kitchen sink # 38 ~ 2 choices

green beans, fork, napkin ~ Au Sable Forks, NY - in the Adirondack PARK (click to embiggen)

Excerpts from 2 picture maker statements. Which picture maker do you think makes the most interesting visual statements?

My work is an exploration of my own psychological landscape ... As I navigated through my internal landscape I was able to discover beauty in my journey back to living.
My motive in creating ... was to create a visual record of the area before it is all sanitized by shopping malls and frozen yogurt stands.

civilized ku # 5011-15 ~ finger licking good

Hattie's Chicken Shack ~ Saratoga Springs, NY (click to embiggen)

Hattie ~ Saratoga Springs, NY (long ago) (click to embiggen)

Wall crack with OOF sweetener packets  / Hattie's ~ (click to embiggen)

painting / Hattie's (click to embiggen)

Chicken cooking guy / Hattie's (click to embiggen)

Another hockey weekend, this time around Albany, NY. The games were spread out in 3 different rinks. Midpoint in the 50 mile drive from one rink to another, the wife and I stopped in Saratoga Springs for cigars and lunch.

Saratoga Springs is a target-rich environment for restaurants, options galore. I had just been reminded about a restaurant - Hattie's - which has been a Saratoga Springs' institution since 1938. Common wisdom has it that Hattie's offers the best fried chicken in the known fried chicken universe and after my fried chicken lunch I was more than inclined to agree with that assessment.

Writing of after lunch, for dessert we were treated to Hugo's game winning goal with only 5 seconds left on the afternoon game clock. It was very sweet indeed.

FYI, you can read all about Hattie Here.

selective focus # 5 ~ working the shtick

I'm starting to get the hang of making selective focus pictures. That is, recognizing what makes them "work" for my eye and sensibilities.

Nevertheless, I still consider that the pictures are a work-in-progress inasmuch as I am still learning to see referents that will make good selective focus pictures. My current "success" rate is about 1 in 5 pictures.

In any event, I have created a NARROW FOCUS / OVEREXPOSURE gallery on my WORK page. I will be adding to / deleting from that gallery frequently since I am kinda focusing on getting this picture making M.O. right.

civilized ku # 5009 ~ temporary edifice

ice castle entrance / Saranac Lake Winter Carnival ~ Saranac Lake, NY - in the Adirondack PARK (click to embiggen)

Missed the women's frying pan toss on Saturday. It's a great, really really great, event. Of course, there were so-called judges. Sad.

in perspective # 1-5 ~ putting things in perspective

in perspective / Arezzo, Ireland (click to embiggen)

in perspective / Paris, France (click to embiggen)

in perspective / Pennan, Scotland (click to embiggen)

in perspective / Cortona, Tuscany (click to embiggen)

in perspective / Toronto, Canada (click to embiggen)

It would seem, as an unforseen result of purusing my finished pictures library, that I have quite a collection of pictures (approximately 40) which emphasize a tight-quarter diminishing perspective. And, for some reason I can't explain exactly, most of those pictures were made in foreign (to me) countries.

The best sort-of-explanation I can come up with is that many countries around the world, outside of the US, have not been hell-bent on eradicating - on the pretext of "urban renewal" - their urban heritage. Here in the US, most (not all) real estate developers are operating in the buy the old, tear it down and and put up the new.

civilized ku # 5006-07 ~ the time has come to talk of many things

McQuaid Jesuit High School hockey game ~ Ft. Covington, NY (click to embiggen)

McQuaid Jesuit High School hockey game ~ Ft. Covington, NY (click to embiggen)

student art ~ Cardigan Mountain School, Canaan, New Hampshire (click to embiggen)

As I do when I am made aware of a new entry by John Linn on his blog, I check it out. Today's entry took me a bit by surprise.

The entry's title asked a simple yet very vexing question - What happened to America?

In his entry's text, John made plain that his "blog is not intended to be political" which was somewhat akin to offering an apology for his expression of distress re: the current states of affairs in the good ol' US of A. iMo, no apologies needed.

My response to John's entry is now that we have stepped through the looking glass and entered the alternative world of Tweedledum and Tweedledee, it is, as the Walrus said, "The time has come to talk of many things." While I, like John, don't intend my blog to go all political, I do believe that it is time for all good men (and women) to come to the aid of their country in whatever manner they can. So, on that note. today's entry ...

Over the past 5 days, I have been instigated to think of the idea of core values. The first instigator was a visit to the 2 New England junior (6-9 grades) prep schools, one of which Hugo (my grandson) will be attending this coming fall. Both schools have as their raison d'être for being is the instilling of core values - compassion, integrity, respect and courage - into the intellect and lives of their students.

The second instigator was a visit up to my neck of the woods by my high school's - McQuaid Jesuit College Prep School - hockey team (I was amazed that all of the kids on the team were named Jesuit). That school shares (amongst other Catholic values) the same dedication to the teaching and instilling of the core values of the NE prep schools.

That written, there is no simple easy answer to John Linn's question. However, I would suggest that, one level, what has happened to America is the slipping way of those specific core values in American society. However, trying to address that notion as anything other than a longterm fix for what ails us is akin to fiddling while Rome burns inasmuch as, while there is a battle over whose core values are "right" which must be engaged, the real issue, re: what happened to America, is the onset of genuine class warfare - haves vs. have-nots.

The solving of that core issue is a thorny problem. While, due to my core value education, I have genuine compassion and understanding of the plight of the have-nots, I have real difficulty trying to understand why they have chosen a leader and a political party, both of which are haves and hell-bent on protecting and preserving what they have (to the detriment of the have-nots), to lead them to the promised land.

Then again, #45's statement on the campaign trial...

"I love the poorly educated." ~ Nevada / Feb. 24, 2016
... is very instrumental in understanding why the have-nots are easily conned into following a have.

Or, as Pat Paulsen said during one of his faux campaigns for president:

"I read an article that said one in five Americans thinks Elvis is alive. I want to find those morons and get them registered to vote for me." ~ c. 1968

'Nuff written for now ....