Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Today Is....

My favorite  leaf, the Sycamore. I measured one today that was 15-inches by 11-inches.These are at the very top of the tree but I have a feeling that they are about that same size as the ones that I measured.


National Look at the Leaves Day and National Butterfly and Hummingbird Day. Just happen to have a few shots today of such things.

WRR Radio, the classical station  here in Dallas, has a weekly program at 8 P.M. our time (CT) featuring a Symphony Orchestra  each night. Tonight's broadcast is from the New York Phil and the program is once again playing Mahler's Requiem, in memory of those that were lost in the Las Vegas Shooting. It seems that they, NY Phil, plays this when there has been a major national tragedy. The chorus and the orchestra together have a very deep meaning for me. Gustav Mahler and I would have made good friends in our musical thinking.

So, the rain has finally made its way up from the Gulf as this post is being written. Eagerly, I am waiting for the 50 degree nights due next week when the day time temps will be in the 70s finally. It really has been a long hot summer. It hasn't been that Texas Sizzle that drains your energy completely, but it''s been hot non-the-less.

Sorry that I didn't come across a hummingbird. So, I'll sub in for the hummingbird, the place where the mallards have been hanging out this summer to stay cool. The tires and the ducks kind of blend in. Click on any of these pictures to enlarge and see the details closer.


Under the training sail boats are 10 mallards in the shade.




A butterfly recharging it's energy with some nectar for the milkweed and others that draws butterflies like honey to a bee.

Sunday, October 1, 2017

Water Towers Are Not All About Water Anymore.

The expansion of cell phone use can be seen just about anywhere. You don't see anyone hardly anymore that doesn't have a phone in there hand or up to their face. The second part of that equation is not only the number of cell phone towers but the increasing number of decks being added to those towers that are already an eye sore of sort. Last week I even saw a cell tower in that now famous triangle arrangement that was covered with a dome like a radar at the airports. Get this. The dome was a dead give away in that it was not round. It was---wait for it----triangular in shape. Now that excites me. Who in the world would go to that length for a cell tower when they are everywhere, bare and cable exposed!

Besides, we have all seen the high tension towers for power lines that runs across hillsides, through meadows, down mountainsides with as wide of a right-a-way as the tower itself. Plus, an equal amount on either side of the outside wires that are strung from tower to tower. Now, the city has started to create additional bike trails that wind there way along these cut right-of-ways with flashing pedestrian crossings at streets underneath the wires mile after mile after mile. They even have names for the section of trail done in stone work and steel mind you. Water fountains for not only you but the kids and the pouch are part of this money grab. Looks like a stepping stone on a toadstool. Nice. But, dang, there are still streets with mammoth potholes from three years ago! But that little gem we will let ride for another days post.

Now, even those, the trail high tension towers, are adding cellphone triangles at their tops. While that kind of cellphone tower makes more sense to me than the single pole type that juts up from  the corner of a church parking lot or behind the local Jimmy John's sub shop's alley, or even a neighborhood's girls soccer field. Even the soccer field abuts the local Kroger store and makes a couple of turn lefts-turn rights and still ending up with a cell tower at the end of the club house area  near the covered patio with picnic tables. There is, of course a lots of reasons for the choice of a site for these things. What is even more amazing is that to get the people to say okay to putting one on their property, there is a little pie sweeteners called  a monthly rent check from the cell provider. That raises even more questions about the utilities getting rent from the cell providers. Do you see a reduction on your monthly Edison (electric) bill? No. I bet you don't! So where is that money going?

Today, as I started out and traveled my regular Sunday route, I noticed a cell tower in a shopping center where I shopped before moving farther way from the old neighborhood. It's on both sides of a major street. There is a water tower set back out of the way that has had a few microwave dishes mounted to its catwalk railings. They encircle the tower beginning at the bottom of the tank and going upwards to the top were a little red light is required by the FAA. It is on the approach area for Love Field. Not so bad. It's stood there for years and likely will be there for more years to come. But, I also noticed a shocking event happening. Workers in multi-high cherry pickers and others with there little boatswain chair seats already attached to their rear ends.I pulled into the parking lot, made the circle to the side where the tower stood and got some shots.  Remember that those white pop sickle sticks are transmitters sending out that little signal or receivers and are the length of a six-foot tall man.

