Category: Travelogue


Right after arriving in Saigon I fell prey to some mystery illness. It was lacking the digestive turmoil of travelers diarrhea (i know you were really curious) but I was laid up with extreme cold spells and heat flashes and debilitating migraines for close to 5-6 days. As such, most of my time through Saigon and from there into Cambodia was spent recouping so I don’t have too many photos – enjoy the ones I do have.

 

Attempting to tame the wiring chaos that’s endemic to Saigon.

A Vietnamese sidewalk hardware store.

Grabbing some lunch at Ben Thanh Market.

Shots like these always earn me a “stupid tourist” glance from the Vietnamese.

Great Restaurant in Saigon. DeeeeLish!

Cambodian market. Much more surreal in a fever state.

Rooftop scene – theres monkeys chilling out in the hq version.

Water Festival boat races in Phnom Penh on the Tonle Sap.

incense

The Killing Fields

s.21 school room converted into a torture chamber

s.21 hallway

After traveling North we decided to head down to Southern Thailand to meet up with our friend Darin who was working for the winter in Phuket. We had planned to visit the Similan Islands but the weather didn’t let up while we were there. So we checked out as much as we could on the island including the Sleazetropolis of Patong, Racha Island, and a number of beaches. After Thailand we flew to Saigon, Vietnam.

Alisha spotted the exact hammock she had been seaching for.
I have a feeling she would have gone for one of the bird cages too if she could have gotten it home

This place had Bob Marley on a loop. Seemed a bit disingenuous considering theres no good weed in Thailand.

Awesome water tower. Very Lost’ish.

In Patong – Horrible club, Horrible music, Nice DJ Booth though.

If Elroy from the Jetsons DJ’ed it would probably look like this.

Leaving for Saigon

Wandering around the interior of Racha Island

Cluster

More Alisha

Racha Island

You get it, right? I don’t need to write a caption for this one do I?

Alisha at Cape Promthep

Turtles at the Sea Turtle Rehabilitation Center

Weird tanks of green goo at the Sea Turtle Rehabilitation Center

Weird Bags of multicolored goo. Hope they get an A on their science experiment

Our travels towards the Northern part of Thailand marks the official start of what our fellow traveller/friend Kate termed the “Temple Death March”; a non-stop parade of looking at and photographing ruins in sweltering heat. A majority of these ruins are in the 500 year old range.

As we headed north we stopped first at Phitsanulok and saw some of the ruins there and then headed north to the much nicer and more accomodating Ayyuthaya.

The Ayyuthaya provincial park was immaculately maintained and quite beautiful and made for an amazing scooter ride. I don’t think the photos need any captions as it these touristy seems to speak for itself – if you have any questions feel free to ask in the comments.


SE Asia Travels part 2: Bangkok, Thailand

bangkok street art

Bangkok Street Art

This is part 2 of my SE Asia travelogue check out the other entries [part one] [part two]

After leaving Bali I met up with Alisha who had spent a month in China, working in a Chinese Hospital doing acupuncture study with doctors. We had originally planned to meet in Bangkok for a short weekend and to get our visas for Myanmar (Burma) for our planned 10 day excursion. The Myanmar government wasn’t issuing visas due to the ‘elections’ they were having (in case there where uprisings) and In a very 1984 manner we were told they weren’t denying us visas but only granting them for certain dates. Since these dates didnt work for us at all this put a considerable kink in our plans since I was very keen on exploring Burma.

 

So we decided to explore Bangkok and see what sort of fun we could get into. We ended up spending a week and a half there (mostly because we were locked into having to be a few places at specific dates and I needed some dental work after a motorbike accident in Bali) We eventually grew to really enjoy the city despite initially wanting to get out. The street food is awesome, we ate at tons of riverside restaurants, and visited a number of really interesting areas. No ping-pong shows for us tho. =)

 

Check out some of the photos below for some of my highlights – keep in mind my tastes tend towards clean and designy and there is a disproportionate number of these photos compared to everything else… wouldn’t want you thinking Bangkok is this super designy city.

Bangkok Skyline

Bangkok as seen from Vertigo the overpriced, overly apologetic pretentious rooftop cocktail bar.

Bangkok Timelapse

Bangkok as seen from Vertigo. Trying my first prolonged exposure with my new camera.

Market at night

Market seen at night – occupied by alley cats

Squid Market

SQUIDS! I ate some of these in Ayyuthaya and really enjoyed it!

Bangkok Futurism

A futuristic texture I spotted as we were heading north to Ayyuthaya.

fetish

Fetishism. As spotted at the extremely insane market north of Bangkok. Gotta get em all.

