By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is Change.
A place of great change, sudden and gradual, catastrophic and constructive, individual and collective, visible all around—
—the 9/11 Memorial in Manhattan.
By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is Change.
A place of great change, sudden and gradual, catastrophic and constructive, individual and collective, visible all around—
—the 9/11 Memorial in Manhattan.
Posted in New York City, Photography
Tagged 9/11, 9/11 Memorial, Change, Manhattan, New York City, Photography, postaweek, postaweek2013, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is A Day in My Life.
Last Saturday, toward evening, I took a walk through NYC’s Central Park.
First I visited our patch of ground. And on that patch, which we had picked for being so unremarkable, a crop of colorful crocuses had sprung up…
(click on any photo to start slideshow)
A few more photos are here.
Posted in New York City, Photography
Tagged A Day in My Life, Central Park, Flowers, Manhattan, New York City, Photography, postaweek, postaweek2013, Spring, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Vladimir Brezina
Last week’s excitement about the East River Dolphin reminded us that we hadn’t seen our old friends, the Swinburne Island seals, in almost a year, since last April in fact. So on Sunday we paddled down to visit them again.
We paddled up to Swinburne Island in what we hoped was a stealthy manner, cameras at the ready.
Unfortunately, with the morning’s forecast of significant winds and, presumably, waves and spray—which in the event did not materialize—I left my non-waterproof DSLR, with its telephoto lens, at home. So both of us were limited to our little waterproof cameras—not really suitable for capturing the details of distant seal heads in the water.
And soon there were heads popping up all around, peering at us with a cautious curiosity. Now and then one advanced daringly close, then immediately crash-dived with a snort and a loud splash.
If you look at the photo above closely (click on it to enlarge), it shows seven seal heads. Altogether, by counting the number visible simultaneously or nearly simultaneously all around, we estimated that there were at least 15 seals around us, although there could well have been many more. There were a few small seals, presumably babies.
As usual, the seals preferred to observe us without being themselves observed. They popped up directly behind our boats and peered at us intently, then immediately dived as soon as we turned around.
As the seals heads rose out of the water in upredictable locations around us for a few seconds before disappearing again, we snapped away in the hope of capturing the decisive moment.
And indeed, in some shots, when we later examined them at home, there were seals in places where we had not even noticed them at the time…
Swinburne Island itself, although clearly hospitable to seals and seabirds, seemed more desolate than on our previous visits, even more empty of the ruins and dead trees that had covered it, probably as a result of the visit of Hurricane Sandy back in October of last year.
Then it was time for some tea on the water, if possible out of the cold wind. We considered rafting up in the lee of Swinburne Island itself, but it was clear that hundreds of gulls would seriously object. We ended up having our tea off the neighboring island, Hoffman, where the local opposition was less intense.
After tea, with the current now turned in our favor, we paddled back to the Verrazano Narrows on our way home.
And, in the shadow of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, Nature had a final bonus ready for us—a porpoise (or perhaps another dolphin), calmly surfacing, arching its back, diving again…
It was in almost exactly the same spot where we had observed another porpoise two years ago, in late March 2011. Come to think of it, that previous sighting was the subject of the very first post on Wind Against Current :-)
Together with the sighting of the dolphins and seals in the East River last week, it’s hard not to feel that marine mammals are really coming back to New York Harbor!
Next up, I believe we are ready to encounter at least a medium-sized whale…
Posted in Kayaking, Nature, New York City
Tagged Animals, New York City, New York Harbor, Porpoise, Sea Kayaking, Seals, Swinburne Island
By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is Our Neighborhood.
Last week’s snowstorm was surely the last gasp of winter. On Saturday, the remnants of the snow were vanishing in the warm sunshine, the first flowers were peeping out from under last year’s dead leaves, and everyone was out in Central Park. I was there too with my camera (not my cell phone)…
(click on any photo to start slideshow)
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Posted in New York City, Photography
Tagged Central Park, New York City, Our Neighborhood, Photography, postaweek, postaweek2013, Spring, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Vladimir Brezina
Ailsa’s travel-themed photo challenge this week is Bridges.
Ailsa asks, “Are you ready to cross the bridge when you come to it?” But we follow quite another set of routes through the city, which were there before the first bridge was ever built over them…
Posted in Kayaking, New York City, Photography
Tagged Bridges, Kayaking, New York Harbor, Photography, postaweek, postaweek2013, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Vladimir Brezina
Over on A Word In Your Ear, Sue’s A Word A Week Challenge this week is Industrial.
Paddling through New York Harbor, the ecosystem that we observe is not Nature, but Industry. Where elsewhere we might hope for close-up sightings of animals coming down to the water’s edge, in the harbor we observe the raw workings of industry. Industrial enterprises line the banks and occupy the scraps of waste land in the corners of the harbor. They present their best faces to the land, but as we paddle past, through, and sometimes even under them, we peer into their back yards…
By Vladimir Brezina
What a difference a day makes!
The morning after the snowstorm, we came out into Central Park to find thousands of people playing in the snow and sunshine.
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And I took a thousand photos. I am still sorting them out, but here are a few good ones—
Posted in Nature, New York City
Tagged Central Park, New York City, Photography, Snow, Snow Storm
By Vladimir Brezina
Yesterday at dusk, just as the heaviest snow started to come down in NYC, we ventured out into Central Park—
(More photos are here.)
Now, the next morning, the storm is over and the sun is peeking out. Time to go back into the park for a few more shots!
Posted in Nature, New York City
Tagged Central Park, New York City, Photography, Snow, Snow Storm
By Vladimir Brezina
Red sky at night, sailor’s delight.
Red sky at morning, sailor take warning.
This was the sight today at 7 a.m. …
… and this at 5 p.m.
A nor’easter is on the way.
For the first time this winter, we might get some real snow. Finally! We are looking forward to it.