John & Anne Wiley

2010/08/18

Two Wings

Filed under: Aviation,by Anne,Flying,Happiness,Has Photos,Nature,SB Region — Anne @ 04:13

After making 2 batches of yummy (if I may say so) brownies, one for the airport tower crew – and reading much of the novel The Help, I’ve had a luxurious relaxed day! I’m in the mood to add a bit tonight, so I chose a photo from the same flight John just posted.  His camera is better (and he knows how to use it!), but I sort of liked the angle on this one of the harbor.  I caught this by looking back through my side of the airplane, taking it behind us.  What looks like a Wing on top is actually the tail of the plane, and the land looks like a Wing flying over the ocean.

0408 SB Harbor Wing

0408 SB Harbor Wing

Hope you enjoyed your day as much as I have mine 🙂

by ~Anne

Do Birds Enjoy?

Filed under: Happiness,Has Photos,Inner World,Nature,Random,SB Region — John @ 03:57

As we left the house for a sunset stroll, the subtle brush stroke clouds added such beauty to the colorful sky I ran back in to grab the camera. Framing the shot I noticed the little bird sitting in the palm tree at the top. Is it enjoying the sunset or just doing whatever birds do before nightfall?

Sunset Bird

Sunset Bird

We’ve wondered lately also about the burned hills above SB. First, are they a new fire hazard rather than providing a few years’ respite from wildfires due to all the chaparral being gone? Second, what’s the brown stuff we see that has us worried? Third, how tall is that stuff? When we flew around on Friday it was easy enough to swing by the peaks and take a look. We’ve heard from fire experts on Edhat that it is indeed a hazard, and though we still don’t know what the stuff mainly is there’s no doubt that it’s several feet tall as you can see from this closeup.

0898 Burn Edge

0898 Burn Edge

The bare sticks are all that remains of the burned chaparral that was several feet tall, and the dried out non-evergreen stuff that surged up from the heavier than usual rainy season is nearly as tall. The brown areas predominate on vast areas of the mountainside as you can see in this photo of just a portion of areas affected by fires of the past two years or so.

0899 Burned Area

0899 Burned Area

Maybe I’m part bird though, because a lot of my concern about fire potential eases when I take in this vista. Concern tries to inch back up when I see our town nestled by the shore in the distance, then ebbs again with the beauty of it all. Would a bird just survey this looking for a meal and watching out for predators?

2010/08/16

How UCSB

It seems to me that how You See SB depends on your perspective. In looking through aerial photos from our Friday flight around town, I realized we hadn’t shared this one of UCSB.

0848 UCSB Gate & Engineering

0848 UCSB Gate & Engineering

Then I remembered my first flight lesson at SBA. I’d toured the campus many times on a bike and the bus, and even more times by car and of course on foot. Never had I seen it from the air, except a brief glimpse from an airliner during landing or takeoff. As the instructor lifted off from one of the two “15” runways  that the small planes mostly use, we passed very close to the East side of the campus and the view just after liftoff was very much like this. I found it very difficult to concentrate fully on the instructor’s running commentary as I kept glancing and even sometimes staring at the magnificent setting of this place I knew so well from the ground. If you like UCSB and have never seen it from the air in a small plane, I sure hope you find a way because as usual photos can’t convey how magnificent it is.

0884 Floater

0884 Floater

Another fun thing to look at when flying over UCSB is the surf lineup at Campus Point, so we often check that out. Friday there was what looked very much like an abandoned air mattress floating near the kelp beds not far from the surfers, and I imagined someone idly paddling around there catching some rays. I hope the environmentalists on campus or at nearby Isla Vista eventually towed it back to shore.

0886 Campus Point Surfers

0886 Campus Point Surfers

To really watch the surfers you’re much better off on one of the bluffs of course. But I also enjoy looking down into the water, and though we’re moving relatively fast even during takeoff it’s fun to glimpse someone actually catching a wave. I’ve wondered whether sometime I might spot a dolphin, seal or even shark swimming near the surfers possibly without them even knowing it was there.

I guess you already know how much we love flying around Santa Barbara, even after having flown in so many other beautiful places. We already loved this area long before we had flown over it in a small plane. Doing that increased our enjoyment of SB by orders of magnitude. So just like viewing UCSB from the air, it seems to me that flying can change how You See SB. 🙂

2010/08/15

Perspectives & Media

Today I had an eDialog with an eFriend, about the eXquisite nature of reality. OK, now that I’ve perhaps annoyed you, let me clarify a bit. By eDialog I mean conversation via email, as you probably guessed. eFriend is my way of describing a wonderful multi-year relationship I (and a few times Anne) have carried on with someone whom we’ve never met. I mangled “exquisite” just to playfully over extend the theme. 🙂

It’s such an increasingly strange and wonderful world we inhabit. Sure we’ve watched “You’ve Got Mail” with friends and talked at length about virtual friendships (including with our virtual friends). We’ve also enjoyed the great precursor films “Shop Around the Corner” and “Good Old Summertime” filmed back when it was all about exchanging physical snail mail with an unknown Dear Friend. But today I’m thinking for example about the greater depth I find in eDialog than back when I had physical pen pals.

