with Lorelle and Brent VanFossen

Guide to Selling Digital Cameras on eBay

Stella Kleiman’s article, “A Guide to Selling Digital Cameras on eBay”, has good tips for selling all cameras, not just digital cameras, on Ebay.

As is often the case with consumer electronics, the technology is steadily improving while prices are dropping, leading many shoppers to eBay in search of newer models at bargain prices. There is still a market for digital cameras that are a few years old or have fewer than 2 megapixels; however, prices are relatively low. I advise our eSpecialists to research the specific camera model online before accepting it for sale. Best-selling brands include: Canon, Fuji, Kodak, Leica, Nikon, Olympus and Sony.

When creating a title for a camera listing, include the following information as keywords: Brand name; Model name or number; Resolution (number of megapixels); Optical zoom (2x, 3x, etc.); Amount of memory; Format (SLR, Compact “Point-and-Shoot”, etc.); Lenses (make and sizes); Memory card, carrying case and other accessories; and NIB if New In Box.

She continues with good instructions on shipping camera equipment to customers. This is very important as a perfectly good camera can easily be ruined in the shipping process and handling returns can be time consuming and costly.

A Good Travel Photograph Makes You Want to Go There

I stumbled across an old Oregonian’s Travel Focus Photography Awards announcement recently. Over 10,000 photographs from all over the world, including Namibia, Peru, Cambodia, and the Antarctic, as well as the United States, are submitted annually.

One of the comments made by a judge in the competition caught my attention.

“When a travel photo makes you want to go there badly, I take that picture seriously.”
Terry Toedtemeier, judge and curator of photography at the Portland Art Museum

This is the truth. A good travel photograph should make you want to go there very badly. It should reach out through the 2 dimension flat image and grab you by the “wanna-goes”.

But what does that mean?

Some basic elements for a good travel photograph is one that:

  • Makes you want to visit.
  • Makes you feel like you are already there.
  • It feels accessible. You can go there and when you get there, it will look like that.
  • Gives you a sense of time, space, and location.
  • Makes you touch, smell, hear, see, and taste a place.

That’s a tall order.

I’m constantly educating my students in photography, blogging, and otherwise that creativity doesn’t require an exotic location. You don’t have to travel to get to beautiful spaces.

Growing up in Seattle, I met a lot of people who told me how they dreamed of living in such an exotic place, surrounded by mountains and water. To me, it was just “home,” a place to live with cool things to do around me, but nothing special. I dreamed of traveling to really exotic places one day.

When I reached those places, living in many so-called “exotic” places, in short order they became just a place to live with cool things to do around me, but really, nothing special.

What makes a place special is your unique vision and experience with the place. Once I got that, I started to look at everywhere I lived as special and unique, truly exotic.

Seattle Troll under the Aurora Bridge photograph by Lorelle VAnFossenAnd I took my camera on that thought process. Suddenly, the Arboretum in Seattle became a magical garden. The Pike Place Market became an exotic farmers market with local food and crafts from around the area and beyond. A walk through Pioneer Square became a trip back into history.

Spider web right outside our home in Everett, WashingtonAdventure was suddenly everywhere, from taking a walk around the neighborhood to stumble upon the great troll living under the Aurora Bridge to the magic of finding a spider’s web in the glowing light of predawn. I could get lost anywhere within a mile or so of my home.

As you create your own travel photographs, remember that your boring place you call home is exotic to others. However, you have one thing they don’t have: experience and familiarity. You already know where the good spots are. Visit them with your camera and photograph them as if they were exotic, inviting viewers to visit your neck of the woods through your eyes.

Looking for a Good Seat on an Airplane?

I recently found two articles packed with information on how to choose a seat, and how to get that good seat, on an airplane.

Microsoft Small Business – Business Travel – 5 Secrets to Getting the Best Seat on a Plane had some very good advice.

Your airline’s own Web site is one of the best resources for finding a good seat. The air carriers keep the most up-to-date seat maps of their planes. If you have questions, you can always call the airline and ask if you’ve selected a comfortable seat. Odds are, the phone agent you’re talking with has some first-hand knowledge of which seats are comfortable.

I’ve always hated being smashed in the stomach when the person in front of me leans suddenly backwards and my tray table practically dices me. Article author, Christopher Elliott, has this tip, that he hopes won’t get him into trouble.

Lower the traytable, fold the inflight magazine and wedge it between the traytable and seat. (See, those inflight magazines are useful after all!) There’s also a product called the Knee Defender that works the same way and keeps the person in front of you from reclining.

Frank Boosman in “How to Get an Exit Row Seat” tackles similar issues like leg room and vying for that precious exit row seat.

