Archive for the ‘California’ Category

Snotty Nosed Elephant Seals at San Simeon

Friday, July 23rd, 2010


Gone Campin’

As I write this post I am getting ready to head off to bed so I can wake up bright and early for a camping trip. My buddy Paul is having his birthday so all the guys are camping out in Glen Rose at Dino Park for the weekend. Not sure if I will have a chance to take many pictures but I will do my best! Hopefully I’ll get to see some dinosaur tracks, and maybe some dramatic clouds to frame them with :-)

TED Talks

Have you checked out the TED Talks section yet? If you have some time, head over there and get comfortable. TED is an incredible organization with some of the brightest thinkers and creators and dreamers around, and they are all giving the talks of their lives to a crowd full of people at the top of their fields. If you can’t make up your mind, I recommend two to start out – Jill Bolte Taylor’s talk is my all time favorite TED video. She is a brain researcher and she actually got to study herself while she was having a stroke! Not by choice of course, but it’s a really eye opening talk on the difference between right brain and left brain thinking. This weekend I plan on shutting my left brain down and leaving it at home! Another is Taryn Simon’s talk on “Photographing Secret Sights.” She spends months trying to get behind closed doors as different places to photograph things that most people never see, or even knew existed. Very interesting. If you get hooked on TED like I have, you won’t get much done this weekend. Cheers!

Snotty Nosed Elephant Seals at San Simeon

These images are near and dear to my heart. They was taken during the trip to California that got me hooked on photography. Now, I was already into photography at this point. I was an avid hobbyist and was searching for clients, but this trip sealed (pun intended) the deal. We were visiting my wife’s side of the family for her cousin Chelsey’s wedding and we made it out there a few days early to help prepare. They live in San Luis Obispo and it is absolutely gorgeous there! One day, my sister-in-laws boyfriend (now husband) Noah and I (are you confused yet?) decided to take off for an afternoon and go explore. We headed north and had to choose between seeing potential Elephant Seals, or paying to go see a definite Hearst Castle. We decided on the seals and it was a great choice! We got to the beach and there were literally hundreds upon hundreds of seals lounging on the shore! While I don’t condone this kind of behavior, we immediately climbed down to the beach, past the sign that said “Do not approach seals, federal fines up to somethin somethin.” In my experience, sometimes the best images involve a little rule breaking. We were very cautious to get a feel for how close the seals wanted us to get, and we figured out quickly that their bubble was about three feet. I took about 300 some odd photo’s before we decided we had better leave (some guy started yelling at us saying we would get in trouble). Here are the images that started it all :-)

My favorite of the bunch :-)

This girl might of had a cold, not sure

The moment I knew I might be too close…

The 3 foot rule, give or take :-)



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Laguna Beach at High Tide

Monday, July 19th, 2010


I’ve always edited my photos out of order. It just always made sense. Sometimes I won’t even look at the images from a shoot for days or weeks or even months. I do this so the anticipation of the images builds, and when I finally look at them I have a fresh perspective on them. I also do this so I don’t have to deal with the pressure of editing thousands of images from a trip all at once. It’s just too much of a hassle. I just edited the image below and it was done in January of this year. No biggie! Another advantage is that as I learn new techniques and refine my editing skills, I can edit images that I would have done poorly on earlier. In fact, I tried to edit this very image about a month after January. I failed. I simply could not make the water look right. The exposure that had the good looking waves wasn’t coming through right in Photomatix, and when I tried to mask in the correct one, I just couldn’t make it look good. I tried it again this evening and bam, no problem at all. I have gotten so much better at masking, adjusting exposure levels, re-masking, painting, spotting things to fix, that it was a piece of cake. I can also say with certainty that if I had edited this image in January, the sky would have looked bad. Back then (it seems so long ago) I was still pretty new to HDR, so I simply took the Photomatix result of the sky and went with it. This would cause haloing around trees, and unrealistic colors in the sky.