Thai Book Store

Wide Angle Book Store photo.

Thai Pulp

Thai Pulp

Alisha at TCDC

Alisha at the Thailand Creative Design Center store (TCDC)

Airport

Suvarnabhumi Airport

Sleep

Siesta

home

TCDC interiior

The TCDC resource library – truly phenomenal collcetion of design art and fashion books!

my cutey!

Alisha at some temple I cant locate again =)

Book Stacks

Not the easiest bookstore in the world

Best Engrish shirt ever!

Thai Accupuncture

Thai Acupuncture

cactus macro

Random Cactus Macro using my old nikkor 55mm manual lens on my 7D!

Alisha at Wat Arun

Bellz


Stop being a whore

“Stop Being a whore” – As found at the gates of Wat Arun – The temple of the dawn.

Wat Arun at Sunrise

Wat Arun at sunrise.

Wat


Alisha at Wat Arun


Thai Temple


Thai Temple

 

balconies

Balconies on a high rise if you can beleive it.

SE Asia Travels part 1: Bali, Indonesia

I’ve found it rather difficult to begin describing why Bali has such a special place in my heart.

Starting with the art: The sculptures and details present in the art and temples definitely appeal to my aesthetic. Very clean, repetitive, balanced and expressive.

 

Unlike the rest of predominantly Muslim Indonesia, Bali is mostly Hindu and practices the Agama Hindu Dharma belief system, which gives the island a unique flavor.

What I found most fascinating is the infrastructure around building, maintaining and use of the tens of thousand temples on this island. You can see them being built, maintained and destroyed, there are even numbers of shops that specialize in making just one specialized component for temples. I found myself especially curious about the social hierarchy within the temples but wasn’t in Bali long enough to really get the downlow on that.

 

The way I understand it, every place has it’s own temple for the spirit of that place. Every house, market and even beaches have their shrine to make offerings. On a larger scale the Banjars or tribal neighborhoods have temples too. Larger still, districts and towns also have their own. I was told all the temples are interconnected and all point towards Besakih, the mother temple, which is literally the highest temple as it’s as far up the southern slope of volcanic Mount Agung as one would dare to build. The idea of the interconnection of all levels of temples reminds me of the buddhist/hindu metaphor of Indras’ Net, which completely transformed the way I see Bali as I sped through it on motorbike. I don’t know if this is accurate from the Balinese point of view but I found it enjoyable to entertain the idea.

 

I think what I found most beautiful was how inseparable the Hindu belief system was from the social fabric of peoples everyday lives. People placing offerings in their house temples and in the middle of the street is a common sight, less often but still frequently there are many different types of ceremonies.

Funnily enough, I’ll admit to reading Elizabeth Gilberts Eat Pray Love, and the picture I had of Bali was nothing like I imagined from her writing. Where was the mention of lack of basic infrastructure, burning trash piles, the confusion of the roads? Oh well. I still love her, if only for her impeccable TED talk on creativity.

 

A week and a half wasn’t nearly long enough and I’m already planning a longer trip to explore more.

 

Demons

 

Temple

I purchased a new camera (Canon 7D, yall!) just for this trip and settled on a kit consisting  of a ultra-wide 10-22mm, a fixed focus 50mm and a macro lens. This is my first proper usage of the wide-angle at 10mm. Be sure to check some of these photos out at a higher resolution – the detail is astounding!


flowery demons

One of the things I’d heard about Balinese beliefs was that the reason there are so many demons is that it’s better to have your demons on the outside and to face them daily rather than hiding them inside. I agree! This also takes them out of the realm of something to be avoided at all costs and makes it another aspect of life.

 

Bali Sunset

Of course the swimming and surfing is supreme, doubly so when it’s just one epic sunset after another. In the distance of this photo above you can see my host/ friend Philip and sons playing in the surf with Gocha the dog.

Above: A fishing village on the coast near Changgu. I was hoping to make it out one sunrise to catch the fishermen leaving for the day, but the main discouraging factor was that I would have to sludge my way through a couple muddy creeks to get there and if theres one thing im squeemish about… its water and mud in the morning.

Above: this is an inlet on the island of Nusa Penida, the coast of which has excellent snorkeling and diving. This was after our trip to swim with Manta rays with a 10′ wingspan. In the photo you can a women raking all the seaweed shes harvested and drying in the sun. tasty!

 


Above: immediately after an intense storm just outside of Pura Ulun Dana Bratan in Northern Bali. I snapped this shot just as the clouds started to clear from the flash storm.

