By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is Journey.
At dawn, some leave on their journey…
… just as others arrive from theirs
More photos from that day are here.
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Other nice Journeys:
By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is Journey.
At dawn, some leave on their journey…
… just as others arrive from theirs
More photos from that day are here.
________________________________________________________
Other nice Journeys:
Posted in Nature, New York City, Photography
Tagged Dawn, Journey, New York City, New York Harbor, Photography, postaday, postaweek, postaweek2012, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Vladimir Brezina
Last night, as a lavender dusk settled over Hell Gate
a pale shell of the full moon rose up among the high buildings
then shone white in the deepening blue sky
as the bright lights of the Second Avenue construction came on
Posted in New York City
Tagged Full Moon, Hell Gate, Hell Gate Bridge, Manhattan, New York City, Sunset
By Vladimir Brezina
In New York City’s Central Park last Saturday. A cold, gray spring day. The cherry tree blossoms are already falling…
Posted in Nature, Photography
Tagged Central Park, New York City, Photography, Puddle, Spring Blossoms
By Vladimir Brezina
On Sunday, Johna and I paddled once more to Swinburne Island to see seals.
Swinburne Island, a small island in New York Harbor just south of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, hosts a healthy population of seals every winter. We’ve already visited them once this winter. But now in April, especially with spring arriving so early this year, we were wondering if the seals would still be there.
We were not disappointed!
Posted in Kayaking, Nature, New York City, Photography
Tagged Kayaking, Marine Mammals, New York Harbor, Photography, Seal, Swinburne Island
By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is Arranged: “… find something in your environment which was arranged by a human hand …”
Hmmm…. how about a human hand arranged?
Posted in Art, Culture, Photography
Tagged Arranged, Halloween, New York City, Photography, postaday, postaweek, postaweek2012, Street Decorations, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Johna Till Johnson
I’ve got great genes. No, make that fantastic genes.
Multiple grandparents and their siblings have lived well into their 90s (and a few into their 100s). And they continued having interesting adventures throughout their lives.
True to that tradition, my (then) 83-year-old mother, Mary Louise Till, and I went on a trip to the Arctic last summer. Thanks to good timing and the skill of our ship’s captain, we were able to crunch through the Arctic ice to north of 86 degrees latitude. (No, I’m not exaggerating—we were roughly 500 miles from the North Pole. And yes, I really will write up this adventure!)
More recently, my mother had an adventure closer to home: Performing this past Monday for approximately 10,000 people in Corpus Christi, Texas, for the Diocese Centennial Mass.
Here’s a short news video about the performance—it’s pretty exciting! (There’s about 5 seconds of advertising preceding it.)
My mother is a second alto in the Corpus Christi Cathedral Choir, a surprisingly excellent adult choir directed by Lee Gwozdz, Corpus Christi Cathedral’s world-class choir director. (It’s a musical family: Lee’s brother, Eugene Gwozdz, has directed the musical “Annie” on Broadway and appears currently on Broadway as musical director/accompanist for “At This Performance”.)
Here’s an earlier video of the choir performing. My mother appears in the upper right at 0:29, wearing glasses and bobbing her head enthusiastically. You can see her through 0:50.
The Diocese Centennial Mass was a celebration of Corpus Christi’s 100th year as a Catholic Diocese. Held in the Corpus Christi Cathedral, the mass featured 40 bishops, 3 archbishops, 300 priests, and a keynote by New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan. (My mother says Cardinal Dolan’s speech was rather pedestrian. Compared to the musical accompaniment, I’m sure it was!)
Not too many of us ever perform for a cast of thousands—much less in our 80s. Congratulations, mums!
By Johna Till Johnson
Courtesy of Dan Kalman (caption mine).
By Johna Till Johnson
A short while ago I wrote about the first two days of my experience at this year’s Sweetwater Kayak Symposium in Florida. You can read about it here, but in sum: I learned more than I ever imagined, particularly about the “feel” of handling a kayak. Here’s what happened on the last day:
On the third and (for me) last day of the Symposium, we met up at the Weedon Island Preserve, a nature preserve just outside St. Petersburg. My paddling plans for the day included two courses: “Bracing, Sculling, and Rolling” in the morning, then “Fun with Foster”, a mysterious course that course leader and kayaking legend Nigel Foster bills as “all the stuff the BCU doesn’t want you to know”. (There’s quite a lot. Keep reading!)
Posted in Kayaking
Tagged Florida, Kayak Strokes, Kayak Symposium, Kayaking, Nigel Foster, Sea Kayaking, Sweetwater
By Vladimir Brezina
Sunday, March 25, 2012
Posted in Kayaking, New York City
Tagged Kayaking, Manhattan, New York City, New York Harbor, Photography
By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is Through.
Crowds of photographers gather as the magic moment draws near. What are they waiting for?
It’s Manhattanhenge! On two days in the year, for a brief moment before it sinks below the horizon, the setting sun is perfectly aligned with the cross-streets of Manhattan’s rectangular street grid and sends its last golden rays straight through its canyons…
These photos are from the first occurrence of Manhattanhenge last year, on May 30, 2011. More photos are here and here.
This year’s magic days will be May 29 and July 12!
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Some other nice interpretations of “Through” I’ve seen:
Posted in New York City, Photography
Tagged Manhattan, Manhattanhenge, New York City, Photography, postaday, postaweek, postaweek2012, Sunset, Through, Weekly Photo Challenge