Just one Monumental view after another...

One of my great joys when traveling is viewing expansive vistas. Just sitting on a hillside, watching the clouds roll by, is so restful. I can almost feel my pulse slow down.

Of course, that doesn't last long, because I'm soon up again looking for a flower or rock to photograph. My father says that always having a camera stuck in my face diminishes the joy of the experience. (But I don't think so. MY joy comes from looking back at images of places I've been over the years.)

Recently, with an upgrade to--TADA!--
Adobe Photoshop CS5 I've been able to create exquisite panorama images. I've taken the requisite frames for years, but it hasn't been really easy to stitch them together until now. Photoshop CS5 makes it ridiculously easy to create panos.

Please enjoy a few from my recent travels:

Calafia, Mexico A beautiful seaside at Calafia, Mexico.
Mormon Rocks This is Mormon Rocks in the San Bernardino Mountains. Utah national parksThis is the view from Northern Arizona looking north toward Utah.


Zion National Park This was a beautiful bend in the road in Zion National Monument, Utah.


Monument Valley A view of Monument Valley from a trip with Dad last summer.

North Rim Grand Canyon The wondrous North Rim of the Grand Canyon.

Wedding albums sure have come a long way since 1977

Last night, as my husband was watching an ancient Bonanza episode, he noticed that one of the cowboys was an old friend of ours. We cracked up, recalling how different the character was from his real-life persona. I seemed to recall a picture of him in our wedding album and pulled out the dilapidated volume to show my grown daughter, who exclaimed, "Oh, that's who that was. I always wondered about him."



Leafing through the old album I was apalled to see the condition it was in. There is no longer a cover on the cheap, dimestore book; the photos are affixed to what used to be sticky pages, and the protective acetate sheeting has mostly disappeared. There are a total of 40 images in the album--definitely just the highlights.

Yet, what would I do without it?

It got me thinking how important our wedding albums are, no matter how pitiful. We treasure those images for years and decades throughout our lives. And if I had my mother's album, how I would treasure that--even though my parents have been divorced for more than 30 years.

Today, we expect fancy albums with custom-designed pages made from archival photos. There may even be a video DVD inside, too. The options seem endless.

I love being able to create such a gift for my clients. Who knows what the future will bring? I, for one, can't wait to find out.

Was life ever that slow? Of watermelons and green apricots

Last week my family got a chance to slow down and watch some old movies together, one of which was based on William Saroyan's "The Human Comedy." It features Mickey Rooney and Carl "Alfalfa" Switzer of Little Rascals fame, set in mythical Ithaca, California, a small, sleepy town which I imagine would be in the wine country near Salinas.

In the movie, Rooney's character's brother is in the Army, fondly recalling with his buddies the features of his idyllic home town. Ah, to be in Ithaca...

It was a time of innocence, to be sure. In one telling scene, after two small illiterate boys take an awe-filled trip to the public library (there's a red book! there's a green one!), a gang of local boys dare to raid an old man's apricot tree. Led by a pubescent Switzer, the group of boys sneak through the old man's yard, dashing to hide behind bushes and farm implements, to approach the tree, daring each other to snatch a snack. (Little do they know the old man sees them coming and wishes he could ripen the fruit faster for them.)

Once the group has gathered under the tree, egging Switzer on, the old man appears and slams the screen door, and the boys scatter. Alfalfa--er, Switzer--refuses to skedaddle until he grabs at least one apricot, and the group is next seen scurrying back to Main Street.

There, in front of the drug store, the gang of miscreants gather round to see the prize. Switzer slowly opens his palm, revealing a marble-sized, green apricot.

"Ooh, ooooohhhh!" the appreciative boys murmur, struck with wonder at the courage and daring-do of their young leader.

Really? Was life EVER that simple? I was dumbstruck.

I asked my dad if such days ever really existed, and he reassured me that they did.


Once or twice when he was a young man, he began an oft-told tale, my dad dared to raid a watermelon patch near his Arkansas home. He and a carload of friends had stopped and climbed through the barbed wire fence and were scouring the patch for a ripe melon, when my dad joked that he saw "someone coming down from the house with a shotgun!"

The friends were back in the car in a flash, and the group was off with a couple of melons.

Another time (or two) the boys visited the patch to crack open a couple of melons, scooping out the juicy, seed-free heart and leaving the remains to rot.

Not long after that, the owner of the patch happened to stop by their home. "Say, boys, I have a watermelon patch up yonder and you're welcome to help yourself anytime."

Presumably, dad says, he knew about the boys' fruit habit all along and just wanted them to know he didn't mind.

Or maybe it was a bit of reverse psychology, because my dad says they never did raid that watermelon patch again.

Somehow it just wasn't the same.