Molly enjoys TXTing, and we’re doing more of that now but it’s declined precipitously now that she’s in France for the Summer. That medium and tweeting seem to me lacking in substance and capability, though TXTing can be very useful for some logistical stuff. To digress a moment, our cellphones often don’t ring so when we’re in Costco or some other big box store it can be frustrating to connect via voicemail, when a simple “Computer aisle” TXT does it instantly.

Email though, seems to beautifully mingle the dialog with our literary minds. Each participant can read and reply at will and whenever convenient, yet there’s instant delivery so topics don’t tend to stale as with snail mail. The fact it’s email rather than voice gives us the time and tools to easily edit and clarify our expressions via the literary part of our consciousness, rather than limiting our expressions to the vocal circuits (oh how many times I’ve left a truly stupid and incomprehensible voicemail!). I also like that my large amount of email dialog has improved (my opinion, but ask Anne) my verbal dialog.

So does any of this make sense? Do you have similar or contradictory opinions or experience?

Anyway, I’d like to also share another of yesterday’s aerial perspectives on this little bit of paradise we call home.

0852 SB Beneath Our Wing

0852 SB Beneath Our Wing

I’ve trimmed the highlights with a photo editor to better show something like what we saw, so the wing strut is reduced to the almost black angle bottom-left. I don’t know if you can make out the tread clamped on there, that I climb up on to check and add fuel. Some photos like this one (before I edited it) show that tread or one of our wheels, and remind me we’re in a vehicle. I mean, often while flying I’m in some special dual state. Part of me is flying, monitoring radio and all the instruments; and maintaining a 3D mental image of the airspace including nearest landing spots, other aircraft, obstacles, etc.

The “larger” part of my consciousness while flying though is in dream time. That special state so similar to my childhood flying dreams that I’ve written elsewhere might account for “prop advance.” This spacious awareness is more present and alive than my ordinary earthbound experience. This part of flying is why I most love it. Far beyond the many other joys of flying, this part resonates with infinity within me.

Noticing a tread I’ve recently stood on, or a strut, wheel or other part of the aircraft somehow yanks me into a sudden integration of ordinary reality with this “big” part of flying. Lots of words, but hopefully some glimmer of what I’m trying to express.

Do you get any inkling of what flying can be from the words and pictures?

Speaking of perspectives, occasionally we like to fly over Oprah’s mansion or some other playground (Neverland, for example) because it’s a glimpse of an entirely different reality.

0870 Part of Oprah's SB Estate

0870 Part of Oprah's SB Estate

There’s something really fascinating about seeing beyond the hedges and walls, because you get a dim and distant impression of what a person with basically unlimited resources will create as an expression of self. That of course, gets me noticing what our little place looks like and what we would do with limitless funds. O the possibilities. I like to imagine something small and modest, with the funds going to some sort of Grameen Bank effort and other contributions to our species and planet. What would you do with a billion dollars?

2010/08/14

Breathtaking!

Filed under: Flying,Happiness,Has Photos,Random,SB Region,Tripp — John @ 05:43

Well, we did fly and it was vastly more magnificent than I’d imagined. What a beautiful place to live! I confess to having actually wondered if it would seem pedestrian after flying through places like Jasper. Luckily I was wrong, because this is certainly an easier climate – especially for flying!

But to finish a thought, we did see some traffic of the vehicular kind and it did bring an evil smile. 🙂

0854 Traffic

0854 Traffic

Now for those less familiar with Santa Barbara, let me hasten to add some context. First, this is at the height of “rush hour” on a Friday afternoon in summer when our local traffic is burdened further by people trying to drive through on Hwy. 101 between LA and SF, and this is a major construction choke point where lanes being added are temporarily making things worse before they get better. Before the road work, this would have lasted perhaps 40 minutes, but now it sometimes goes well over an hour and on Sunday afternoons several hours. Even so, you can get a sense of how beautiful a place it is to sit in traffic. The bird refuge at the top, and the Andree Clark “cottage” at the top-right corner are perhaps the most obvious from this distance. If you’re ever passing through and encounter traffic, do yourself a favor and exit to stroll the beach or State Street.

0851 San Roque

0851 San Roque

Everything is within a few minutes’ drive here, and this scene is perhaps a mile from the freeway. The municipal golf course gives way to a small plaza with one of our largest independent bookstores. The line above that in the distance is what I call the Stevens Bridge over a park, where before going to the airport today we drove home from Trader Joe’s (locals can find it in this photo) doing our vote. That’s where we drive across looking left and right, and vote on our favorite view (which changes by the minute on most days). Usually the mountains win, though sometimes the harbor or less often the islands emerge victorious. In case you’re wondering, today was an islands day.

Speaking of Andree Clark, here’s another view (to complement those in the news lately, including some of mine) of her immaculate and unused estate, with the bird refuge on the right and the beach on the left. The lovely SB Zoo is just out of frame at the top.

0861 Andree Clark Estate

0861 Andree Clark Estate

I hope these few words and pix give some idea of why we so love living here, and found it so very refreshing to fly over Our Town again today. Maybe it’s just infatuation, but it seemed to me Tripp enjoyed it as much as we. 🙂

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