Author Archives: Vladimir Brezina

The Dry Salvages

By Vladimir Brezina

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… the ragged rock in the restless waters,
Waves wash over it, fogs conceal it;
On a halcyon day it is merely a monument,
In navigable weather it is always a seamark
To lay a course by: but in the sombre season
Or the sudden fury, is what it always was.

T.S. Eliot, The Dry Salvages

The Dry Salvages is the third of T.S. Eliot‘s Four Quartets, a landmark of 20th-century English poetry. In a prefatory note, Eliot tells us that the Dry Salvages are a group of isolated rocks offshore in the Atlantic Ocean, but in the body of the poem they are never  mentioned again by name. Rather, their symbolic reach expands immediately to encompass one of the larger themes of the poem, that of water as the eternal agent of birth and death. It might seem, therefore, that the Dry Salvages are a mythical place.

But they are real, and a couple of days ago we paddled out to see them.

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Weekly Photo Challenge: Fresh

By Vladimir Brezina

This week’s Photo Challenge is Fresh.

Kayaking, we soon become familiar with a distinct hierarchy of freshness. In descending order, there is—

Fresh off the tree!

Mulberries
(story is here)

Fresh and cold from the store!

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Fruit that stays surprisingly fresh on a long trip…

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and something that was fresh once in the depths of the dry bag.

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Travel Theme: Tilted

By Vladimir Brezina

Ailsa’s travel-themed photo challenge this week is Tilted.

Here’s a photo of me sailing my kayak through New York Harbor—that’s the Empire State Building in the distance—back in 2007. The camera, set to take a photo automatically every 10 minutes, was mounted on the outrigger arm, but evidently not very firmly: it started rotating round it, so that when I got home, I found I had photos tilted at all angles, even some upside down…

Tilted

More about my kayak sailing adventures can be found here, here, and here.

What to Do with Visitors to NYC? A Round-Manhattan Paddle!

By Vladimir Brezina

Heading homeWe are constantly racking our brains trying to come up with new things for people who visit us in NYC to do.

Empire State Building? They’ve been there. Statue of Liberty? They’ve done that.

But how about… a round-Manhattan paddle!

Here are some photos from last Saturday’s Manhattan circumnavigation on which we took our friend R.

And I think she got all the excitement, as well as the unexpected quiet beauty, that she could have wished for.

(click on any photo to start slideshow)

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Photography 101: The Quality of Light

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This is the fifth installment of Photography 101.

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Weekly Photo Challenge: The Golden Hour, Take Three

By Vladimir Brezina

This week’s Photo Challenge is The Golden Hour.

Most obviously, the golden hour brings with it the golden light of the rising or setting sun itself, as in my first two posts, here and here. But the real glory of the golden hour is the soft glow with which it lights up every object it still reaches, briefly between the lengthening shadows…

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All in Central Park, New York City.

Weekly Photo Challenge: The Golden Hour, Take Two

By Vladimir Brezina

This week’s Photo Challenge is The Golden Hour.

One golden hour was here. But I can’t resist posting another one, which was so perfectly golden—

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(Belize, 2010. More photos are here. And yet a third “Golden Hour” post is here.)

Travel Theme: Simplicity

By Vladimir Brezina

Ailsa’s travel-themed photo challenge this week is Simplicity.

A block of wood is very simple—

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Weekly Photo Challenge: The Golden Hour

By Vladimir Brezina

This week’s Photo Challenge is The Golden Hour.

DSC_0265 cropped smallWhen I saw this week’s theme, I thought, how timely! For today (and tomorrow) is the second round of this year’s Manhattanhenge, the culmination of a very special golden hour in Manhattan. (Here are the photos from the first round of Manhattanhenge in May, and from 2011.) And I was going to urge all New Yorkers reading this post to go and see it. And even-out-of towners—you’ve still got a few hours to get on that plane so as to be in Manhattan by 8: 23 PM EDT ;-)

Unfortunately, a solid overcast, with occasional showers and thunderstorms, is forecast for both today and tomorrow. Indeed, as I write this, the rain is already beginning.

It will be a wash.

So, instead, here is another golden hour that I remember fondly.

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It was last summer, during our kayak circumnavigation of Long Island. We were camped at the easternmost point of Long Island, at Montauk, in a grove of trees that faced the rising sun. The light that flooded our camp that morning was truly golden. And equally golden was the extra hour of sleep that we allowed ourselves that morning after our exertions of the day before

Two more golden hours are here and here.

Photography 101: The Fundamentals of Light

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This the fourth installment of Photography 101.

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