About the image | Laguna Beach at High Tide

I took this image at a somewhat secluded cove in Laguna Beach, below the famous (and incredibly expensive) Montage Beach Resort. In fact it was so secluded that some photographer felt comfortable enough to photograph his half naked girlfriend and was right in the way of my shots for a while. After they finally left, I was free to create images of the sunset! Kristin and I waited at this cove for an hour or so waiting for the sun to go down, and for naked people to leave. During the sunset, I took tons of images from different angles. And when it just started dipping below the horizon we started to leave to find a vantage point on top of the cliffs. Right when I got the end of the cove we were in, I found this spot and fired off 6 exposures from my 5D Mark II.

Canon EOS 5D Mark II, Canon 15mm Fisheye f/2.8, 15mm, f/14, ISO 200, 1/13th



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San Clemente Pier Awaiting the Sunset

Saturday, July 17th, 2010


I’m kind of a sucker for California, sunsets and beaches (if you haven’t noticed). So when I can get all three of them in one image, I’m pretty satisfied. I have an almost identical image of this pier that was shot about 10-15 minutes later in an older blog post. That image shows just how quickly sunsets change from beautiful golden warm tones, to surreal and cool tones. I took this image on a photo walk with Trey Ratcliff, back in January. If you like the images on this blog, you should check out his work as well over at Stuck in Customs.

I took this image with a Canon 5D Mark II (I’ve got a review here), and a Canon 24-70mm lens (review here). I kept the aperture fairly low here to freeze the waves as much as possible. The lower your aperture, the faster your shutter speed. Shots like these have several obstacles, including waves, birds in the air, people walking by on crowded beaches, and so on. Some people can’t figure out how you would be able to freeze birds in the air when you’re taking 3-7 frames of a scene. To concur this obstacle, you can either mask in one of the lower light frames (which always have the fastest shutter speeds of the set, or shoot a single RAW image and convert it into a pseudo HDR.



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F14 Tomcat Aboard the USS Midway | California Travel Photography

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010


Update on Gallery Night

As many of you have read, my work is being featured in an art gallery this Saturday night at Main and Vine Art Gallery in Keller Texas. I just wanted to say that I got all my prints in and all the selected images for the gallery night are now on display and ready to go! So, if you can’t make it by Saturday night for whatever reason, you can stop by any time now to view my work. I’m pretty excited about the gallery night and hope to see you all there, hopefully I will be able to meet some of you I haven’t met before face to face. Any prints purchases that night or any time through my website will come with a “Certificate of Authenticity” as well as a brief “Story Behind the Image.” You can keep these with the picture or with your other important documents.

Cancun Next Week!

Wow this trip is coming up fast! I got some emails and phone calls from a few people with tips on what to do while in Cancun. I figured out I will only have one full day to travel around. Every other day is either the wedding, or a half day where I am flying. If I have time to make it down, I will go to the Myan ruins at Chichen Itza. I have been to the ruins at Uxmal on a cruise I got to do a few years back, but Chichen Itza is supposedly where it’s at for ruins. I keep reading that you need to stay there for about 3 days to see everything there, but I will just have to cram what I can into one day. Other than that I won’t have a lot of time to focus on travel images. Which is perfectly fine because Daniel and Laurens wedding is going to be amazing and I can’t wait to shoot it!

F14 Tomcat Aboard the USS Midway

My family has a great history of serving in the armed forces. My Grandpa and his brother on my Mom’s side served in the U.S. Navy during the Vietnam War. He served on submarines and did all kinds of cool. My Papa on my Dad’s side was an MP in the second World War, but I never got a chance to meet him because of his passing when I was about three years old. My sisters husband even served with the US Rangers, although I don’t know much about what he did. Maybe I can find out one day :-) . Most recently my cousin Brandon (also on my Dad’s side) served in Iraq with the 101st Airborne as a medic. He was with them when they marched in and I truly admire his bravery and courage, as I do with both my grandparents. To everyone who served or serves in the US Military, thank you from the bottom of my heart. You are all heroes and your courage leaves me in awe. We are forever in debt to your sacrifice.

