“Stairs, Parque de la Alameda” — A person on stairs at th Parque de la Alameda, Santiago de Compostela
While visiting Santiago de Compostela this past spring we wandered a bit outside the confines of the central old town, including a visit to the Parque de la Alameda. The large park is easy to access and features everything from statues to groves of trees and (at least during our visit) a carnival. Its open spaces provided a pleasant break from the narrow and sometimes crowded streets of the old part of town.
Our walk began on a wide route passing beneath groves of large, old trees. Eventually we arrived at a sort of platform at the top of these old stairs, which lead to a lower terrace of gardens. While all of the forms in this scene would be quite “square” and angular if viewed from directly above, here the effects of a lower angle and looking downward distort that regularly in fascinating ways.
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“Tufa, Island, Distant Mountains” — Shoreline tufa formations, an island, and distant mountains, Mono Lake.
This view looks roughly north across the expanse of Mono Lake and Mono Basin. The foreground formations are tufa towers, exposed as the lake’s level dropped decades ago when Los Angeles began taking the water from feeder streams. The main body of the lake lies beyond the tufa. What appears to be the far shoreline is actually Paoha Island, a volcanic feature. In the far distance are desert mountains of the basin and range country.
I knew some history about the fights over Mono Lake’s water, but I learned something new on this visit. A few decades ago Los Angeles Water and Power bought out water rights up and down the Eastern Sierra, drastically changing the environment — and in places turning former lakes into dusty wastelands. This taking dropped the level of Mono Lake by many feet (it was too late for Tule Lake in Owen’s Valley) until court orders and regulations forced an agreement that LA would begin to protect the watershed, with a goal of eventually restoring the lake to a level closer to its historic level. I thought that serious progress had been made… but decades later the lake’s level is still dangerously low.
“After the Storm — Tuolumne Sunset” — Sun comes out after a summer storm in the Tuolumne Meadows High Sierra.
Decades ago I started visiting places like this when I was very young. (My first visit to Tuolumne Meadows was almost certainly before I was 10 years old.) In my “early mountain years” — which I think of as roughly the first three decades — it was all about discovery. I went to places I had not been before, saw new sights, experienced things for the first time. Everything was new… which, of course, was kind of the point. But now, a few more decades along life’s path, I see these places differently. To a great extent they are old friends whose acquaintance I renew on each visit.
There are three high points in this photograph — Lembert and Dog Domes in the foreground and the distant summit of Mount Dana at over 13,000’. I’ve stood on all of them. Today they are no longer romantic new objectives, but rather familiar places that are part of my Sierra world. Yet somehow, I still find ways to see something new in them every time I visit.
“Mountain Haze, Kosovo” — Kosovo mountains west of the city of Pec.
As far as I know (and I cannot claim to be an expert on Kosovo after visiting for a few days) this is not a particular iconic location — it was just a place where we pulled over while driving into the Accursed Mountains (yes, that is their name) west of the town of Pec. Looking up into the mountains on either side of the river valley we followed, I was impressed by the thick vegetation, the steep slopes, and the atmosphere’s luminous haze.
For me it is an odd experience to quickly pass through a new landscape, particularly one where I’m unfamiliar with the features, the culture, and the language… and to then quickly move on, perhaps with no opportunity to return in the future. I’m more used to getting to know such places through return visits that expand my knowledge. But what I came away with here are fragments of memory — a walk to the end of a gravel road, lunch at a mountain lodge, stopping to photograph a country mosque next to a mountain river, and pausing to look up at theses slopes.
Photographer and visual opportunist. Daily photos since 2005, plus articles, reviews, news, and ideas.
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