John & Anne Wiley

2010/10/23

Sun, Moon, Wing

Filed under: Aviation,by Anne,Has Photos,Nature,SB Region,Tripp — Anne @ 07:06

John has been offline and totally immersed. He bought a hard drive for more capacity for photos, but when installed his email got completely messed up and its been three days. So lest you think we’re disappeared, I’m excited to post photos from the 19th when we dropped by the airport to pet Tripp and check how she’d fared after our dramatic lightening thunderstorm the night before. She was indeed holding a bit in her belly so we tipped her clear and started watching the sunset which was Incredible. John’s photos are better but here are some from my point & shoot. First is John shooting next to our car and plane on the ramp at Santa Barbara Airport, plane & car doors open perusing each other:

0753 John shoots for you

0753 John shoots for you

Here is what we were looking at, and it kept changing by the second:

0748 Sunset Cone

0748 Sunset Cone

… and when I turned around, this was 180′ the other direction:

0741 Moon over Wing

0741 Moon over Wing

Yes, at the bottom of the frame is our plane wing, but be reassured I’m not wing- walking! I took this from the ground.

Many happenings this weekend and John may be back online 🙂

by Anne

2010/10/19

Port to Home

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.

2327 Not Just Tea

2327 Not Just Tea

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.”

2328 Harbor Park

2328 Harbor Park

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.

2334 Vincent Thomas Bridge

2334 Vincent Thomas Bridge

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.

2338 One Way Mosaic

2338 One Way Mosaic

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.

2341 Air, Oil & Water

2341 Air, Oil & Water

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.

2399 Colorful Corner

2399 Colorful Corner

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.

2440 Grotto Home

2440 Grotto Home

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.

2010/10/18

Shores

Something about the sea attracts people. I used to get really strong urges to visit the beach if I hadn’t seen it for a while (like when I lived far from it). When we first moved to Santa Barbara, we went to the beach daily. Just standing there staring at it, or walking along the sand, wading, splashing, sitting and listening to the heartbeat of surf… Everything about the beach was nourishing, healing and refreshing to us.

Not so much now. We still enjoy all those things, but often just glancing at the sea while driving around town seems to instantly provide enough of all that. Occasionally we’ll go out on Stearn’s Wharf which of course provides all but the sandy feet, and we rarely actually visit the beach.

2087 Lunging Seaward

2087 Lunging Seaward

Maybe this sense of oceanic fulfillment is why looking at this home makes me wonder what it’s like there during a major storm. How would it fare standing up to a rogue wave? If I were standing there as a tsunami approached, what would I do? OK, in case I haven’t ruined it for you I also like to imagine sleeping on that balcony. 🙂

2114 Another Plane

2114 Another Plane

About a minute later we noticed another plane, this time going in the opposite direction but again quite a safe distance. Still, I was glad that my policy is to fly higher and further from shore where it’s that extra bit safer. Past the La Piedra  and just before the El Matador State Beach is an extra unusual building, presumably a home.

2126 Gaudi Beach

2126 Gaudi Beach

The curved walls appear somewhat Gaudi-esque. I wonder if it was built organically over time, with the location and orientation designed to best handle prevailing winds and weather with good sunsets while providing shade. Sea Level Drive on the outskirts of Malibu goes out to the small promontory where this imposing structure surveys the sea:

2154 West Malibu Gate

2154 West Malibu Gate

Quite a view they have of the ocean, plus much of Malibu stretching to the East from here. Sort of a guardian or observer of all that transpires in this area. Past the Malibu West Swimming Club (and the market I always thought of as downtown Malibu), some pretty amazing estates occupy the high ground.

2187 High Ground

2187 High Ground

Looking at a map though, Kanan Dume Rd. is more the center of Malibu, and this is probably my first photo of Point Dume. Somehow I didn’t associate this name reminiscent of Tolkien, with the heart of Malibu.

2207 Point Dume

2207 Point Dume

Lots of imposing homes all along these shores of course, and this neighborhood East of Dume has an interesting collection. I like the sound of that phrase, East of Dume.

2219 East of Dume

2219 East of Dume

I guess the name adds a lot to property values or something, because you’ll see Malibu associated with quite a long stretch of beach for miles on either side of Dume (I can’t stop playing with that name). Near the Pepperdine campus is the less-populated area of Malibu Lagoon, presumably named before lots of lots were sold.

