John & Anne Wiley

2012/08/14

Firsts

The first time for things is extra special. This morning was the first time we woke from a passable sleep in many daze. Glorious! Today was also the first time Anne got a pic we really like of me with our precious Grand Daughter.

0262 Sweet Love

0262 Sweet Love

The first time she helped me on a project, fixing the loose carpet threshold she’d been tripping over. As you can see she’s very attentive and helpful. She’d closely watch what I was doing, and join in without getting in the way. Such a Perfect child she is!

0264 Perfect Assistant

0264 Perfect Assistant

We all went out to the airport so that we could move Tripp to a less expensive parking spot, and the moment she saw all the planes this Perfect child squealed with delight. Meeting our beloved Tripp for the first time, she immediately wanted to climb all over and investigate everything. Very good sign. 🙂

3811 New Pilots

3811 New Pilots

It’s clear she and her Perfect Dad want to be pilots. So since we had to get in the plane and taxi it a couple of hundred feet to the other parking spot, I decided to take her Dad on a quick flight around the city. Obviously the shortest route between the two parking spots. His first time seeing Edmonton from Tripp.

2154 Smoked Skyline

2154 Smoked Skyline

As with many places on our flight, the air over Edmonton is laden with smoke from far away fires. It gives an opalescent depth to the orange glow of approaching sunset. Another angle shows how well the river is integrated into the city.

2153 Another Perspective

2153 Another Perspective

The last first I’ll share with you tonite is by far the most impactful for me. Quietly astounding. Didn’t imagine it would ever happen, yet seeing is believing.

2152 Amazing First

2152 Amazing First

The first time our dear Daughter has asked to fly with me. She loved it, took the controls for a moment and of course instantly understood how it works and performed flawlessly. In fact, she was so comfortable that much of her time during the short flight was spent taking pix with her cellphone. As we got back in the car to drive them home, they shared that their dream has changed. Rather than a motorhome they’ve decided to buy an airplane. “Costs the same to buy, maintain and park, but it’s many times more fun and useful.”

Can you tell I’m delighted? 🙂

2012/08/13

Intention

It was my intention to make a proper post to update you on our AB Joy adventure, once we got into a hotel with working wifi. Well, we do have internet now but have been having so much fun with my daughter, son-in-law and grand-daughter…

Now we’re about to try again for a good night’s sleep, but meanwhile here’s a pic that better shows the color of that amazing lake. I put bigger versions of both pix on the Photo Page (link at right), and one of them has a map link that shows where it is.

2068 Unreal Color

2068 Unreal Color

We all three gawked at it in disbelief, talking about how nobody would take our word on the color we saw. Didn’t see indications that many people have made the short hike up from Hwy. 93 (tho there’s a daunting river crossing involved). So in closing here’s an indication of the delights we’ve enjoyed today. 🙂

0239 Pure Love

0239 Pure Love

2012/08/11

Well Spoken

Today, after a wonderful organic breakfast with friends at their riverside home near Fall City (outside Seattle) our plan was to reach Cranbrook, British Columbia for the night. After a quick visit with a dear nephew in Renton we rushed to the airport and got Tripp ready. Taking off was glorious in the fairly clear air.

1814 Mercer to Seattle

1814 Mercer to Seattle

Looking across Mercer Island, Seattle actually looked better than this pic. I know, complaining about my camera skills doesn’t improve the viewing experience for you. 🙂

1844 Mt. Si

1844 Mt. Si

Above is a clearer shot of iconic Mount Si just past Fall City on our route to Spokane. The views through the pass were even more crisp as you can see in this random shot from the dozens I snapped.

1853 Crisp Pass

1853 Crisp Pass

As we were beginning to emerge onto the prairie at the east side of the pass I finally put on a polarized filter to cut the haze for this next shot.

1888 Altered Reality

1888 Altered Reality

In terms of clarity and the effect of haze, it’s much nearer to how everything looked on our mountain passage. But as you can see, the color looks really strange. Compared to what we saw, I’d even say it looks a bit fake. True, I also tweaked the color a bit trying to correct for the shift from the filter. I left the filter on for the rest of the flight, so you might notice a strange quality in some of the pix. It helped a lot with this next one tho, because there was a small fire nearby and it was smokier than it looks in the pic.

1917 Grand Coulee

1917 Grand Coulee

Grand Coulee Dam conjured up images for me of a tall concrete structure wider than Boulder Dam. As you can see, I was wrong. I hate being wrong. 🙂 Actually I already knew it looked like this, having watched an interesting PBS docu about it. So at the left is where the river used to run. Now it gets a trickle, with the rest going into that canal angling down to the right from the dam. It goes into tunnels that then pop out again nearby in a continuation of the canal. The idea was to make a verdant valley where there had been desert. It worked, but one does wonder what the old river looked like and how life has changed along its course. After a less fascinating transit across the dry plain we were greeted by the riverside oasis named Spokane.

1925 Verdant Spokane

1925 Verdant Spokane

It’s really beautiful from the air, and fun to walk the zillion bridges and gawk at the many waterfalls. I only dimly recall attending the World’s Fair there back in my 20s, so it’s interesting to visit remnants of that too.

1934 Hotel & Togetherness Walk

1934 Hotel & Togetherness Walk

It turned out we arrived too late for our Cranbrook plan, because Canadian Customs there keeps banker’s hours. Now when we’re flying, all Joy sees of us is the backs of our heads and we don’t see her much at all though we can all talk with some minor difficulty. So we decided to walk from our hotel (3-winged multi-story building just above and to the left of the thing that looks like a white upside down boat) to a nice Italian restaurant. After a great meal we went looking for a thin cushion for me to sit on that might increase my comfort on the now longer flight we’re planning tomorrow to reach Edmonton. What I imagined would be a time for conversation and togetherness walking to Pier One (white roof just across the river at right) looked like this.