The aircraft below is none other than the famous F14 Tomcat. You know, Top Gun? The F14 flew from December of 1970 all the way through September of 2006 when it was officially retired. What’s really interesting about this jet is that Iran owns about 44 of them today! During Nixon’s presidency, back when the US had good diplomatic relations with Iran, the US decided to offer Iran access to our military technology. They needed aircraft to defend themselves against Russia and they decided the Tomcat would fit the bill. After relations started going south, the US embargoed much of their shipments to Iran and even began destroying remaining F14′s to make sure they didn’t fall into the hands of the Iranian air force. To this day, Iran still has 22 working F14 Tomcats. The US Air Force will not sell scrap parts of the F14 either because of the same fear, like they do with other aircraft.

F14 Tomcat Aboard the USS Midway

F14 Tomcat Aboard the USS Midway



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Low Tide at Carlsbad State Beach | HDR and Travel Photography

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010


I love finding an image in my library that I have looked past and discarded multiple times, and then realizing it’s potential and bringing life to it. The obvious photos are great, but these little hidden gems have a special place in my portfolio :-) . On our recent trip to California, my wife Kristin and I were driving back to Orange County after a rather disappointing trip to San Diego. We drove to San Diego to scout a place for sunset and I could not for the life of me find a good place. Now, you can take snapshots anywhere, but an HDR or landscape photograph has a lot of criteria to meet before it becomes worth taking. There has to be something unique or intriguing in every part of the frame. So after visiting the USS Midway and having a corn dog at Hot Dog On A Stick (we ate there during our honeymoon so it’s tradition :-) ), we bailed on San Diego in hopes to find somewhere on the way back the OC. There were a lot of unique challenges in taking pictures of the beach. I have become very picky on what I take pictures of and it can be frustrating at times. Everybody has seen the typical picture of a beach with the sand, the waves, and the sky behind it. So I always try and bring something extra into the sides of the frame when I can. This could be a pier, a bluff, some rocks, people, etc, whatever makes the shot interesting.

When I took this image, there was nothing to bring into the frame besides the sand, the waves, and the sky; the typical image. But to me, there was something unique about this one. The waves would crash and pour in about 5 feet past where I was standing every few minutes. And every time the waves receded back they would pull this deep, buried, black sand with it along with the usual sand. This black sand I guess was native to the beach but was buried underneath the normal sand. What was so cool about it was the veiny streams the waves carved out to reveal the darker sand beneath. Pair that with the incredible colors the sunset provided and the distorted lines of a 15mm fisheye lens, and you have the image below. You may also be interested to know that the only reason the sand is reflecting the colors of the sky is because a wave had just receded back to the ocean and the sand was wet and water was still streaming through the veins down to the ocean. The HDR process brings these reflections out and makes them pop, so the sand is like a mirror image of the clouds and sky above.

Low Tide at Carlsbad State Beach, California

Carlsbad State Beach, California

P.S. I put my heart and soul into making these image. If you like what you see, or don’t like what you see, let me know! Comments are how I gauge whether or not I’m creating images that people love and remember. Cheers!

P.S.S. After I took this shot, we visited a place called Harbor Fish Cafe right on the beach. They had some of the best fish n’ chips I’ve ever had. And I am complete sucker for good fish n’ chips. They served the fish on a cardboard plate with a roll of paper towels. Brilliant! Can’t wait to go back!

P.S.S.S. Now I’m really hungry :-)



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Pre-Spring Discount | Huntington Beach Surf Competition Photography

Thursday, February 18th, 2010


PRE-SPRING PORTRAIT SPECIAL

February has been quite a month. It seems like every day has either been too cold, to windy, to wet, raining, or we have been immersed in the biggest snowstorm in our known history! The aforementioned weather conditions are widely known for ruining photo sessions or causing people to hold off until spring. But I (and I am admittedly an optimist) believe the worst is behind us, and we have a lot of sunny days ahead of us! While the grass may not be green, there are still plenty of amazing places for engagement sessions, family portraits, senior portraits, and anything else you can think of. Not every location requires green grass, but merely warm weather! For example: the Grapevine Train Station, the streets of Fort Worth or Dallas, Las Colinas, the Fort Worth Stock Yards or that old rustic barn on your property to name a few. Or what about taking advantage of the bare trees and leaves on the ground and doing a session walking through the woods? There are plenty of ideas out there! So why not get your pictures done now while there is a discount?! Here are the details…

Any session held between now and March 20th
Take $25 off your session fee (normally $125)
Take 10% off print orders and products
Excludes Wedding Packages
This add has become
a rather good
triangle
!