2319 Malibu Lagoon

2319 Malibu Lagoon

In fact, miles further East looking back at this lagoon in the distance from near Moonshadows and Las Tunas State Beach you’ll still find some Malibu references before it finally yields after one last restaurant at the base of Topanga Canyon. So the area of this photo could be called East Malibu even though Pt. Dume is far out of frame beyond the lagoon in the hazy distance.

 

2325 East Malibu

2325 East Malibu

 

Airspace got busier from here on (flew the fun & easy “LA Special” corridor directly over LAX yet again), so I didn’t snap any more pix until Long Beach. Wonder if I’ll share some of those and on to San Diego, or maybe just shift to our more recent flight moving Tripp home from our Fog Stop at Santa Ynez the next evening.

2010/10/13

Mind the Gap

It’s been fun treating this blog like a diary of sorts because we sometimes review the posts and recall related experiences, and also because it’s fun to share with you. So the longer gap between posts lately is a little surprising. We’ve had plenty of fun, but just didn’t blog for some reason(s).

We’ve become a little involved with the growing movement to replace four of the seven current SBCC Board of Trustees. Four new candidates are running for the first hotly contested Board election in recent memory. They were begged to run by many friends who know how much they can contribute to getting SBCC back on track, and we’re very much hoping to help get the word out because the local media hasn’t done a very good job. If you’re interested in education, take a look at the Citizens4SBCC group’s website where you can learn about the issues and the four to vote for: Haslund, Croninger, Blum, & Macker. If all you need is something to remember when voting:

No SBCC Incumbents!

OK, so another recent activity was our Sunday flight to San Diego for Dad’s 91st birthday. The date was actually last weekend, but we missed the family gathering then due to thick local fog that prevented us getting Tripp out of SBA using “Visual Flight Rules” (VFR, basically meaning clear of clouds).

As if to reward us for waiting, the weather was glorious! Here’s what we saw soon after takeoff, looking past SBA and UCSB out to the islands.

 

1910 SBA to Channel Islands

1910 SBA to Channel Islands

 

Looking the other way, the canyons leading up to the mountains were also incredibly beautiful. Such a place to live!

 

1922 Quiet Mountain

1922 Quiet Mountain

 

The first small bare spot on the ridge just left of center is a favorite local hang glider launch spot, but I guess the air was too calm because we didn’t see any flying. For more detail, click on Our Photo Page in the top right column to see tagged identification of areas on the mountain.  I’ll blog more about the trip soon (I hope).

2010/09/28

Quiet Passage

Part of our Saturday flight from Bishop to San Jose was quiet. After passing Mammoth we turned toward the Hetch Hetchy valley, and that took us by the area I call the Minarets. There are several other named features here, and all are remarkably beautiful.

1368 Minarets

1368 Minarets

But among all the lakes and magnificent peaks, the jagged Minarets really stand out and instill in me a sense of quiet awe. Adding to my quiet this day was the knowledge that famed aviation adventurer Steve Fossett died here (see my Photo Page for details). Flying here can be challenging even when weather is good, so I had waited a long time for this clear and almost completely calm day. So mingled with the other sources of my inner quiet was a respect for both the power of this terrain, and for Steve’s skill in flying here so many times in difficult weather. I share his appreciation of this as a favorite place, but not his willingness to fly here on less favorable days. Flying even higher and more quietly than usual, I contemplated what a magnificent place this is to be forever connected with.

1372 Middle Panorama

1372 Middle Panorama

It might give you slightly more impression of the beauty here to see a broader panorama, so above is a photo taken about a mile from the first one and looking more toward the West.

1383 Toward Hetch Hetchy

1383 Toward Hetch Hetchy

This one’s also from the same general area, looking more toward the northwest where we flew over Hetch Hetchy valley. Imagine these three photos side by side, with #1372 in the middle and #1383 on the right. Now that you’re “flying” along with us, note that this is about a third of the panorama we were swimming in. More mountains in every direction, and Mono Lake visible in the distance behind us. Some places we’ve flown evoke gasps and joyful shouts, but here we were mostly in quiet reverie.

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