Just for comparison, I also ran across a tower crane being disassembled with one section of the cross bar already on the ground. It was higher than my car and through the sunroof, it was visible about another two feet. That tower crane will now go to a customer that has been waiting over a year to get it. In the metroplex currently, there are more than 100 tower cranes that are up and running. I counted 15 in downtown and 4 more at Love Field that are on my Sunday route. Today there were 3 at Medical City and 1 at White Rock;  2 at Northpark. That's a quarter of the 100 right there. Sundays are good for things like that when the traffic can endure more lane closings while another crane takes one apart. There are others on the tip of my tongue, too. It's mind-blowing.


Water Tower, Microwave towers and Cell Tower

The top deck is without any equipment---yet!

The man with his boatswain chair will need  as he rises upward to the higher deck above the  round dish to the infamous triangle that points the way.

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

The World Is Messed Up!

If you haven't noticed in the age of social media and other light news lately, the world is messed up! It also seems to me that during the course of my lifetime, things have gone from the good-old-days to the terrible-days-we're-in. That's just my observation, mind you, but I'm fairly confident that there are more than just a few out there that feel the same strains that are pulling on society.

What brought this up---you ask?  Well, I'd like to say nothing in particular but as it turns out--- it's every thing in particular. Neighbors against neighbors. Workers against management. Governing bodies against constituents. Political party against political party. Military against military That is, of course, the tip of the iceberg, the blunt end of the sword, the short end of the stick. The Howdy and the Dowdy of it all. Which, saving the best for last is or was the Howdy and the Dowdy. Just yesterday, I said to my self, "I wish I had my digital recorder with me. These drive times could be used in creating a comedy routine."

The things that I see while making my rounds is the point of this. I begin to see things that the average person would not even know was going on or what a parked car could mean in a parking lot. I don't even mean to imply that it is all nefarious. But, in today's world, being cautions and not walk up on something is a much more keen safety awareness than ending up being shot. Having a bit of street smarts is far better than having none.

 Years ago, when I came back to Dallas, I'd walk up to the drugstore to pick up a refill rather than drive less than a mile each way. I enjoyed being out in the fresh air and just taking in the sights and sounds of a big city that I love.  As I came back to my mom's place, I'd see these tennis shoes hanging from the telephone wires. I'd never seen that before. When mom would come home, I'd mention to her about the funniest thing that I saw today. It was my mom who told me what tennis shoes over a telephone cable meant. It blew me away, actually. I remember saying to her, "you got to be kidding me?" Not totally  about the shoes over the wires as much as my mom knowing what it meant more than I did. But she had been an officer of the court and appointed to serve as a probation officer.  It was then that I started paying more attention to things than ever before. Rather late in life, I might add.

The first taste of my awakening was when I came back from Brasil and at Miami's airport when we cleared customs, I saw just how ignorant American's were to the rest of the world. Remember thinking then, also, that "this is not good". As it has turned out, we have gone asleep at the wheel, just like the TexDot guy said to me a couple of years ago when we were talking about the high tech equipment going in on LBJ635. He had said,"The people of Dallas don't even know it's to late, already." Since then, I have observed more examples of what he was talking about and to me, it is frightening. There are people next door (figuratively) that still think that if civil war broke out or some type of martial law invasion would happen, they would still have time to go to the bank or think life is still normal for them. In other words, they are not aware that conditions could be like the Mel Gibson movie, Mad Max.  Not in America!
Meet David. Senior Citizen. Retired from Army at 63

David  kayaks every week for a few hours. Including unloading and loading his kayak onto his trailer and stowing equipment.

