Most villagers don't own cars, and it isn't easy to go to town with a donkey cart. If you think an SUV is difficult to park, try a donkey. At least the SUV doesn't get bored and decide to go home. Clever merchants load a pickup truck with what they think that the village women will want and make their rounds.
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Saturday, June 27, 2009
The Shop Comes To The Village
Most villagers don't own cars, and it isn't easy to go to town with a donkey cart. If you think an SUV is difficult to park, try a donkey. At least the SUV doesn't get bored and decide to go home. Clever merchants load a pickup truck with what they think that the village women will want and make their rounds.
Friday, June 26, 2009
Flight
I've been away in New York for a week or so for my son's wedding, so no photos to post. The wedding was lovely and the bride and groom took off for a honeymoon in Alaska to do whale-watching, kayaking, and glacier-stomping. On my return, I went out for a look at a wall that the Antiquities Department is building to block us off from our desert and discovered a huge flock of European Storks resting in a mango grove. I was quietly shooting photos when about half the flock suddenly took off. It's late in the season for storks and we've had an unusual number flying through this area and taking rest stops. The change in migration pattern makes me wonder what is happening in our world.
Sunday, June 14, 2009
Waiting Our Turn
Every so often I help a photographer friend who shoots portraits of championship body builders all over the world. He shoots some of them in different settings showing off their ability to make particular muscles pop out all over their bodies and then he also shoots photos of them on my horses. The horses and I have gotten used to the routine although it only happens about once a year. They wait patiently and then carry the young men ever so carefully around a prescribed area or they stand looking off into the distance while the men flex and pose on their backs.
Saturday, June 13, 2009
High Flyers
Every year the European storks travel from Germany and other parts of that continent south to Africa in the winter and then back again in the spring. Usually we see a few of them who have stopped off in our fields for rest over night before continuing on the next day. This year we've seen them daily in flocks of ten to twenty birds on their northward flight. I don't know why there are so many more of them this year unless the wind currents have changed a bit. The storks will be out in the fields early in the morning and then as the air heats up they catch the thermals soaring up gradually in spirals until they reach almost 20 thousand feet where they catch the northbound jet streams. On the ground they are ungainly, tall (a metre) but light weight, but in the air they are extraordinary.