Archive for the ‘San Luis Obispo’ 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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Daily Image – Bubblegum Alley in San Luis Obispo, California

Thursday, January 14th, 2010


2,100 Square Feet of 40 Year Old Chewing Gum!

Bubblegum Alley: An alley leading tourists and shoppers from a parking lot to the unique shopping and attractions of downtown San Luis Obispo, a famous college town in central California. The alley is 70 feet long and 15 feet high and just about every square inch of the walls on either side are covered in chewing gum!

History Surrounding the Alley

Bubblegum Alley has been around since the 1950′s. Some believe (and this is just theory) that it started back in the 50′s as a rivalry between San Luis Obispo (SLO) high school students and Cal Poly (a local college). Others believe it dates back to World War II. Either way it’s an alley, covered in gum. The alley has been featured in magazines from the Los Angeles Times to the Guardian in the United Kingdom. It’s been featured on national television on the Tonight Show and MTV. The wall is incredibly interesting. Some may argue with me, but I fall into the group of people who consider this wall art. When you walk up to the wall, it looks disgusting, and it is. It looks like a 70 foot long stretch of wall where passers by shove their gum as the go about their business. Like a huge trash can or underside of a classroom desk. But when you walk right up to the wall, it comes alive. This wall is a tapestry of creativity by hundreds of thousands of people. Every square foot has designs stuck to it, ranging from smiley faces, to sorority and fraternity symbols, to names of loved ones, to song lyrics, from peace signs and wrappers, to curse words and loose change. Artist Matthew Hoffman (couldn’t find a link to him) even created a self portrait on the wall of him blowing a bubble to sits high above the wall beyond arms reach. Art doesn’t always have to be pretty and pleasing to the eye, it just has to hold your attention and make you think.

Controversy

This wall has been stuck in controversy ever since it started (hehe). The wall underwent full cleanings twice, the last being in the 70′s, hence 40 year old gum. That means that some of the pieces of gum on the wall have literally been there since the 70′s! How gross is that!? There isn’t a lot more to say about this work of art without just showing you, so I will leave you with a poem that was written specifically for this wall.

We write our epitaphs on walls with gum,
And though it may be meaningless to some,
We have a symbol of our gummy youth,
Whose walls may not tell some glorious truth,
But eloquently speak of better times,
Of cruising, shopping sprees, and nursery rhymes.
If gum is all you see upon our wall,
Your mind is closed, your spirit shrunk and small,
Though memories of youth may never last,
Gum Alley is our present to our past.”

-“M”, Arroyo Grande

Well, that was interesting! Before I show you this image let me tell you a bit about it. The image is originally a panoramic landscape, meant to be viewed from left to right (or right to left if your Hebrew). I decided to turn it portrait so the viewers could see this wall in as much detail as possible. The alley is VERY narrow, so I simply held my camera with my back nearly against the opposing wall covered in gum, and took five shots while taking large steps to the right between each one. I would guess that this image covers roughly 10 feet of the wall but I don’t really know. Enjoy!

Bubblegum Alley