David is 85 currently. He is a Legion of Merit holder.





Thursday, September 21, 2017

They're Back!

A week or so ago, thoughts turned to the return of the pelicans to the lake. After checking the log from last year, it was noted that the pelicans returned on Columbus Day, the 12th of October.  Also, I had spotted a big blob of white a ways out from Sun Set Bay's dock on the logs that wash up on an ever increasing sandbar. But, it was only today, that I could, for my own satisfaction, confirm that the blob of white was indeed the core group of 16 pelicans, mixed with this years fledglings. The old male that knew the way down to Texas has been the leader the past couple of years, at least. It is my guess that with the cold already setting up north along the Canadian border, the "old man" took the rookies and headed out to claim the lake for another season. The older birds will bring what's left and come on down fairly soon, I would think.

There was snow in Montana last week and Idaho got a 9-inch snow fall already in the boarder towns that have ski lodges. With the trees already turning and dropping leaves here, it has been a general consensus that fall is coming early this year. Even the Farmer's Almanac at the checkout at Lowe's points to a pretty good winter up north. The National Weather Service has also indicated that the Great Lakes were going to have a rather "old fashioned" winter this year. That's cold and snow from early November through May generally. Been there, done that already for a number of years. Some of you will remember reading already this month on this blog where I mentioned the flipping of the leaves on the trees showing up. Our first 50-degree night time temperatures are due next weekend as a fall cold front settles in on us next week.

My doctor's office called  today around noon to tell me that they had messed up on the quantity for a refill and they had just corrected it with the pharmacy. While it wasn't that bad heat and humidity wise, I decided to head out early and swing by the pharmacy and come on in early today. There were pictures to load and to edit. It has been a busy month for pictures and the doctors. Plus, saving on gas as the price begins to fall isn't a bad ideal either. Gas today was at $2.449, down from the $2.599 when the hurricanes were shutting down the refineries in Houston during Harvey's rage.

Plus, as a bonus...meet my new friend that I discovered today. Enjoy
The core of 16 have arrived from up north.

New friend by accident
Beautiful white peacock. Look at the second, more traditional plumage up against the tree trunk in the background.

Big Bird and Little Bird.

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

My Fav Airlines Pulls Yet Another Rabbit Out of the Hat.

It's no secret that I have long admired the quirky and humorous billboard ads around Love Field. They go up and down Mockingbird Lane on either side of where Cedar Springs becomes Herb Kelleher Way at the main entrance to Love Field. I love humor and I cannot drive down Mockingbird without a chuckle, which I appreciate.

Last year during the holidays, the parking situation at Love was bad. The increased traffic coupled with the renovation and enlargement of the terminal didn't help much. Never-the-less, it became an immediate attention grabber that something had to be done. Quickly, Southwest started their LOVE lots and shuttled employees to the terminal from those lots. Then, they created long term lots at a much cheaper rate to give the parking garages a quicker turnover. In short, the problem was eased a bit quickly.

The aftermath was this: construct a new and larger additional garage. That's why you see the big tower cranes at Love now. In an effort to kinda keep tabs on the Southwest growth in physical plant, Southwest opened a new operations center across Denton Drive from their Corporate Headquarters. That building had not even seen a few paint chips and scratches before the groundbreaking of the new training facility north of the operations center. Well, it was just common sense that new equipment would need to be placed in that center because of the flight training simulators for pilots and a mock-up for flight attendants, too, but then, it became apparent from just general observation that something else was going on in that new, and not yet finished building. When the big holes in the HQ building and the operations center on the second level appeared, it was pretty much an architectural guess that walk ways or sky bridges were in the works because the Love Field Train Station is in between HQ building and the operations center. And when the expressway like support went up in between the operations and new flight training facility, that same guess that would be the support to span the sky walks. Suddenly, there appeared one on the east side of Denton Drive at the end of the corporate HQ building and that sealed the fate of the sky walks suspicion.