If you have elite status with an airline, it’s easy. Most (if not all) US airlines allow their elite travelers to reserve exit row seating at any time prior to 24 hours before departure. You don’t need super-elite status; any will do. So focus enough of your flying to get at least the lowest level of elite status with one airline — preferably the airline most convenient to your travel needs.

If you can’t do that, or if you have to fly on another airline, here’s the secret: most (if not all) US airlines allow Web check-in, and treat it just as if you were checking in at the airport — in other words, those exit row seats that were formerly unavailable except to elite travelers become available to anyone who meets the safety criteria. And most US airlines allow Web check-in beginning 24 hours prior to departure of the first flight of your trip. So set a reminder for yourself 24 hours prior to departure. When that reminder sounds, go to the airline’s Website and check in. You should be able to grab an exit row seat then — it’s your best shot.

Unfortunately, many newspapers and agencies are reporting recently that airlines are charging for exit row or aisle seats soon.

Northwest Airlines last week began testing a program to charge domestic coach passengers $15 extra to book aisle- and exit-row seats.

…Ebenhoch gave several reasons for the fee: to get more revenue; to accommodate customers who book late and pay more, only to find good seats are gone; and to keep fares low to compete with low-cost carriers. He compared the fee to hotels charging more for rooms with ocean views.

Airlines that have similar fees include Virgin Atlantic, which since 2002 has charged $75 at the airport for exit-row seats, and Air Canada, which charges $12 for seat selection for passengers choosing its lowest fare, called Tango.

Let’s see, no free food, no free drinks, payment for 2 pounds overweight on luggage, paid exit and aisle seats, what’s next? Pay toilets?

Honoring Women Aviators in National Women’s History Week

Brent and I are fans of Cut and Paste Aviation and I was really excited to find that they are honoring National Women’s History Month with highlights of amazing and outrageous women in aviation history. Some highlights include:

Katherine Stinson (1893-1977): Katherine Stinson won a balloon trip in a raffle at age 16 and decided to become a stunt pilot soon after as a way to make money. She became the fourth woman to receive a pilots license soon after, and became one of the most daring female stunt fliers of her time. In 1913, she and her mother founded Stinson Aviation Company and a couple years later started a flying school in Texas. She went on to become the first woman to carry the mail by air and is often credited as the first woman to perform the loop the loop.

In November 1915 she made eighty consecutive loops flying upside down for thirty seconds and executing a series of spins. In December, determined to out-do a male pilot, Art Smith, who had looped the loop at night, she added magnesium flares to her aircraft and traced the letters CAL in the night sky, then looped, flew upside down, and spiralled to 100 feet of the ground, trailing showers of sparks. For the first six months of 1917, she toured China and Japan, where no woman had flown before.

Marga von Etzdorf (1907-1933): Marga von Etzdorfwas born into an aristocratic military family and decided at 19 that flying would be her life. She got a job as a copilot of a “Junkers F-13 with Lufthansa” flying a commercial route regularly from Berlin to Basel, Switzerland, via Stuttgart. Eventually, she bought her own plane and learned aerobatics, flying throughout Europe, then further including a famous 11-day solo flight from Berlin to Tokyo in 1931.

Juanita Pritchard Bailey: Called “The Flying Beautician”, Juanita Pritchard Bailey was the owner of a beauty salon in Clairton, Pennsylvania, and an active pilot, including flying coastal and patrol missions with the Civil Air Patrol during World War II. She was the first woman to solo from the US to Panama and became a ferry pilot for aircraft companies, flying all over North America from Alaska to Central and South America. Still alive and kicking, according to Cut and Paste Aviation, “she has logged over 6000 hours during her distinguished flying career.” Wow!

Helen Richey: Helen Richey has a long record of firsts. First soloed in 1930, followed two years later as a record holder for women as she and Frances Marsalis stayed in the air for almost ten days. First to win the first National Air Meet for Women in Dayton in 1934. First commercial pilot for Greensburg, PA’s Dick Coulter’s Central Airlines in 1934 winning out over 8 men. She set two world records for light planes in 1936. She was the first woman to be licensed as a flight instructor by the CAA.

Ruth Rowland Nichols (1901-1960): Ruth Rowland Nichols began flying in 1919 and became the first woman to licensed for a “flying boat” or sea plane. She was rated to fly just about anything including “the dirigible, glider, autogiro, landplane, seaplane, amphibian, monoplanes, biplanes, tri-planes, twin and four engine transports and supersonic jets.”

She was the first three women to earn an Air Transport Pilot rating in 1929 and the only woman to hold three different world records simultaneously: women’s altitude (28,748 feet), speed (210.5 mph), and non-stop, Oakland to Louisville (19 hrs. 16 min.) between 1931 and 1932.

