Showing posts with label bend. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bend. Show all posts

Saturday, March 10, 2007

I'm a Dumbass


Not this little guy - me - I'm the dumbass.

I'm in Oregon at the moment and just after arriving, looked through my bag for a pair of sweatpants and other warm layers and found none.

I must have been sleep-packing, because I packed t-shirts but no sweaters, no fleece, nothing warmer than a sweatshirt, and nothing to lounge around the house in.

Clearly, my vitamins aren't working or they can't stop my brain from dissolving and running out my nose with every sneeze.

On a positive note, the opening at the museum was a big success and that night I was commissioned to get more wildlife shots. I spent some time there yesterday watching a lively river otter swim all around his pond - otters have the coolest paws - and getting new shots of the lynx and bobcat. It was hard not to get in there and snuggle with them.

Thursday, January 04, 2007

Off To a Quick Start


2007 is getting busy. I'm heading up to Oregon at the end of this month to meet the other volunteer museum photographers & sync up on the show.

I still need to finish my submission prep and send that up. Then I have another shoot for the food bank. And I need to remember to keep showing up at my day job.

It will soon be time to disengage from the corporate teat. It's nice security, but at this point, I'm not sure the security is making up for the soul-sucking despair.

I could always go back to waitressing. Tips AND a square meal - not too shabby.

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Travelogue - Wednesday (8/9)

Backyard visitor


I miss my kids.

Very ready to head home.
Meow.

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Travelogue - Tuesday (8/8)

Had lunch at a restaurant that's been in Bend since the '30s, the Pine Tavern. It has two actual pine trees growing through the dining room.

Behind the restaurant, flowing through the heart of town is the Deschutes - this quiet stretch known as Mirror Pond. The park is Drake Park and runs along the river for about a mile or so with amazing homes on either side.

Overlooking Drake Park and Mirror Pond, this is one of many homes I'd be happy to relocate to.

This lady works at a nearby gallery, keeping it tidy throughout the day.

Oh, wait, no, that's a new piece. I call her Gladys.

This dog will sell you tickets to stuff.

This dog is Sampson and will only talk to you if his mom says you're OK. He's a very sweet puppy who works with his mom at a clothing boutique. Most of the clothes they have would fit Sampson or small people who work in carnivals.

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Travelogue - Monday (8/7)

I think vacation is working. I think I'm unwound. I'm cleaning my room, the kitchen, the house, doing laundry, reading books I've meant to read for months - things I didn't have time/energy for before this trip north.

Either I'm relaxed enough to be able to focus on stuff like that, or I'm kidding myself and feeling twitchy about having so little to do. Being away from home, I don't have much else TO do.

I'm ready to get home to my giant man boy and my fuzzy children. A little more northwest unwinding to go, and then I'll be in the car going very fast towards California.

Something the deer haven't eaten yet.

Amazing thunder/lightning storms came through Monday night - tried like hell to get a bolt, but no tripod, lots of clouds and too much ambient outdoor light to work around. The storm went on for hours - giant bolts covering half the sky at times.



Playing with zoom.

Smoke makes dramatic sunsets.

Monday, August 07, 2006

Travelogue - Sat/Sun (8/5-8/6)

We had dinner with neighbors Sunday night. Really interesting people, and their son is a well-known comic book writer & artist (to those who know comics, that is ; ). They came by for cocktails and then we agreed to caravan to dinner.

The neighbors drove away and my father went to shut the back hatch on our car in the garage so he could pull it out into the driveway. He was lowering the hatch as I was about to get into the back seat when I heard him calmly say, "Oh dammit." When I looked up, blood was pouring down his face. Instead of shutting the hatch, he slammed the corner of it into his noggin, resulting in a deep cut.

I ran him into the house and grabbed a towel. Amazingly, he managed to hold his head out from his body to prevent bleeding on his nice shirt, but as he tried to rinse his head in the sink, it seemed to create more blood. It was a spectacular pre-dinner show. Who knew Dad was such a bleeder?

I kept thinking, what will the neighbors say when we show up late with my dad's head bleeding profusely?

The bleeding subsided after some pressure, then we threw a band-aid on his dome & headed out to chow. Dinner was great, but throughout the evening, I kept noticing the band-aid getting redder and redder. After dinner we convinced my dad to stop at an urgent care clinic to see if they thought it might require anything more than hydrogen peroxide & a bandage.

