Song from My Youth

Canon Camera, Canon Live View, High Dynamic Range (HDR), Journaling, Light Intensity, Photography & Conceptualizing Beauty, Project 365 - Photo-a-day, Still Life, Sunset, Weather, Winter
Fire Tower, Watt Mountain - High Level, Alberta 1

Fire Tower, Watt Mountain – High Level, Alberta 1

Fire Tower, Watt Mountain - High Level, Alberta 2

Fire Tower, Watt Mountain – High Level, Alberta 2

Fire Tower, Watt Mountain - High Level, Alberta 3

Fire Tower, Watt Mountain – High Level, Alberta 3

Watt Mountain 2 - High Level, Alberta 1

Watt Mountain 2 – High Level, Alberta 1

Watt Mountain Ice - High Level, Alberta 1

Watt Mountain Ice – High Level, Alberta 1

Watt Mountain Ice - High Level, Alberta 2

Watt Mountain Ice – High Level, Alberta 2

A quiet Saturday, one spent mostly at home comes to a close. The Ozark Mountain Daredevils play from my iTunes account through computer speakers, ‘If You Wanna Get To Heaven’ – muted strings on a guitar are percussive, a harmonica brings in melody and other instruments, the sound preceding lyrics that consider getting to heaven – song and lyrics attract my ear, a song from my youth. The evening has involved editing images from Watt Mountain.

Listening to – Bruce Springsteen’s ‘Highway Patrolman,’ ‘One Step Up,’ and ‘Last to Die.’ There’s been ‘Rumble’ by Link Wray and the Wraymen. The Who have played ‘Boris the Spider,’ ‘I Can See for Miles’ and ‘Magic Bus.’ The Kingsmen have played ‘Louie Louie.’ Green Day have played ‘East Jesus Nowhere.’ The playlist has rounded out with Bruce Springsteen singing Pete Seeger’s Civil Rights anthem, ‘We Shall Overcome.’

Quote to Consider – “Picture-taking has been interpreted in two entirely different ways: either as a lucid and precise act of knowing, of conscious intelligence or as a pre-intellectual, intuitive mode of encounter.” – Susan Sontag, ‘On Photography’

Remembering on Watt Mountain

Canon Camera, Canon Live View, High Dynamic Range (HDR), Night, Photography & Conceptualizing Beauty, Project 365 - Photo-a-day, Still Life, Winter
Watt Mountain - High Level, Alberta 1

Watt Mountain – High Level, Alberta 1

Watt Mountain - High Level, Alberta 2

Watt Mountain – High Level, Alberta 2

Watt Mountain - High Level, Alberta 3

Watt Mountain – High Level, Alberta 3

Watt Mountain - High Level, Alberta 4

Watt Mountain – High Level, Alberta 4

Watt Mountain - High Level, Alberta 5

Watt Mountain – High Level, Alberta 5

Watt Mountain - High Level, Alberta 6

Watt Mountain – High Level, Alberta 6

For Bobby, a cousin and Canadian veteran, who passed away last Wednesday and whose funeral occurs today in Grande Prairie, Alberta. Thank you for the friend you’ve always been to my wife and me. Thank you for the family you’ve been a part of. Thank you for your service to Canada – wounded, but accomplishing what very few others could have. Very well done!

Listening to – ‘William’s Lullaby,’ ‘The Gairlock and Loch Duich’ and ‘Amazing Grace’ offered by the Canadian Scottish Regiment Pipes and Drums.

Quote to Consider – “‘A photograph is not an accident – it is a concept.’ To take a good photograph, runs the common claim, one must already see it. That is, the image must exist in the photographer’s mind at or just before [it is taken].” Susan Sontag (working with an Ansel Adams quote and taking it further) in ‘On Photography.’

Rattling Warmth

Canon Camera, Canon Live View, High Dynamic Range (HDR), Photography & Conceptualizing Beauty, Project 365 - Photo-a-day, School, Still Life, Weather, Winter
Courtyard Melt - High Level, Alberta 1

Courtyard Melt – High Level, Alberta 1

Courtyard Melt - High Level, Alberta 2

Courtyard Melt – High Level, Alberta 2

Directed to our school courtyard, these images bear witness to a curiosity of weather. In twenty-four hours our boreal winter temperatures have moved from -35C to 0C, a change most noticed by way of intense wind rattling houses. There has been melting that has occurred at night in the wind’s warmth. Remarkably, this same weather system has stretched eight-hundred kilometres from us in northern Alberta all the way to Edmonton in central Alberta, the wind, there, breaking railroad traffic arms and causing the LRT not to run. For us, at school, in our courtyard this extraordinary night melt has produced the following sculptures.

Listening to – a friend of Brian Turner (Bachman Turner Overdrive) play a self-sculpted tune in my office at school, the end of a parent meeting establishing goodwill – this parent, playing upon my Larrivee L-05 and our special needs students enjoying the show immensely … a good, good moment, the best kind.