HUNTINGTON BEACH SURF COMPETITION

And now for some images I took at a surf competition during my recent trip up and down the coast of California. For some reason I always thought Huntington Beach was run down and a little ghetto, but I was pleasantly surprised when I realized how beautiful and clean the town was near the beach. There was a local surf competition that day and I couldn’t pass up the opportunity to get some shots of these guys. I’ve always loved surfing, it amazes me. The really sad and depressing part is that I’ve never been :-( I’ve been to California multiple times now, and every time I tell myself I am going to surf. But I never get a chance to! It’s really frustrating! The one time I got really close, my wife’s cousin was going to take me while staying with them in San Luis Obispo. He woke me up at 6:15 in the morning dressed like an Eskimo, with a hood covered in fur and mittens on his hand. It was freezing cold outside and I could only imagine the water wasn’t any better. Somehow the idea of getting out of bed and into a freezing ocean until my body went numb just didn’t seem exhilarating at the time. In hind sight it wouldn’t have been that bad, but now I have to keep waiting. Maybe if I get a chance to go to Hawaii this year I will do it, and then I don’t have to worry about water. But I digress. Here are a couple of shots from the surf contest for your visual enjoyment. For my visual enjoyment I like to read comments to gauge whether my readers like the content I am putting out, so get to it and leave some photo love (or hate)!

huntington beach surf competition | huntington beach, california

huntington beach surf competition | huntington beach, california

huntington beach surf competition | huntington beach, california

huntington beach surf competition | huntington beach, california

huntington beach surf competition | huntington beach, california



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San Clemente Photography | Tower 1 at Sunset

Monday, February 15th, 2010


LIMITED EDITION PRINTS COMING SOON

As many of you know, HDR photography is a huge passion of mine, equal to wedding photography I’d say. Up until this point, my HDR images have just been a hobby and something I do to get away from everything else. Well, in the next 1-2 weeks, I will be working on organizing a site for you to purchase these prints in very limited quantities. The prints will be sold in small sets to ensure that the owners are few and far between. They will be signed by me with a number stating which sequence the individual print is in that set.

Seeing these HDR images on a computer screen is one thing. Seeing them hanging on your wall is completely different. The detail in these images are incredible and a 15 inch computer screen just doesn’t do them justice! I will try and make the cost of these prints as low as possible. They will hopefully bring in enough income to allow me to travel to other places and keep these images coming. Fort Worth is a great place, but the world has so much more to offer and it’s a huge passion of mine to bring that to life in my images!

If you’re interested in reserving one of these prints, please email me by going to the contact page of my portfolio website. You can get there by clicking the “Website” link at the top of the blog, or by scrolling all the way down and clicking the contact me link at the very end of this web page. The Limited Edition print sets will be released one at a time and probably on a monthly or weekly basis. Haven’t decided yet. These first prints will be extremely limited, in order to test the market and see the demand for them. If they sell out quickly I may add a few more in the future. As always, thank you to all my fans for your support! The comments I get here, on facebook, on twitter and through email always make my day!

TOWER 1 AT SUNSET

It’s freezing outside in Texas. A high for today of 40 degrees with wind chills in the upper teens to lower 20′s. The snow was fun for the first day but now it’s old, my yard is like a flooded swamp, and I’m ready for some warm weather! So this morning I am sipping some steaming hot coffee and posting a picture of sunny California. I took this shot a few weeks back in San Clemente, about twenty minutes south of Laguna Beach. San Clemente is a beautiful beach town, my only complaint was the incredibly annoying train that went right through the beach (about five feet behind where I stood to take this picture). I was down there for a photo walk with Trey Ratcliff of Stuck in Customs and every ten minutes or so he would be talking and a train would pass through blaring it’s horn. Other than that, I loved this place! And the little hole-in-the-wall pizza place we ate at had some of the best pizza I’ve had in a while! Anybody know what that place is called?