After injuring her back in an attempt to fly across the Atlantic and crashing, she flew the rest of her life with a steel back brace, and the injury inspired her to start the “Relief Wings, a flying ambulance for mercy missions” which became part of the Civil Air Patrol.

Women, be inspired by these great representatives of the fairer sex who even inspired men to fly better and changed the face of aviation today.

Simultaneously published on Brent VanFossen – Aerospace Engineer with a View

Using CSS to Create a Photo Gallery

I have quite a few examples in my CSS Experiments on showcasing your photographs, as a single image or in a gallery format, and I found a very simple, easy-to-understand explanation of how to use CSS to create a photo gallery from Web Reference.

With this article I hope to show you how to produce a professional quality photograph gallery using nothing more than an unordered list of photographs and a Cascading Style Sheet (CSS). I will take you through the styling one step at a time and end up converting an unordered list of photographs into a professional photograph gallery. Each step will be thoroughly explained and will have an example page showing the effect of the additional styling so that you can see what to expect.

The technique presented puts the images in a HTML list and then uses CSS basics and the hover style to create a photo gallery so when you move your mouse over the thumbnail, the enlarged version of the image will appear in the showcase.

This is a great technique which worked on only a few browsers when I first started experimenting with it, but with most people upgraded to newer Internet browsers, and so many people switching to , this technique will work across most browsers now.

Enjoy!

Heading North To Michigan Then Seattle

My father’s stay here in Mobile, Alabama, has long past its expiration date and we’re planning to head out of the Gulf Coast towards Seattle, the long way.

I’m really nervous about traveling right now as winter isn’t quite over, but he wants to get home and isn’t willing to wait another two weeks for safety’s sake. So we head out.

We’re heading north for Michigan to do some genealogy exploration before heading across to Seattle.

I’ve been helping my father research his family tree for many years, beginning as a very young teenager. He has his family bible dated from the early 1800s and the family tree is fairly well spelled out, or so we thought. When I first transcribed it, I realized that it was all names and dates with no connections between which name belonged to which person when and where.

I was able to make some connections with the Farlin family marrying into the West family, but then it came to a dead end. I could pick back up at my great grandfather, Walter West, and trace it to me, but the gap remained for over 15 years.

Over the past few years I’ve posted an occasional message or two on genealogy forums trying to connect the dots between the Farlin/West family and my known Wests. Little or no luck until this winter.

A family having the same problems with their family tree found one of my posts and they sent me an email. It was clear from the beginning that they expected that there was no connection, but they’d been searching for so long, anything was possible. I sent them some information from my family bible and research, and they said that it looked possible, but they weren’t sure.

I told them of the missing pieces in my family tree and wondered if they could help. The next day I got an email that solved my 15 year old mystery, and brought plenty of new ones into the mix. Amazing. I couldn’t believe it.

I copied some of my research and the barely decipherable family bible records and mailed it to this family in Michigan, hoping to help them as much as they helped me. A few days later I got an amazing email telling me that I had helped them solve the mystery gaps in their family tree puzzling them for 44 YEARS! Wow!

Since then, I’ve done more Internet research and filled in a lot of gaps now that I have some core information to go on. The Michigan family has been traveling to Lenawee County in Michigan, where the Farlin and West families combined, and researching tons of records to help substantiate the Farlin and West family trees. We’ve been helping each other fill in the missing blanks and it’s been very exciting.

So exciting that when I get done with taking my father back to Seattle, I’m going to start a new website dedicated to our family research, in the hope that we can get more of the gaps filled in, and find more missing relatives along the way.

Oh, this family in Michigan are my cousins. Many times removed but cousins all the same. My dad is thrilled.

The other part of the mystery is how this ancient bible transfered from one family to another. We’re still trying to figure out all the pieces, and the mystery is shaking the foundations of my father’s long held beliefs, but we’re getting closer. It’s fun to dig into history like this. Very exciting.

So if you are on our route, which isn’t quite established, from Mobile, Alabama, to Lansing and Lenawee County in Michigan, then across the US to Washington State, and you’re a fan of this site and willing to host our small Class C motor home in a smoke free environment….okay, so I’m begging for people to meet and greet along the way. It makes the trip so much more enjoyable when we know there’s a warm place to sleep and kind people to meet. You can leave a comment or contact me through our contact page.

I’ll do my best to keep you all updated on our travels. While you are waiting for me to return to “normal life” again, once my dad is back in his home and habits and I return to Mobile, Alabama, and the heat and humidity and hurricane life, stay tuned for some very exciting articles and resources coming to this website. I’ve got some great plans.