Turns out the "urgent" care clinic is more of a "hope we're open when you need us" clinic - closed after 6pm on Saturdays and Sundays. We reasoned that my dad would likely still be alive in the morning and if the cut was still bleeding, he'd go back to have it looked at.

As luck would have it, it's already starting to heal and he found an actual doctor to look at it today. Doc said it was doing fine and commended our field dressing & first aid skills. My mother is now known as Nurse Ratched.


That's blood on the floor of the garage.


That's a nice slice of prime rib.

It's strange that just about every time I'm vacationing with my parents, something happens that results in one or all of us getting hurt.

When I was 15 we took a small RV all through the Pacific Northwest and I got my thumb smashed in the door. Then when my dad stomped on the gas pedal I was thrown backward into the corner of the fridge, right between the shoulder blades.

Then at one campsite we were picking blackberries and a swarm of bees came upon us. As I was sprinting back to the RV, I heard my dad yelling, "watch out for snakes!" That wasn't a great time.

While on a road trip in Europe not so long ago, we went to get the car out of the hotel garage and noticed a chlorine smell, but didn't think much of it. As the elevator descended to the garage the smell got stronger and stronger.

Soon we were choking on chlorine gas and running for the emergency exit. Concerned that our car and luggage were left unattended, we all held our breath and ran back in to get the car. Why? I have no idea. We're Americans. We can't leave a perfectly good car AND luggage in a garage. That's stupid.

After waiting for what felt like a day or the garage gate to open, we drove around front and went in to tell the manager they were poisoning their guests in the garage.

They seemed annoyed at us and said they'd check it out, but we were convinced they thought we were raving idiots. They gave us bottles of Evian and sent us on our way. We drove for an hour with the windows down, coughing, trying to sooth our burned throats with French mineral water and cold air.

Another time in Portugal, my mother had the mussels and really shouldn't have. She spent that night in the loo, cursing the restaurant, the Portuguese and our lack of Pepto Bismol.

It's a rich tradition - vacation means adventure, and with adventure, comes the risk of injury. We go boldly forth and keep our first aid kits handy.

Travelogue - Friday (8/4)

Lazy black eyed susans in the front yard - lazy, cause all they do is stand there in the sun, doing nothing. Kinda like me this week.

Happened by a Pierce Arrow convention... one of many gorgeous cars we saw on our way into the High Desert Museum.

A bobcat resident of the High Desert Museum - not so much a musem as an animal rescue/rehabilitation and educational institution. They take wild animals injured or confiscated from dumbasses who thought a bobcat or lynx would make a good pet, and if they can rehabilitate them back into the wild, they do, and if not, they create an optimal environment for the animal to live out a healthy, comfortable life, while teaching anyone who will listen how to live as one with nature. They have lovely historical exibits, too, but the best part about them is their work with animals.

This guy was taken from a dipshit who thought a bobcat would be a swell pet. There's another beautiful cat there, a lynx, who was found out in the wilderness starving to death, after another asshole had removed its canine teeth and had it declawed. The lynx is now healthy & enjoying his days at the HDM.

The job I'd really like to have is that of hunting down these morons & shooting them full of incredibly painful things - bullets, nails, razor blades, really any sharp, harmful things, then maybe pouring gasoline all over them & lighting them on fire.

This is Moki - Moki was found as a baby otter without any sign of her mother. After some time trying to find her mother, she was rescued & brought to the HDM where she spends most of her time playing or sleeping.

One of the amazing birds of prey at the HDM. Some of their birds sustained injuries (hit by car, power line, etc.) that prevent them from being released back into the wild, others were confiscated from idiots who thought they could keep a red tailed hawk as a pet.

A beautiful boy - can't remember the type of hawk - ruffled hawk, perhaps? I was too distracted by how gorgeous he is & wasn't listening.

A giant lava flow, now used as an informal firing range and we think is the same place where every New Year's Day, the locals find an old beater car and tie the steering wheel in place all the way to one side, throw a cinder block on the gas & let it go, then they all shoot at it from the top of the surrounding ridge. I love country entertainment.

Dinner at 38 Degrees - one of the best dinners I've had.

Fantastic vino, from the other home country.

I don't remember the rest of the night... lots of fresh air, wine... Zzzzz