Goa Gajah

Goa Gajah or The elephant cave: This is an old ruin. Inside is a very simple T shaped cave carved out of the rock where monks and masters would go to meditate.

mists

View the rest of my Bali Photos on Flickr
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Prosperity, Friends and uhh Lichen?

We spent the past weekend with a bunch of friends out in the desert. Springtime in the desert is always special when you get that brief window of life instead of dry dusty shrubbery. Here are a few photos of my friends and some interesting macros I did of lichen. If you want to see the rest click here

Alisha

Matt

Sienna

Michelle

Sam

Liza and Alisha

Michael & Sienna


View the rest of the Travelogue Blog Posts


Abstract Ice

2009 hasn’t been the best year for me in the photographic sense – Possibly since I’ve spent a good portion of my free time in the studio working on music and art. I think that may account for my complete lapse in judgment when I decided to leave my camera at home while heading out to Idaho for a Christmas break vacation. I realized the errors of my thinking when I finally found the hexagonal Hoar frost I’ve been itching to see for over a year now since my friend Christian showed me some photos he took of these amazing geometric frost patterns. Luckily Bill lent me his Nikon and I was able to salvage the situation (though If I had my macro lens I know these photos would be phenomenal) I’ll consider this a lesson learned. You can view all the photos here if you desire

Ice Bridge

Edge of Motion

Priest Lake Idaho Winter Panorama

Priest Lake Panorama – Click to see in full detail

 

Hexagonal Ice Crystals

Crystallizing Ice Matrix


View the rest of the Travelogue Blog Posts


Seaweed picking at the Coast

I went with Alisha and classmates to the coast to collect seaweed and chill at the beach. I took a number of macros at low tide which proved to be pretty difficult considering the waves crashing around and the razor sharp barnacles and my fear or broadcasting buttcrack to the world at large. Additionally since its somewhat relevant I put up a picture of my newest painting which is based on the San Juan islands (yeah thats right Orcas peeps!)

View the rest of the photos here

Possibly my favorite frame ever.

Wave crest and Star filled twilight detail.

indian beach wave

Surf Crash – Indian Beach – Ecola State Park – Oregon Coast

Surf and Two Starfish

Starfish vs Waves – Ecola State Park – Oregon Coast

bubbles above anenome

Bubbles in pool above sea anemones

Neon Anenome off Oregon Coast

Sea Anemone macro

Tide Pool traffic jam

Beach Still Life

Seaweed Hunting

Starfish Macro

Starfish arms

Clowncore

Starfish and Surf


View the rest of the Travelogue Blog Posts


Macrodynamics

Hello everyone, Alisha and I went on a little mini-vacation in Eastern Washington and went for a few hikes – including one to one of Alishas favorite places – Emerald lake – which is a mountain lake you have to hike miles over a mountain to get to – In the summer the upper lake dries up and the lake bed is left to slowly dry leaving large cracked earth. There are also beautiful mint fields, deep emerald lake and flower filled meadows. Below are a number of the macro photos I took here and in Priest Lake Idaho.

Cracked Lake Bed, Emeral Lake Trail, colville, Washington

Fractal Drying – Emerald Lake, Colville, WA

Cracked Lake Bed, Emeral Lake Trail, colville, Washington

Lake Bed Composition – Emerald Lake, Colville, WA

Grasshopper macro

Large Grasshopper – Emerald Lake, Colville, WA

Underlying structure – Emerald Lake, Colville, WA

Bursts – Emerald Lake, Colville, WA

Baby Frog Macro – Emerald Lake, Colville, WA

Emerald Lake, Colville, WA

Lichen Macro

Creeping Lichen  – Emerald Lake, Colville, WA

Lichen Macro Photo

Lichen Composition – Emerald Lake, Colville, WA

Emerald Lake, Colville, WA

Tree Sap over Lichen

Tree sap over chartreuse lichen – Emerald Lake, Colville, WA

Rock Lichen Ecology – Emerald Lake, Colville, WA

Throrofare Liminal Zone – Priest Lake, ID

More Lichen – Emerald Lake, Colville, WA

Shipwrex – Priest Lake, ID

Trout Lake from Above -  Colville, WA

Trees -  Colville, WA

 

You can view all the photos here

Glacier Hiking Trip

Alisha and I just finished planning our 72 mile late summer back country expedition into Glacier National Park – I made a google map of this to get an idea of distance per day and elevation changes.

Heres the stats

10 Days

73 miles

3 Passes

1 River Fording

4 suspension bridges

I will update this page once we return with photos! but for now feel free to peep our map


View Glacier Hike in a larger map

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