Digital Camera Hacking Tips Reference

Chieh Cheng’s Camera Hacker is a site featuring technical articles and tips, as well as the Camera Hacker’s Hacking Digital Cameras book. If you are a computer techie and into hacking up computer and digital parts and pieces, including cameras, you’ll find plenty to keep you busy there.

Highlighted tips, tricks and techniques for understanding and hacking digital cameras include:

Mardi Gras 2006 – Floral Parade Rained Out

The Floral Parade in Mobile, Alabama, rained outThe Floral Parade in Mobile, Alabama, is one of the unusual parades because it rolls through Mobile twice during the Mardi Gras festivities. We caught it both times, though the first time, it was a total wash out. Literally.

We arrived a few hours before the parade began, timing our arrival between that morning’s marathon and the parade going crush. My father set up our spot near the beginning of the parade route

An hour before the parade began, the skies opened up in a torrent. It seemed to do its worse and then quit and the skies lightened up. It looked like everything was a go.

The Floral Parade in Mobile, Alabama, rained outThis year was the first in a very long time where not a single Mardi Gras parade had been rained out. In fact, it had been sunburn weather for the past three weeks with nary a drop in the sky. The nights were cool and the days warm.

The floats started lining up outside of the Civic Center and the children began to arrive.

Only a few people started lining up along the route, disheartened probably by the earlier rain, so my father and I were prepared to collect ALL the loot with less people to compete against.

Twenty minutes before parade time, the rain moved in again. The closer it got to starting time, the heavier the down pour. Almost as soon as the clock struck noon and bells began to ring out in the nearby Cathedral, everything went dark and lightening started slapping the sky.

The children who has spent the last 30 minutes standing on the floats dressed up in rain proof ponchos and gears, and the small crowds all ducked under umbrellas, knew that this was going to be a mess. The paint was starting to run off the floats and the flowers were melting under the water.

I headed down towards the front of the line of floats, wiping water off my camera and trying to capture what I could, and arrived in time to catch the parade official beginning his march down the line advising each of the float captains that the parade was canceled. Cancelled not so much due to the rain, but the lightning potential for striking the floats built out of wood but resting on metal flat bed wagons isn’t a good idea.

With the word coming down the line, the kids and the crowds ran for cover as the skies exploded in rain.

The Floral Parade in Mobile, Alabama, rained outMy father and I, moss on our backs, rust in our blood, and webs between our toes from growing up in the Pacific Northwest, slowly walked under one umbrella back to the car, drenched to the skin. Both of us could hardly find the car for the streams of water rolling down our glasses.

We debated waiting around for the next parade in an hour and a half but decided that we were too wet and the weather didn’t look like it was going to lift that fast.

We made it out onto Highway 10 among the other exiting parade-goers and within seconds our speed was down to 10-15 mph. My wipers couldn’t keep up with the volume of rain coming down, even at high speed. Big trucks, small cars, we all had our emergency lights on and crept along the highway which usually hosts a minimum speed of 65, typically 80 mph.

My little car’s defroster couldn’t keep up with the condensation building up as soon as I wiped the inside of the window, so I knew we had to get off the highway. My father and I stared through the torrent for a green sign along the highway, pleading for a quick exit.

The first sign was for Michigan, the exit to the regional airport and Brent’s office. It is also a back route along the airport to our home. Once off the highway, we rolled through flooded streets, some more like rivers than puddles as the water raced along towards drainage ditches.

In one swift current about 10 inches deep, I had a terrible time controlling the car as it plowed through the water. This was now more about getting to safety than getting home.

I turned down the road to Brent’s office, the road ahead of me a total white out with a foggy window on the inside and sheets of grey water pouring outside. My father finally found a wad of tissue paper and I swept a swath of clear on the window to find that I was seconds from driving off the road into the four foot deep ditch. I straightened out and made turn into the parking lot.

My dad and I raced to the office door and stood inside the warm office, dripping puddles.

Brent was surprised but more worried that we had been out there in the storm. We were okay, but decided to sit there and eat the picnic lunch I’d prepared, waiting out the storm.

It ended about an hour later. Outside, the rivers had turned back to deep puddles and the wind had died down, but the skies were still dark. We made it home and peeled off our wet clothes with steam coming off our bodies.

When I checked in with my dad an hour later about heading back out for the parades that night, for the first time since Mardi Gras began here in Mobile, he decided to skip the evening’s fun and head out tomorrow, after some much needed rest and recovery. I agreed.

The Floral Parade and the one immediately after it were the only parades rained out this year. The next three days of parades and festivities were met with boiling sunshine and no clouds.


Click the pictures to see an enlarged view, and please print these out from there with your color printer. We do not sell prints, though we may consider negotiating for reprints.