The parking garage for the flight training facility is unusual. the normal look of one of those is to see the uneven floors caused by the ramps going up the many levels. That wasn't there. It still needs to be investigated but I would think that either the ramps are in the middle or there is some automated lift. I saw a lot of those in Brasil (yes, in Brazil it is spelled with an s instead of a z). the facility has a back  entrance from Harry Hines Blvd. in the medical research district as well as the main entry point off Denton Drive.

In the meanwhile, things have a way of revealing themselves to those of us that aren't impatient. In time, most questions are answered automatically, albeit but the fine details. Still, the over all picture is always the most important and in photography when you do a close up, most of the time, you will do a wide angle to show the relationship to the subject. That's still true with general observations when trying to figure things out. Which brings me to my point at the end of this flight. All that additional space in the new training facility might be for---get this--- SWA University. How did I come up with that? Simple and using Southwest own words: "Check out these training wheels" that I found parked in an out of the way place. I learned long ago to never fail to check out those kinds of paces for the real taste of business savvy.  I'll keep you posted.
Yes, do check out these SWA University training wheels!

What A ride!

Here's that skywalk hub. Left to Operations. This way to HQ
                        and right background is training facility as it is now getting its sky walk.

Sunday, September 17, 2017

Last Weekend of Summer in Downtown Garland

The Marketplace DFW that forms a horseshoe of vendors of farmers & artisans, on the square in downtown Garland, is nearing the end of another season with the last two trip to Garland on October 7th and 21st. The final weekend this year will be in Mesquite on the 28th of October. The schedule alternates one week Garland one week Mesquite each Saturday from April through October.

Usually, there is something that always catches my eye and this week it was several things. The old Library buildings that held the Theater company is now gone and the empty space is a grassed over green space with some interesting outdoor past times. The first thing that caught my eye was the arrangement of colorful slat-back chairs in the center of the green space. I had to try them out! I love those chairs. Many may know them as adirondack's named for the mountains in New England or Cape Cod's beaches. The classic is, of course the white and the red. Some like the cedar stained. But, they are very comfortable and I do enjoy them. These, along with the view, might find me here more often when the cooler fall weather sets in just around the corner. The ping pong table and the corn hole bean bag game boards (there were a set of three) were interesting as well.

When I started my walk around the horseshoe, some of the vendors I recognized from trips past. The thing that I look for is the unusual, the well displayed and organized tables as well, of course, something of a bargain or new source of healthy foods and the like. Then, I go sit down and just observe where the people gravitate toward. All in all, this weeks pick would be a thumbs up to the Wholesome Farms and Gardens of Van Alstyne, Texas. Wholesome Farms and Gardens 

A  blue gingham table cloth covering the table. It reminded me of my paternal grandmother's kitchen table. She had both the red and the blue. The blue was always my favorite. Next, the young man at the booth was polite and knew his product well. I ask a few basic questions and he answered those questions straightforward and articulated his take on the products well. The egg cage was a clever and creative display of fresh eggs and he proudly produced the carton of fresh grass raised free range chicken eggs in brown shell. When I ask about the meats that he had mentioned in his presentation, he immediately produced  packages of fresh ground beef and pork brats frozen and did not hesitate to mention the companies that dressed out their beef and made their brats for them. I ask if they raised the beef themselves and he answered that clearly as well. Yes, they raise their beef on their farm in Van Alstyne and then provided me with a folded 8 1/2 x 11 pamphlet printed on both sides with information on what we discussed and contact information phone number, Email, website and both face book and twitter social media addresses. The well cared-for frozen meats were solidly frozen and when people take care to store there products on the road well, they do the same when producing them as well. That impressed me a lot.
♫ Slat-backs in Fall Colors for relaxing--they ain't for sale! ♫

♫ I like this company! ♫

Chalk Board for Freshness!