San Clemente Photography | Tower 1 at Sunset



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Why I Love HDR and What the Heck It Is

Monday, February 1st, 2010


WHAT IS HDR PHOTOGRAPHY?

I have received a lot of questions lately from people wanting to know what HDR photography is and why it looks so much different than a normal photograph. I figured I would write a blog post about it and explain from my point of view why HDR is so amazing and what makes an image an HDR image.

HDR stands for “High Dynamic Range.” An HDR image combines all the available light in a scene into one image. You may have noticed that when you take a picture on vacation (I used to do this all the time), it never quite does justice to your memory of that scene. I specifically remember driving to Table Rock Lake in Missouri back when I was knee high to a grass hopper. We drove up to a place on the side of the road marked “Photo Opportunity” and from that point you could see for literally miles. The lake looked as if it went on forever. The sky was bright blue with dramatic clouds. The scenery went on forever. I grabbed my camera and snapped off a picture before driving to our destination.

I remember getting my film developed at Wal-Mart and eagerly anticipating that one picture. I could still remember it so vividly in my head. I grabbed my pouch of images from the desk and opened it with great anticipation, but when my eyes finally found the image a frown came across my face. “That’s not what it looked like at all,” I muttered to myself. My camera could not capture the full dynamic range of light in that scene. It was just too great a spectrum: The intense light coming from the sun, the reflection off the water combined with the deep blues and greens of the lake. The bright greens of the trees along with the dark shadows cast by them.

HDR processing fixes this problem! Now I can take an image and capture the exact emotions and mood of the scene on that very day! I can bring in the dramatic tones of the clouds and the streaks they make across the sky, as well as the captivating textures of the water crashing against the shore line, and at the same time get every detail in the greenery. But how is this possible you might ask? Is there some new camera out on the market that nobody knows about yet? Hardly! HDR processing starts with the same camera I use to shoot weddings, families, seniors, etc. The difference is the set up of the shot and the post processing of the image after-wards.

An HDR image starts with taking multiple shots of the same scene. It is ideal (and required in some cases) that you use a tripod for this step. Any movement of the camera can cause more work in post or ruin the image completely in low light situations. In most cases, three images of the scene are enough to capture the full range of light in a scene. However is some cases it may require five, or seven even. After composing the scene, simply take three images: one at the “correct” exposure for that scene, one 2 stops under-exposed, and one 2 stop over-exposed. So -2, 0, +2. In rare instances, like shooting into the sun; -2, -1, 0, +1, +2 and so on. Some people even take 9 exposures but I’m not sure my computer would like that! Your images will look something like this:

SO WHAT’S WRONG WITH THOSE THREE IMAGES

Glad you asked! If we start with the first one (underexposed) you will notice that the detail is primarily in the sky behind the aircraft (C-1 Trader) as well as the front of the aircraft. In photography you don’t want to lose any detail in the image. So if parts of an image are too dark, that part of the image turns pure black, which is BAD! We call it “blowing your shadows,” or “blowing your highlights” if you are referring to pure white being present. Pure black or white means parts of the subject are lost. In the under exposed image the shadows are consumed by pure black inside the engine and around the letters on the side of the plane. Since it is pure black, there is nothing to see!

In the middle image, the properly exposed image, the plane is exposed for the most part. There are some blown highlights at the top of the plane due to it’s finish and the harsh sun light from that day. You notice a lot more detail in the plane itself, but there’s one thing missing. One thing that will make you think, “Well that’s not what it looked like.” The sky! Because there was such a big difference between the light falling on the plane and the bright sky, the sky has been nearly lost in this image. The is barely any detail in the clouds at all. But the clouds were so beautiful that day, I guess you just had to be there :-( .