Click image to see enlarged version.

 

Mardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Floral Parade for children, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossen

 

Mardi Gras 2006 – The Comic Cowboys

Comic Cowboys, Mardi Gras Parade, Mobile, Alabama, 2006, photograph by Lorelle VanFossenSquished in the middle of several parades came the Mobile Comic Cowboys, a parade more in keeping with the more popular Mardi Gras theme in New Orleans, compared to the family style parades in Mobile, Alabama.

The Comic Cowboys parade consists of trucks pulling flat bed trailers adored with costumed or plain clothes folks throwing beads and candy, along with numerous editorial cartoons poking fun at local officials, national news, and, of course, everyone else.

This year is the 122nd anniversary of the Comic Cowboys parade. A local businessman, Dave Levi, started the Comic Cowboys in Mobile in 1884, keeping the theme eternally locked on satire. There are now about 400 members who comb the local and national news looking for things to poke fun at in time for the February Mardi Gras events. Their satirical theme is constantly underwritten by their saying “without malice”, in keeping with the southern gentleman’s attitude that reminds me of the saying, “If you can’t say anything nice, sit down next to me.”

Comic Cowboys, Mardi Gras Parade, Mobile, Alabama, 2006, photograph by Lorelle VanFossenThe floats this year poked fun at Hurricane Katrina with several sign boards. A nod to FEMA and the famous FEMA trailers that dot the Gulf Coast like white beached whales scattered everywhere and in groups, along with the many problems with the budget and planning for local schools, the sign read, “Thanks to Katrina, Biloxi and Bayou La Batre have more portables than Mobile Public Schools.”

Comic Cowboys, Mardi Gras Parade, Mobile, Alabama, 2006, photograph by Lorelle VanFossenCasinos once off-shore in Mississippi but now crashed onshore after the hurricane, went into overdrive to clean up the mess and get their businesses back up and running, proof that money can indeed get things done faster than anyone else, including the government and volunteer organizations. The sign read, “We salute …The Mississippi Casinos for reopening!!! So people can lose their shirts twice In the same year!!” I got that one really fast.

Others were more oblique and I relied upon a friendly “old timer” of Mobile Mardi Gras festivities standing next to me, a veteran rider of almost 50 years of parades now Comic Cowboys, Mardi Gras Parade, Mobile, Alabama, 2006, photograph by Lorelle VanFossenretired, who knew the ins and outs of local news and gossip. He explained the reasoning behind the local ribs.

“Tillman’s Legacy as Sheriff … He could keep’em alive for $1.75.”

It seems that retiring Mobile County Sheriff, Jack Tillman, took more than his fair share of lunch money from state prisoners under his care. According to a story in the Mobile Register:

Tillman gets $1.75 per inmate per day from the state to spend on food for the inmates. He has been spending about $1.45 per inmate, however, and reserving the rest. The sheriff, who said a state law allowed him to keep the surplus cash, is charged with theft and violating the ethics law for public officials in connection with one of those food fund withdrawals.

The first sign that led off the Comic Cowboys had me confused it said, “Warning! Please stand back. David Thomas is pulling this float.”

I turned to my elderly confidant and asked him what the founder of Wendy’s Hamburgers, now deceased, was doing in a Mobile Mardi Gras parade. He laughed and explained that Comic Cowboys, Mardi Gras Parade, Mobile, Alabama, 2006, photograph by Lorelle VanFossenMr. Thomas was involved in a “heet un run” accident during Mardi Gras last year which seriously injured an 8 year old there for the festivities. Even now, a year later, and during the arrest, investigation, and indictment for hit and run and driving-while-under-the-influence of alcohol, he remains the President of the Mobile County School District, which upsets a lot of people. I checked it out and found Mr. Thomas was brought before a grand jury on felony charges, and eventually indicted on this and another hit and run accident from the previous year. Nice of the school district to keep employing him. Very strange.

Still, the Comic Cowboys brought a bit of entertainment and local history and culture into my life, learning a little more about this odd place we are temporarily living in. Strange politics and bedfellows can be found anywhere, and everywhere we go, we seem to find the eccentrics.


Click the pictures to see an enlarged view, and please print these out from there with your color printer. We do not sell prints, though we may consider negotiating for reprints.

Click image to see enlarged version.

 

Mardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Comic Cowboys, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossen

 

Portage Lake, Alaska

Portage Lake at sunset, photo by Brent VanFossenAn hour’s drive south of Anchorage, Alaska, Portage Lake is one of the most accessible locations in the state. Tourists pause on their way to Seward to enjoy this glacier fed lake and spectacular glacier. After the visitor’s center closes, you can still walk along the lake and catch the last rays of light as the sun paints the clouds red and orange. Chunks of ice, more than 50 years old, fall from the glacier at the far end of the lake and float nearby, blue and sparkling.

