Well surprise, I’ve decided to add a few more from our 10/10 flight instead of more recent stuff that’s less interesting to me. Great thunderstorm going on, so maybe the lights will go out before I finish and rather than work on backup power maybe that would nudge me to get some sleep. Anyway, here’s a shot from the San Pedro area past Long Beach across LA Harbor.
Even on this “clear” day, I wondered about the health effects of that haze on the millions living and working in the LA basin. The whole harbor complex is buzzing even during the recession, with container ships, tankers, grain, military, oil development and all the land-based things associated with all that. For some reason I thought about a line from an old Leonard Cohen song, “tea and oranges that came all the way from China.”
Between all this commerce and massive residential areas, Harbor Park is an oasis of green. Heading out a little offshore, this view back at all the port activity also gave us a good view of the Vincent Thomas Bridge. Pretty impressive span, but easy to miss in all the industrial vastness.
I was reading a wiki page about Terminal Island, and tried to imagine this back when the Native Americans hung out here. I enjoyed looking directly down on a container ship unloading.
I like the colorful mosaic of the containers, and thought about how most of them are empty when they sail back to China. I was looking at a tanker when another plane flew below. More common in LA area, but still unusual to be close enough for a photo.
You’ll be pleased to note the gap between the ID number of the photo above, and this next one. I’m sparing you lots of shots I liked, rather than spend the rest of the night uploading them. 🙂 Here then is a colorful collection of buildings in the community of Huntington Beach (though far from the water) that I was very curious about.
Maybe you guessed that this whole thing is associated with the church on the corner. No reason worship can’t be playful, eh? There’s a neighborhood on Brighton Road, between Corona Del Mar and Crystal Cove we found interesting.
The grotto of sea caves and arches that was probably once popular with ancient people seems to now be popular with someone rich enough to build one on the bluffs. Wonderful garden courtyard, and was it built around those sandstone boulders? Looks like public access to what could have been a private beach, but for California law keeping our shores open to all.







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