1947 Different Agendas

1947 Different Agendas

Joy was worried that the store would close at 8:30, Anne was on the phone with her sister, and I paused to snap this scene so unrepresentative of the noisy traffic rushing across the bridge in chaotic surges.

1941 False Impression

1941 False Impression

Happily we did get into the store, the call ended, and I stopped dallying for photo ops. Joy decided to walk back to the hotel, so Anne and I enjoyed a leisurely (and now serenely quiet) stroll along the river walk and thru part of the World’s Fair area. Tho you won’t hear that enchanting call of their quiet familial honking as they flew low over our heads on the silent foot bridge, Anne wanted me to snap these geese to share with you.

1954 Geese

1954 Geese

See them? “It takes a long exposure to get a decent shot when it’s almost dark out,” I replied. Yes, the fuzzy shapes to the right of the red-tipped circus tent looking thing are geese and not freak clouds. I like the effect, and hope you can imagine being there with us. Still, I’m glad to have a digital camera rather than wait for prints from film. 🙂

1962 Train/Trolley

1962 Train/Trolley

Near the circus tent thing this passenger train/trolley thing went by occasionally ringing a most gentle bell. It added a magical note of charm to the friendly darkness that was now draining color and dimension from the world to replace it with mystery and a soothing closeness. Back in the hotel I snapped this view out the window, and you can see the arched red sign for Luigi’s at the right.

1968 Looking Back

1968 Looking Back

Like our adventure from Seattle to Spokane today, it seems much longer than a couple of hours since before sunset when we walked over to Luigi’s for dinner. Right now I’m looking back at Luigi’s, looking back at our waking near Fall City, and further back to the start of this adventure. Past some gaps I can see almost the whole way back to the start of My Journey. I enjoy looking back occasionally, because it helps me enjoy being Here and Now. 🙂

2012/07/31

The Eye

Computers can’t yet distinguish things. Yet. So far, human face recognition is maybe their best game. But recognizing everyday things as most any two year old child can do, not so much. Cameras don’t see very well either, in human terms. OK sure, they can see vastly more detail and into the ultraviolet and infrared. But they don’t see. The human eye is really good at the things that matter most to us. But why do scenes like this draw my eye?

1313 Gulls & Buoys

1313 Gulls & Buoys

Is it the crowded emptiness of all those boats and no people? The colors and shapes? Memories of toy boats? The unusual perspective? The fact I once sailed on boats like these? Of course it looked different to my eye than to the camera and the computers we’re viewing the pic on. But what would a computer make of it? Or this one?

1314 Dredge Roost

1314 Dredge Roost

Keeping SB Harbor open requires pumping lots of sand onto East Beach, and though the boats might not like navigating past it the birds absolutely love all this space and have painted it white. So why did I snap it?

Moving objects draw the eye. Especially bright colors. So this was an easy one.

1318 Easy One

1318 Easy One

We’re usually talking to ATC while flying, and they tell us about “traffic.” The aviator’s word for other aircraft within a couple of miles. Often they’re hard to spot, especially if they’re the same color as the sky, their profile is small, and if the air’s a little hazy. It’s great having an idea where to look but this one half a mile away, bright red and moving across the landscape, was easy to spot. Given that everything’s moving, would a computer have spotted it as easily? Would a computer know what this next one is?

1310 Mission Creek Mouth

1310 Mission Creek Mouth

Why has my eye been drawn lately to the colors and shapes of this scene? Colors and forms for sure. Also the pipe that the sand travels from the Harbor to East Beach. The contrast of beach grasses. I didn’t notice from the air, but now I’m quite drawn to the palm tree shadows. Do such things sometimes move me to snap, not knowing why, and then jumping out at me looking at the pic later?

Many are predicting that within the next few decades people will have computers and cameras implanted and connecting their nervous systems with the Internet. What will life be like for people born into a world where everyone is hard wired? What will their “eye” be like? Will there still be an “I?”

2012/07/29

Stone Stories?

Sometimes I’m curious what it is that draws me so strongly to some rock formations. True, I seem drawn to many if not most of them. That might simply be the universal human tendency to create stories. Studies of human intelligence tend to focus on two qualities that set us apart from other species, and one of those is our stories. So when rock formations like this draw me back again and again, maybe it’s because of the stories they stimulate in me.

1576 Story Impression

1576 Story Impression

On the large slab, there seem to be petroglyphs carved into the flat surface. I’ve never noticed them before, but now I wonder if a fleeting glimpse of them strengthened my urge to keep returning for another look. Maybe it’s some enchanting quality of the stones themselves, that drew both ancient peoples and me to visit there? I wondered looking at the first pic, if it’s just a play of light. So I looked at this slightly different angle on the same spot snapped a moment later, and the enigmatic shapes still show up.

1579 Perspective Shift

1579 Perspective Shift

But then I looked for pix from my other flights past the spot, and found this one snapped from much closer.

0424 Different Story

0424 Different Story

I can still see some of the shapes, but this detailed view magically transforms them into stories of life, weather, light and shadow as they dance with ancient stone that itself was once sand on an even more ancient beach. Maybe my urge to see human symbols there has the same origins as my own yearning to share the stories etched on this blog. Sharing where I was, what I did, what I saw and the effects Life had on me. It is this desire to create and share stories that distinguishes us from other intelligent animals, enabling us to teach and learn the things that produced technologies like space travel and the internet. …and airplanes like Tripp. 🙂

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