The National Forest Service Begich-Boggs Visitor Center sits at the west edge of the lake. Open daily in the summer, it offers extensive displays on the glaciers and their environmental importance. Naturalist rangers are ready to answer questions and tell you the latest news about the ice worms which live on the glacier. A small bookstore there is well stocked with nature books and videos on glaciers and the local flora and fauna. The award-winning, educational film “Voices from the Ice” shows hourly.

Explore the self-guided interpretive trail just south of the visitor center and learn how the glaciers form the land. During the winter, the lake freezes over and the entire area is blanketed under snow. The road to the visitor’s center is plowed open on weekends. Stay warm inside and look out through huge picture window overlooking the icy lake.

Portage Lake, Alaska, Icebergs, photo by Brent VanFossenMake time to enjoy a cruise on the MV Ptarmigan sightseeing boat, crossing the lake to within a few hundred feet of the toe of the Portage Glacier, and with luck, you may see large chunks of ice calve into the lake. A ranger usually accompanies the cruise, narrating the trip and explaining glacial geology and the unusual Chugach National Forest, a forest that contains more ice than trees.

At the USFS Williwaw Creek Campground, 38 sites accommodate campers of all sizes from tents to large motor homes. Reservations for the campground are available by calling 1-800-280-CAMP. Campfire programs are offered during the summer.

From the campground, a self-guided nature trail leaves the campground loop and wanders along the creek. This is prime moose and beaver habitat. Early morning is good for finding the moose grazing in the wetland areas. Along the creek a viewing platform juts out and spawning red salmon and dog salmon fill the creek from late July to mid September. Another trail north of the campground heads up the mountainside towards rushing cascades of glacier run-off.

Travel eight miles back to the town of Portage and catch the train to Whittier, or travel the soon-to-be-completed auto route directly from Portage Lake. From the fishing community of Whittier on Prince William Sound, you can board the Alaska Marine Highway Ferries to cross to Valdez and other ports of call or join one of several glacier and wildlife cruises into the icy fjords.

Whatever the season, the Portage area south of Anchorage is an exciting and photogenic place to visit.

Eye Movement Controlling Camera Functions in the Future

Today, technology is available within modern cameras that detects where the eye is looking through the viewfinder for focus and even zoom the camera’s lens. Research at Rutgers University may bring the ability to actually edit the image within the viewfinder with the movement of the eye.

Based upon the thesis called “The Art Of Seeing: Visual Perception In Design And Evaluation Of Non-Photorealistic Rendering”(PDF) by Anthony Santella, of Rutgers University, users will be able to use their eyes to crop images.

In all eras and visual styles, artists control the amount of detail in the images they create, both locally and globally. This is not just a technique to limit the effort involved in rendering a scene. It makes a definite statement about what is important and streamlines understanding. Our goal is to largely automate this artistic abstraction in computer renderings. The hope is to remove detail in a meaningful way, while automating individual decisions about what features to include. Eye tracking allows the capture of what a viewer looks at and indirectly, what they find important. We demonstrate that this information alone is sufficient to control detail in an image based rendering, and change the way successive viewers look at the resulting image.

This is still in the theory stage, and a lot of assumptions are being made. Still, the determination to automatically improve the end results of a photographic image with computer analysis combined with psychology and physical response to artwork…a part of me feels like while auto-everything is nice for the family photographer, this modern convenience may make it too easy to NOT think about the individual artistic expression in photography. Just something to think about.

Mardi Gras 2006 – The Mystics of Time Ball Preparations

We arrived several hours early to get a good spot for the Saturday noon Floral Parade and Knights of Revelry, parades in Mobile, Alabama, that are mostly for kids, by kids, but still great fun. My father got into a key spot and I went inside the Mobile Civic Center to see what was happening for that evening’s events.

The Mystics of Time were beginning preparations for their fancy ball that night, as well as their parade. Men, women, and children, often whole families, were spread out inside the Civic Center decorating rooms and hallways and the grand ballroom with their theme, “A Time for Exploration”.

Bare white walls inside of the small meeting rooms around the auditorium were being covered with gold, purple, and green mylar and Mardi Gras decorations. Ceilings were being filled with helium balloons of the same trio of colors so synonymous with Mardi Gras.

A few people were bringing in costumes for the parade that night, tucking them in corners and hanging them on racks, but for the most part, all the hard work was going into the extravaganza ball that night. Food was being hauled in on huge wire racks along with massive volumes of alcohol and soda pop for the party goers that night. Bars were set up in most of the meeting rooms and on both sides of the main ballroom.