The third image is 2 stops overexposed. This means two steps brighter than what the camera thinks the image should be. I should also note that when shooting a scene for HDR, you cannot be using your camera in an automatic mode! Stay away from the green box on your camera! When you take a picture in automatic you aren’t really taking a picture, Canon is, or Nikon is! You are letting your camera decide how to create the look of the image. You let the camera decide your depth of field, your sensitivity to light, your white balance, your shutter speed, your metering, etc. You are just the middle man who holds the camera for them! If you really want to become a creative photographer you must learn to work in the creative modes. And HDR is done best in “Aperture Value” mode, or “Aperture Priority.” This means you set aperture (depth of field) to one place and that setting never changes during your three images. In manual, shutter priority, or automatic the depth of field would change in every frame and that would mess everything up. But I digress: You will see in this third image that the sky is completely lost. No detail at all, just pure white. In fact, the majority of the image is lost. The plane almost seamlessly blends into the sky behind it, as well as the ground beneath it. But there is a few parts of the image that I captured brilliantly. Look at the incredible detail in of the propellars and mainly the details of the engine! You can see everything in there! There is also great detail in the tires of the C-1 and the inner workings around the landing gears. This image would be great if all I remembered was the engine.

But I remember the beautiful, dramatic sky with slightly present storm clouds appearing. I remember the shiny finish of the C-1 Trader and beautiful curves of the planes body. I remember seeing the city of San Diego behind the aircraft carrier and how the ocean was just to the right of us. I remember there were dummy’s dressed up in flight suits sitting in the cockpits of every plane, and how that kind of bugged me sometimes. It seemed to ruin a couple of shots I wanted to get.

After reading Trey Ratcliffs book on HDR photography, I completely agree that we remember scenes in a sort of fantasy-like way. Some things are slightly exaggerated; colors, saturation, details, etc. The further away from the present the event becomes, the more captivating that fleeting moment becomes. So what if you want to capture every part of that image? The details of the C-1 Traders motor and it’s inner workings, the slightly intrusive dummy in the cockpit, the brilliant finish of the aircraft and it’s curves, the incredible drama of the clouds in the sky as well as the Pacific Ocean to the west of the scene…that’s where HDR processing can bring to us an image like this:

HDR Photography

SO HOW DO YOU COMBINE THE MULTIPLE EXPOSURES TO GET THESE RESULTS

HDR is a ground breaking process. HDR software crunches your multiple images using advanced algorithms and scans the photos on a pixel to pixel basis in an attempt to find the best light sources from each image. There are a number of programs out there that you can use, but the most widely used (and best in my opinion) is Photomatix. I believe it costs somewhere around $120 for the bundle for Lightroom or Aperture.

Now I find that Photomatix usually give me a “rough draft” to start with. The real magic happens in photoshop. Photomatix is not a perfect program and runs into issues with things like movement in the scene. If you are shooting a beach with waves or a flag blowing in the wind, the software will fail at the part of the image and produce what’s called “ghosting.” It also causes a side effect called “haloing” around high contrast areas. Halos can be very hard to fix sometimes but it can be done. Once I have the image in photoshop I bring in all three images from the camera, the “RAW” files. If Photomatix failed anywhere in the image, I can mask in the parts of the image I want to bring back or remove. I would say that this part of the HDR process takes the most skill. There are a lot of things in photoshop that require a lot of training and additional hours to become used to. If this overview of HDR receives feedback from my readers I will elaborate on the steps in photoshop at that point.

The last step once I work my magic in photoshop is to run it through a filter. The filters in photoshop are nice, but they just aren’t enough sometimes. My favorite plug in for HDR filters is by Topaz Labs. I would suggest buying the photoshop bundle package for a little more. It comes with a whole suit of filters to help make your image stand out. It also includes a noise reduction filter which is essential for HDR. The HDR process can bring a lot of digital noise into a picture, even taken at ISO 50.

I hope this brief overview has shed some light on what HDR photography is. Since diving into it, I can never look at a landscape image the same way if it’s not HDR. A normal photograph just doesn’t do it justice in almost all cases. There are always exceptions though. Like I said, depending on the feedback I get from this I will be more than happy to dive deeper into the details of my workflow. If you have any questions, leave a comment below. If you follow me there are a number of ways to contact me besides here, via facebook or twitter. Thanks for digging my work and God bless!