Being an old marketing guy...this guy was a winner hands down. With the holidays coming along soon, I have a heads up on some healthy eating of locally grown foodstuff that I already feel comfortable with even before trying it out the first time. As Arnold is so well know for: "I'll be back!"


Friday, September 15, 2017

Shotgun Shells,Tire Donuts, a Virgin Fog Cutter

It almost seems like a scene out of a James Dean movie, doesn't it? I've always said that being an Urban Photographer was the treasure hunt of all treasure hunts. You go looking for one thing and come up with something you never expected to find and that fits like a piece of a puzzle into the whole scheme of things.

Going to the doctor on Tuesday set me back a couple of days. Day before yesterday, I never left the house. It was the last day for a while of low humidity and fall-like temperatures. In short--it was my kind of weather. Then, this Equifax thing jammed up the Internet and consumed time to get nothing but a hold pattern more like a plane circling than waiting for a customer rep. Seldom do I give up, but I also know when to cut my losses (time wise) and I hung up. But, the point is that it was a big waste of time and that threw off my schedule. So, yesterday, I had to get back out and do some shooting. These days of 10 or 15 meager shots just didn't cut it to fulfill my goal. The majority of my portfolio is shot in Spring and Fall. I have tried to increase the Summer and Winter stock but the fact remains that Spring and Fall are my kind of weather and my kind of scenes. However, again, I bring to mind the words of the fictional character on the Golden Girls, Sophia, who always had the cookie cutter answer that never went out of style when she would look directly into the camera and say : "You never know!"  That would apply here because I have really been working this summer to increase the stock of Summer shots that are published and it has been a good summer for me in doing that.

Next week will slow me down again with another doctors appointment. It seems like you never can regain the lost time, even when you try to work harder to make up for the time lost. But, I do enjoy doing what I do. It's a hobby that pays back some of the cost, too. I was reminded a few years back that Urban Photography doesn't always have to be the best shots, too, but that doesn't mean I  don't try to be better with each click of the shutter. The example pointed out that there was  a very important time in American history unmarked of the actual spot where President Kennedy's plane was parked at Love Field. When Lyndon B. Johnson was sworn in as the new President following the death of John F. Kenned, no actual location was ever marked. One reason was because Love Field had been upgraded with runways and taxiways, the tarmac was never marked that day after the Dealey Plaza shooting. And, because of security and other reasons, the general public was not allowed out on the tarmac. There were not a lot of camera shots out side but plenty of the swearing in ceremony aboard Air Force One. As it turned out, there was one local photographer who had an image of the plane that could be used to pinpoint the actual location. Today, there is both a marker on the tarmac and a placard inside the terminal window looking out to the placard on the tarmac. So urban photographers do catch things that most others do not.

This weekend, I plan to go down to Lee Park and shoot the empty base where the Robert E. Lee on horseback statue sat until yesterday afternoon. I had shot the area with candles all around when Tony Romo, then quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys had gotten married. That is another story that I feel some comments coming forward, but the time isn't now. So enjoy the oddity shots with a bit of humor from the past that still rears its head today.
Fog Cutter N528VA cleared to make departure turn onto runway 13R at Love Field. The horizon of the plane is adjusted to cover the line of sight from the tail to the top of the construction cranes, not the horizontal plane of the runway.

Shotgun Shells left on the ground. When as a kid I went bird hunting with my uncle, grandfather,and dad, back in the early 50's they picked up there shells even then. This shows how people today could care less.

Most teenage drivers that lived on the wild side could recall those days of doing these donuts on the pavement. This is atop the new Sylvan Bridge that crosses the Trinity at Trammel Crow Park. It's where the long semi-circular ramp comes into the top to the bridge at a T-intersection where there is lots of room to do crazy things like this. There are cameras there.

It All Started in the wee hours of May 28th when 80 MPH winds was tossing everything against the side of my house.

 Those winds were substained for well over 40 minutes. The results were trees everywhere down or large branches broken off. One of my bus ro...