The main stage was being dressed up as huge props and sets rolled off trucks and onto the stage. Workers moved in and around volunteers to change this convention hall/stadium into a place of magic and music.

This is the 58th year the Mystics of Time, more commonly called “MOT”, have held their festivities in Mobile.

Unfortunately, due to weather and other obligations, we couldn’t return that night to watch the parade or the ball.


Click the pictures to see an enlarged view, and please print these out from there with your color printer. We do not sell prints, though we may consider negotiating for reprints.

Click image to see enlarged version.

 

Mardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystics of Time, photographs copyright Lorelle VanFossen

 

Coalition for a Smoke Free Mobile, Alabama

I really thought that Mobile, Alabama, was seriously behind the century in terms of cigarette smoke prevention and protection laws, but I learned the other day that there is a Coalition for a Smoke Free Mobile, Alabama. If your business, like a restaurant or park, qualifies as a “smoke free environment”, they will give you a certificate to post on your wall. I found one in a nearby fast food fried chicken and seafood shop.

While their website hasn’t been updated in a while, it lists a wide variety of services, information, and activities that Mobile was doing to help promote a smoke free city.

Students Working Against Tobacco (S.W.A.T.) is a group of high school students helping each other learn about how to avoid cigarettes and cigarette smoke and to promote a “tobacco free Mobile” from Murphy, Vigor and Satsuma High Schools. There are also camps, workshops, and many programs working not only with area students, but also the Native American populations nearby.

They even have annual celebrations for Kick Butts Day in April, World No Tobacco Day on May 31st, and the Great American Smokeout held the third Thursday in November.

I loved this description of one children’s event:

Fifth graders at Woodcock Elementary used straws to simulate the labored breathing a smoker experiences. Kindergarten students participated in an “ugly face” activity making their best ugly face at the damage tobacco does to the body.

The site offers links to a variety of resources for anti-smoking and stop smoking information, locally and nationally, and includes the effects and impact of smoking on adults and children and creating a smoke free work environment.

It also includes an out-of-date but usable Smoke Free Restaurant Guide for Mobile, Alabama, in PDF form. It’s out of date because some of these restaurants are no longer open (yet or ever) due to recent hurricane damage. It isn’t a “smoke free restaurant list” either because while many of the fast food places and chain stores are smoke free per national policy, local law requires designation of a “no-smoking area” not smoke free. Restaurants like Ruby Tuesday and Applebees host bars in the middle of the open restaurant where smoking is permitted, thus they are not smoke free.

Still, it’s a start. While states like Washington and Illinois now have laws that not only prohibit smoking in public places, they restrict smoking near public and private entrances by a certain number of feet. It’s 25 feet in Washington state. Unfortunately, smoking is still considered a right in Alabama and much of the southern United States. Many times I’ve asked someone nicely not to smoke near me and have been told no, that they have a right to smoke. Affronted by their outright rudeness, especially coming from southern gentlemen famous for their hospitality and polite behavior (at least in public), I tell them they don’t have a right and they get angry. So sad that people mix up their rights and privileges. Smoking isn’t a right. Breathing is a right, smoking is a privilege.

Even my chain-smoking, 3 plus pack-a-day father, into his fourth month without a cigarette, is now opening up to the damaging impact. He was stunned to learn that medical estimates report 95% of all children are allergic to cigarette smoke, (estimated 75% of all adults, too, including smokers – the smoker’s hack is a symptom), and the impact of second hand smoke on children which causes them to have “more upper respiratory infections and more difficulty recovering from these infections”, as well as chronic cough and chronic middle-ear infections. Luckily, I was raised with a no smoking mother, but research says that children in two parent or mult-family members smoking have “twice the amount of bronchitis, pneumonia and are hospitalized more frequently before their first birthday than children of non-smoking parents”. I still spent a lot of my childhood sick from constant respiratory infections, flus, coughs, colds, and fevers, not learning that I had a severe allergy to cigarettes until after turning 28 years old.

Watching the throng of people during the past three weeks of Mardi Gras events in Mobile, he has started commenting on how people use cigarettes. He described one woman trying to juggle a cigarette that she just wouldn’t put out or put down with several children climbing all over her. “It was a juggling ballet,” he added. “I didn’t realize that a cigarette is more important than her children.” Watching new born babies carried in one arm while a cigarette is waved around in the other hand, and seeing smoke blown into the faces of these little precious bundles of our future, now makes him sick. He just never “saw” the impact of a cigarette in people’s lives. Remembering all the one armed hugs I got as a child, I know the impact of a cigarette in a child’s life. I’m glad he’s finally learning.