The View from Underneath the Newport Beach Pier

Sunday, January 31st, 2010


BACK FROM MY TRIP TO CALIFORNIA, FOR NOW :-)

California was amazing. You wouldn’t think that lifestyles can change much within the same country and culture, but there are vast differences between the way of life here and there. I know the grass is always greener on the other side but I truly fell in love with California on this trip, as I do ever time I visit. It seemed like everyone was in shape there! We visited Newport Beach, Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach, San Clemente, San Diego, Costa Mesa, and all the little towns in between. Everywhere we went all the locals were out and about; running, jogging, walking, riding their bikes, surfing, reading a book, cuddling up under the set, or just relaxing. Everyone was ACTIVE! In Texas it seems 80-90% of the time it’s either too hot or too cold to go outside. In the summer it’s usually over 100 degrees with extreme humidity. The news stations actually tell people they need to stay inside. During the winter, like today, we still have the humidity so the cold weather is bitter cold. 30 degrees feels like 15. Spring and Fall are our best bets but you never know with Texas weather! Don’t get me wrong, I am a native Texan and have lived here my whole life, I love Texas, and we do sometimes have great weather, but something keeps pulling me towards Cali.

Maybe I will move there one day, but it will take some ridiculous dedication and perseverance to get settled in there! The cheapest house we found was around 500K with HOA dues of $450 a month! The price you pay for a beach, year round 70-90 degree weather, mountains, and local In-N-Outs! Besides my obsession with an In-N-Out Double Double, the trip has definitely inspired me to put more emphasis on being in shape and taking care of myself. After two trips to In-N-Out and two meals of fish and chips, we made an agreement to eat healthy for an entire month and go from there. No fast food, no junk food, just healthy and active lifestyles! They say it takes 30 days to form a habit so hopefully this will change things! Neither of us are grossly out of shape or unhealthy, but we could definitely do with some working out, regular walks, and a healthier diet. It should be fun!

THE VIEW FROM UNDERNEATH NEWPORT BEACH PIER

I flew into Santa Ana (John Wayne Airport) on Wednesday. The main reason for the trip was to meet one of my favorite HDR photographers for a photo walk in San Clemente. Right after I got off the plane I bolted towards In-N-Out and then went straight to Newport Beach. Newport Beach is quite an interesting little town. I didn’t have time to stay very long but I managed to find their pier and make my way underneath it. Along the way I met a lot of interesting people. I think I probably stick out like a sore thumb walking down the beach with a backpack full of camera gear and tank of a camera and tripod balanced on my shoulder. So I get a lot of questions about my gear, what I’m doing, and why. I met a really cool beach bum who was scanning the beach for buried treasures. He had lived there most of his life and seemed content with what he was doing. So who was I to judge him? I also met a few other photographers taking pictures of the surroundings. After walking a mile or so down the beach I made it to the pier and got this shot from underneath it. I love piers, and this one was exceptionally long.

Aboard the Legendary USS Midway

Saturday, January 30th, 2010


THE RETIRED C-1 TRADER

In 1952 the United States Navy flew this aircraft for the first time. There were 3 major variants, the C-1 Trader being one of them. The C-1 (originally the TF-1) was outfitted to carry nine passengers or 3500 pounds of cargo and first flew in January 1955. Through out the 1960s and 1970s the C-1 Trader carried mail and supplies to aircraft carriers on station in the Pacific Ocean during the Vietnam War and also served as a trainer for all weather carrier operations. The last C-1 was retired from US Navy in 1988 though a few are still operated as vintage aircraft.

Although the plane didn’t seem very popular among it’s pilots (mainly because of the missions it had to fly, i.e. delivering mail) I couldn’t take my eyes off this airplane, it’s beautiful! It’s not long and sleek like the fighter jets, and it’s not huge and massive like the cargo planes, just somewhere in the middle.

C-1 Trader Mail Plane



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