Quote to Inspire – “… photographs alter and enlarge our notions of what is worth looking at and what we have a right to observe.” – Susan Sontag, ‘On Photography’

Jasper Avenue Apartment

Best Practices - Photography, Canon Camera, Canon Lens, Canon Live View, High Dynamic Range (HDR), Journaling, Photoblog Intention, Photography & Conceptualizing Beauty, Project 365 - Photo-a-day, Winter
Jasper Avenue Apartment - Edmonton, Alberta 1

Jasper Avenue Apartment – Edmonton, Alberta 1

Jasper Avenue Apartment - Edmonton, Alberta 2

Jasper Avenue Apartment – Edmonton, Alberta 2

Jasper Avenue Apartment - Edmonton, Alberta 3

Jasper Avenue Apartment – Edmonton, Alberta 3

An Edmonton apartment overlooks the North Saskatchewan River. It is a building that has been around since the thirties or forties and is architecture of my mother’s time, a time when walking was the way through Edmonton and vehicle use was limited. The apartment is one I associate to Canadian literature as backdrop or setting to scene, a building that could feature in Mordecai Richler’s ‘The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz’ or within Robertson Davies’ ‘Fifth Business.’

The apartment draws me to recall Morley Callaghan’s ‘Such is My Beloved.’ The novel looks at a priest in the Great Depression making sense of God’s Love and the encounter of his reaching out with Christian care to two prostitutes, an encounter in which his efforts are taken advantage of and as I now recall, a situation repeated for real much more recently and narrated more accurately in Nadia Bolz-Weber’s memoir, ‘Pastrix.’ In ‘Such is My Beloved,’ the cocoon of Church, Church-Life and Church politics, all, cloud the words of the great commission being lived out and because they are not current or used readily by the congregation their exploration by Father Dowling is an innocent and naïve endeavor, one done on the sly without others knowing, a first, sustained attempt that’s taken too far with aims of turning recipients’ Lives around.

The story functions as a morality play, unfortunately tragic in structure and is more cautionary about not living out the Great Commission. In actuality, the Great Commission is likely more of ‘do-what-you-can-with-what-you’re-presented-with;’ when lives begin to turn around the Church can mobilize with many resources.

Listening to – The Blind Boys of Alabama and ‘Run On for a Long Time,’ ‘Amazing Grace,’ ‘Soldier’ and ‘Way Down the Hole.’

Quote to Inspire/Consider – “The camera is a kind of passport that annihilates moral boundaries and social inhibitions, freeing the photographer from any responsibility toward the people photographed …. You are not intervening in their lives, only visiting them.” – Susan Sontag, ‘On Photography’

Edmonton Night

Canon Camera, Canon Lens, Canon Live View, High Dynamic Range (HDR), Night, Photography & Conceptualizing Beauty, Project 365 - Photo-a-day, Winter
Downtown Edmonton from Cloverdale Walkway Bridge - Edmonton, Alberta 1

Downtown Edmonton from Cloverdale Walkway Bridge – Edmonton, Alberta 1

Downtown Edmonton from Cloverdale Walkway Bridge - Edmonton, Alberta 2

Downtown Edmonton from Cloverdale Walkway Bridge – Edmonton, Alberta 2

Downtown Edmonton from Saskatchewan Drive - Edmonton, Alberta 1

Downtown Edmonton from Saskatchewan Drive – Edmonton, Alberta 1

Downtown Edmonton from Saskatchewan Drive - Edmonton, Alberta 2

Downtown Edmonton from Saskatchewan Drive – Edmonton, Alberta 2

Downtown Edmonton from Saskatchewan Drive - Edmonton, Alberta 3

Downtown Edmonton from Saskatchewan Drive – Edmonton, Alberta 3

Christmas took us to Edmonton, this year. And, I had my camera out for some of it.

Photographically, my intentions for Edmonton are evolving. While I will always find visual interest in exploring the Edmonton landscape, the city, in its sprawling hugeness seems to be holding repetition of structure and shape – areas of the city have become indistinguishable. A growing interest for me in the past few years, is the architecture in the arcs and patterns of Edmonton’s Anthony Henday Ring Road at the junction where the Ring Road meets the Calgary Trail (Gateway Boulevard) – there’s rich artistry and engineering in these, a visual feast for the visitor to Edmonton coming into the city from the Edmonton International Airport. Beyond such architecture, Baseline road and the petrochemical plants were of interest; at -30C, in late afternoon sun, the capture of light and shadow on each side of billowing steam plumes was an extraordinary sight.

Christmas had me recalling my father; at the age I am now, he would have been accommodating me in his Edmonton home as University student. Christmases, all those years ago, would have involved so much – the use of his car, getting home according to curfew, calling ahead if I wouldn’t be home for supper, and, the introduction of my girlfriend, now wife, to our family and within Christmas. These were years I learned so much about writing at University and from my father and mother, simply by involving them in proofreading and discussion. These years, were the years when my father introduced me to audiobooks in his bringing back Jane Austen’s ‘Emma’ from the HMV shop in one of his business trips to the UK. Audiobooks became a way to interact with texts beyond what we were reading in the novel-a-week pace set for us in Literature courses.

Downtown Edmonton is presented from two vantage points – Saskatchewan Drive and from the Cloverdale walkway bridge.

Quote to Inspire – “… Photographs alter and enlarge our notions of what is worth looking at and what we have a right to observe.” – ‘On Photography,’ Susan Sontag

Listening to – hauntingly familiar songs associated with Emilio Estevez’ film, ‘The Way.’ Tyler Bates’ ‘Ventura’ is one of them; along with it, a real treat – ‘Nadal De Luintra’ by Berroguetto.