More information on the health policies for the state of Alabama can be found from the Alabama Public Health Organization.

Mardi Gras 2006 – Mystic Stripers Parade

Wow! My dad really got into the Mardi Gras festivities here in Mobile, Alabama. We’ve done three parades now, the Conde Cavaliers, Polka Dots, and now the Mystic Stripers. He sorts through his beads, stuffed animals, and moon pie collection, eats all the moon pies and then whines that he’s got to go back to get more. So we head back out into the evening for more Mardi Gras fun.

Mobile has really turned out with splendid finery, considering the hurricane damage and impact from Hurricanes Dennis, Katrina, Rita, and Ivan, among the 6 or more hurricanes which passed through this Gulf Coast area last year and the year before. Little dampens the spirit of this 300 year tradition.

Did you know that Mardi Gras started in Mobile, Alabama? Well, I’ll have this and more information in a future post, but for now, here are the images from the Mystic Stripers Parade in downtown Mobile. Now that I’ve gotten to know a few of the important figures behind many of these parades, including some of the men and women who participate in several parades every year, not just one, I was invited backstage into the Mobile Civic Center to wander and photograph the preparations for the evening’s parade.

Each parade features a wide variety of floats and costumes, but I’m finding some themes running throughout them. The Conde Cavaliers are the pirate-gentlemen from a time when great wooden sail boats ruled the seas and the world. The Polka Dots were only women, and their costumes and floats reflected stereotypical women’s roles and jobs this year.

The Mystic Stripers had a lot of “characters” in their theme. There were Elvis impersonators, red stripped prisoner costumed men with the traditional Chinese pointed top bowl hats, Caribbean and Mexican mariachi band members, and all different brightly colored international and famous looks.

Rain threatened early in the day but the evening was warm and clear with stars overhead, perfect for the parade. The crowd was heavier than the earlier parades, and just as greedy, reaching out and calling for their beads, trinkets, and moon pies.

Click the pictures to see an enlarged view, and please print these out from there with your color printer. We do not sell prints, though we may consider negotiating for reprints.

Click image to see enlarged version.

 

Mardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystic Stripers Parade - copyright photo by Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystic Stripers Parade - copyright photo by Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystic Stripers Parade - copyright photo by Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystic Stripers Parade - copyright photo by Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystic Stripers Parade - copyright photo by Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystic Stripers Parade - copyright photo by Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystic Stripers Parade - copyright photo by Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystic Stripers Parade - copyright photo by Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystic Stripers Parade - copyright photo by Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystic Stripers Parade - copyright photo by Lorelle VanFossenMardi Gras 2006, Mobile, Alabama, Mystic Stripers Parade - 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Chicken Tagine with Dates and Honey

I recently wrote about our favorite fresh fruit recipe and I’ve been asked to share more of our classic recipes. This one is from the Middle East, though some say it can also be found in India, called Chicken Tagine with Dates and Honey.

Again, it comes from our favorite cookbook series, The Australian Women’s Weekly, specifically part of their Cooking Class series on Middle Eastern Cooking.

What makes this fun is that there are many ways to prepare it and it is great for traveling. You can mix up all the dry spices and even cook the chicken and store it in the cooler until you are ready to put it all together. Or cook it all up and then freeze it without the nuts or corriander. It can easily be warmed up once thawed. It does, however, take some time to cook. The smells will get everyone salivating. It’s worth it!

Chicken Tagine With Dates and Honey

Prep Time: 5 minutes – Cooking Time: 2 hours – Serves 4-6

9 (1kg) chicken thigh fillets (we prefer and often use boneless chicken breasts)
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 medium (300g) onions finely sliced
4 cloves garlic, crushed
1 teaspoon cumin seeds
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1 teaspoon ground turmeric
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon chilli power (to taste)
1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1 1/2 cups (375ml) chicken stock (low salt or salt free is best)
1 cup (250ml) water
1/2 cup (85g) seedless dates, halved
1/4 cup (60ml) honey
1/2 cup (80g) blanched almonds, toasted is nice
1 tablespoon chopped fresh coriander leaves

Cut chicken into strips. Heat 1 tablespoon of the oil in pan and add chicken in batches, cooking until brown. Drain on absorbent paper.

Heat remaining oil in same pan, adding onions, garlic and spices to cook until onions are soft.

Add chicken back to the pan and cover with stock and water. Simmer, covered, for 1 hour.

Remove lid, simmer about 30 minutes or until mixture is thickened slightly and chicken is tender (the smells are wonderful).

Stir in chopped dates, honey and nuts and sprinkle with fresh coriander and serve alone or over white rice.

Note: Reheat on the stove and not the microwave to keep chicken from turning tough and chewy.