile and Orchid Cactus blooms.  Well, so far they've made it and here they are.




       Last time, the blooms were rapidly consumed as a deer appetizer. So far, so good!
       I hope you enjoy seeing these shots of exquisite nature.  I am grateful for the opportunity to the spend the time capturing the images and being so close to such stunning and intricate beauty.
       See you down the trail.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

THE CUBA FILE-STREET SCENES

MAKING DUE
       There is a great shot everywhere you look in Havana. The setting and action of 
this frame captures the rich Latin blend of life in Cuba.  An old car, set against a decaying old colonial era edifice is the object of what is true determination, creativity and genius.
Think of the challenge of maintaining a relic, without benefit of parts, imports, or service centers. Improvising and making due is what they do.
        The street entreprenuer above is taking apart and refilling old lighters with bug spray. His business was brisk.
        Make shift rehearsal areas abound, as does the great Cuban jazz.  I was surprised
by the number of musicians spotted around neighborhoods jamming away.
       Look at the age of this car, that serves in this moment as a music stand.  These 
guys were incredible.  
       When much of the world has gone wireless, the majority of Cubans rely on clearly
antiquated phone systems.
       Cubans play great baseball.  Not unlike the stick ball of New York city, these guys
find a way to convert a block of Havana into a playing arena.
       For almost a half a century the Island nation has lived with the ravages of deterioration.  A revolutionary political and socialist economic meltdown, Soviet heavy handedness and then abandonment and the stringent US economic embargo.  Despite
the adversity, Cubans find a way to carry on and with a joy in those things that bring them pleasure, despite having to improvise or make due.
       Stay tuned for more from our Cuban file.  (See the Post of June 15 2011.)
       See you down the trail.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

NOT YOUR BASIC PICNIC

A FOODIE REPORT
       Hello Lightbreezes readers.  I hope you will permit a bit of indulgence, in more ways than one.  Today's post is about food, good food and a lot of it.  For a year now, a group of friends have gathered about every month for a "moveable feast." The offerings at our 
"American Independence Feast" push Fourth of July picnics to a new level.  I assure you the pictures can't do justice to the meal.  


Beginnings
Provolone and Pesto 
Stuffed Mushrooms
Fennel Salad with
Chickpea/Fava/Spinach Cakes
Quiona and bean salad
THE ENTREE
Kosher hot dogs with
New York Style Cole Slaw
pulled chicken barbecue
bourbon baked beans
smoked tri-tip with
chimichurii sauce
SWEET ENDINGS
Strawberry Muerbeteig
Aunt Bertha's Cherry Pudding
Peruvian Chocolate
the wines 
Pipestone Grenache Rose
Sofia Rose
Crawford Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc
D'Abnbino Sauvignon Blanc
Kukkula Lothario
Justin Petitt Verdot
Pipestone Zinfandel
Venteux Farmhouse Cuvee

It was an extraordinary evening,
See you down the trail.


Monday, July 4, 2011

INDEPENDENCE

A UNIQUELY AMERICAN DAY
Do your self a great favor today.
Take a couple of minutes to read
the Declaration of Independence by linking here.
Here's something to add to your conversation at a barbecue or party today.
Two of the framers and signers of the Declaration
John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, the second and third 
Presidents of the US, died on July 4th 1826, the 
50th Anniversary of the signing.
Both men had been ill.  Jefferson asked his doctor
"Is it the Fourth yet?"
"It soon will be," Robley Dunglison replied.
Later Jefferson awoke to say,
"I resign my spirit to God, my daughter to my country."
Adams was asked if he knew what day it was.
"Oh yes.  It is the glorious Fourth of July. It is a great day. It is a good day. God Bless it.  God Bless you all."
He lapsed into unconsciousness. Later he awoke and said
"Thomas Jefferson.  Thomas Jefferson survives."
Actually Jefferson had died a couple of hours earlier.
It remains an amazing coincidence that the two men, infirmed and dying  held on to life until the 50th Anniversary 
of perhaps America's greatest day.
Happy Independence Day!
See you down the trail.



Saturday, July 2, 2011

THE WEEKENDER :) WONDER AND FUN

SHOULD HAVE PAID MORE ATTENTION 
Here is a bit of wonderment for you.
If you were a better math and/or science student
 than me, you might know the principal behind this.

While I don't have a magic wand for you-
try this 


Enjoy the weekend.  
See you down the trail.

Friday, July 1, 2011

SIMPLE PLEASURES

CREATING A WILL TO SEE
The trainer at a creative workshop challenged
us to begin to see beauty in the everyday.
As a producer, I was always looking
for shots, angles and points of view that
would illustrate or "tell" a story.
So it was not a stretch to begin to 
"see differently."  The mundane can 
offer up something lovely.
Here is an exercise, as an example-
Kitchen Shelves
 Lines and color in utility

 Drying pasta-a nice visual of shape prompting an anticipation of taste.
 Tight quarters, an efficient use of space. 
Function creates form.
And another hide away-the secret ingredients spark thoughts of recipes or memory of meals.
Rather than look through or over or past everyday items
try to see them as shape, color, prompters of other senses.
Seeing, tasting and smelling working in concert
remind us of the full palette we have to 
help us create a day.
They are not really such simple things after all.
Try it out, open a cupboard and "see" it.
SPEAKING OF SEEING
REEL THOUGHTS
As we left the theater after seeing Tree of Life, we looked
at each and said, "not sure I understand it all." We 
felt like we needed to see an explanatory guide. However, it is a grand, sweeping, cosmic, provocative, beautiful, intricate, moving and powerful film.  Terrence Malick makes art, as much as he makes films.  The acting is superb and the film has a lot to say. The score is magnificent.  As I say, I'm going to listen to
others as they explain the mysterio/spiritual aspects.
You leave feeling a lot.  Just what all you think about it takes a while.  And I guess that is a good piece of art.


See you down the trail.

Thursday, June 30, 2011

BRER' BEAR

THE BEAR TRUTH
        By the time I snapped this shot at Brooks Falls in Katmai in Alaska, I already had a fascination with bears.  The Grizzly Bear, pictured in these shots, is a ferocious beast and can be a man killer.  Still, I've always thought of bears as a sort of super steroid sized dog.
I know that's not the case, but their loping amble almost seems playful.  
        I suspect the image of bears was set in me back with the old Brer' Bear character in the Joel Chandler SONG OF THE SOUTH literature of the Uncle Remus stories.  The Disney
version painted Brer Bear as slow, somewhat dimwitted and always being tricked by Brer Rabbit.


       Living in the west, you learn to live with the reality of Bears.  We've had bear sightings within a couple miles of our home.  We have hiked into brown bear country in the Sierra.  Bear lockers are something we frequently use and we always observe the no food in the car admonition in certain areas.  
       What we think of as the California Golden Bear is really a type of brown bear.
They are less lethal than the Grizzly, the bear on the California Republic state flag. Ironically the Grizzly is probably extinct in the state.  
        However, interaction between bear and society is problematic, even in mostly wild, pastoral, agricultural  or undeveloped San Luis Obispo County. A local bear that has developed a taste for chicken, is now on a hit list.  The term we use out here is a "depredation permit."  That's a lyric Uncle Remus never sang about.
The bear/community interaction has been lethal. Link here for the San Luis Obispo Tribune story of the bear kill.
  Read abut the background of the story by  linking here to the San Luis Obispo Tribune.
      
        Enjoy seeing the Big Grizz in their natural environment.
       Do you figure this gull has any idea of who he may be trying to steal a fish from?
       Katmai National Preserve and Park in southern Alaska, in the area of the 10 thousand smokes is an extraordinary place. Not only can you observe Grizzlies in the wild, you are also in one of the most active volcanic regions in the world thus the name-The Land of the 10 Thousand Smokes.   
See you down the trail.