Killing Time

I’ve never felt, much less understood the concept of, boredom. My eyes & brain never fail to keep me entertained. Yesterday I flew from RDM to DIA for a quick trip to visit my parents (more on that soon) and my flight left just before noon. Sue dropped me off several hours earlier because she had work to do, and could not manage to drop me off closer to my flight time. I checked my bag, read the newspaper… and then just left the airport with my iPod, my camera, and just went for a walk. The Redmond airport is east of the town of Redmond and pretty much cut-off from it by a set of railroad tracks. The tracks only have crossings at the north & south side of town, so the area around the airport is quite isolated. The landscape is typically central Oregon, with gnarled Junipers and spots of Cheatgrass amid the dry sandy soil. I walked a mile or so and then turned around to start heading back when I noted a storm squall bearing down on me. I made it maybe one-third of the way back to the shelter of the airport when it arrived with mixed rain and snow. My coat was in my checked bag, and all I had on for warmth was a lightweight pile vest. I sought the shelter of a Juniper tree and waited out the storm. The tree kept the wind and most of the precipitation off of me as I stood under it for the better part of an hour. I wasn’t bored. I was maybe 50 meters away from something I planned on photographing (some old piles of melting snow) and thought about how I would try and shoot these in a way that played tricks with scale. Are the images of Alaskan glaciers, or small piles of snow? After a while I started seeing small beauty in the tree that was giving me shelter from the storm.I had my 20mm f/1.7 lens on the G1, and fired off a few shots of the tree…

The Juniper tree that provided me shelter from the storm.

The Juniper tree that provided me shelter from the storm.

The Juniper tree that provided me shelter from the storm.

The melting snow that originally caught my eye as we drove by, and what I went on this walk to photograph.

The storm abated and I was able to walk to the melting snow piles, and then finally amble back to the airport… with a couple of hours to spare before my flight. So if you ever find yourself bored, just open your eyes and look around – there is plenty of beauty, at every scale from the microscopic to the universal to behold.

Nick Update.

I’m really proud of my son Nick.

We moved last summer from near Arlington, WA to just outside Bend, OR. This happened between his Sophomore and Junior years at High School. Moving when you are a kid is tough, and moving as a teenager is even tougher. My parents moved when I was a teenager and I was morose for the next several years. Not Nick. Despite leaving the place he grew up, a place where he had accumulated quite a nice group of friends, he has hit the ground running here in central Oregon. He ran Cross-Country in the fall, and at the urging of several of his teammates, decided to give Nordic skiing a try. The very first time he ever put on XC skis was on November 20, 2010. Three months later, last weekend he competed at the Oregon State High School Championships… and placed 26th in the state!

Here’s a few photos of him from the meet:

On

And a photo of the whole Bend High School Nordic Ski Team:

The 2010-2011 Bend Senior High School Nordic Ski Team. Can you spot Nick?

Here’s a clue for the sight-impaired. 😉

Car Photo of the Day: Cure for a grey, snowy day.

Our mid-winter break of mild weather and sunshine is over. I put the studded snow tires back on the TDI and we’ve seen well over a foot of the white stuff. I did get the 65E out for a drive a few weeks ago… exploring roads I’ve never driven. It was wonderful, though a tad chilly with the top down. I’m looking forward to the end of winter so I can explore some more. Meanwhile, here is a shot of a summer’s evening drive up the Pacific Coast Highway in northern California a few years ago. Fond memories of that trip indeed.

Keep Clam – and a Spicy Chicken.

As much as I love my new home in Central Oregon, I am occasionally homesick for the Seattle area. No time so much as lunchtime. I miss teriyaki the most. Sure, there’s pseudo-Japanese/Seattle fusion fast food on just about every corner and every strip mall in western Washington – but over on the dry side I’ve only ever seen one, and it is in Redmond (a 20+ minute drive from my office.)

Yes, I even miss those quirky, crazy clams at Ivars. But I must carry on without them.

Hat tip for this art, “Amishboy” via my friend and long-time client Glenn Fleishman on twitter.

Car Photo of the Day: Family Photo, Mystery Car.

Mystery Car.

An irony of the art of photography is that it captures moments in time with amazing detail of objects, but without any information much less detail on subjects. Nowhere is that so well illustrated as the photo above.

I was having a conversation with a friend at work about family histories. He showed me several photos that he had collected of various members of his family, many he had never even met. One such photo is this one, which he knows is an uncle, and it was taken sometime in the mid-20th century in California. Beyond that, he knows little. Nothing about the woman. I said to him that I bet I could help him narrow it down to a specific year, based solely on the newish looking car behind the subjects. I told him I have a bunch of readers who are excellent car spotters. Let us know what the pictured cars are and we’ll at least fill in some blanks.

Best Photographs of 2010 – Travel/Misc

2010 saw me traveling a lot – always for work. I made “MVP” status on Alaska Airlines – oddly entirely through flights to the Bay Area and Washington DC (The Other Washington, as we from Washington state call it.) Along the way I always had my camera with me and grabbed a few shots worth sharing…


Jet landing above a park in Washington DC.

At National airport in Washington DC jets come in to land right above a park along the Potomoc River. This shot was taken with an ultra-wide angle lens and like your passenger-side mirror “Objects in Lens are Closer than they Appear!” This jet is very close.

Outside the Jefferson Memorial at twilight.

Not long after the jet shot above, I stopped by the Jefferson Memorial. Thomas Jefferson is the founding father I most admire. He seemed more prescient than the rest – seeing how things should and will be long before his contemporaries.

Inside the Jefferson Memorial.

I sat off to the side and awaited this moment. This particular couple standing before this particular quote redacted and excerpted from a letter July 12, 1816, to Samuel Kercheval:

“I am not an advocate for frequent changes in laws and constitutions. But laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. As that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new discoveries are made, new truths discovered and manners and opinions change, with the change of circumstances, institutions must advance also to keep pace with the times. We might as well require a man to wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy as civilized society to remain ever under the regimen of their barbarous ancestors.”

That my friend is the wisdom of an enlightened, scientific mind. I’m proud to live in the creation of this sort of thinking.


Hope Luminaria.

This image isn’t really a “travel” one, but is more in the realm of “miscellaneous”. It is a long-exposure shot taken at the all-night “Relay for Life” event that I chaperoned Nick and his relay team at Arlington High School last summer.


In early December I flew down to the Bay Area for a meeting of Managers & Leads from all the Facebook datacenters around the country. At the end of two days of meetings we all went off into a Redwood forest for one of those “team building” things – this one involving a ropes course. We were all apprehensive about this – because usually these corporate team building things are really lame. However it turned out to be a lot of fun and I shot several hundred photos (which, if you’re my friend on Facebook you can see them all). A few turned out to be nice solid images…

Going up the tree.

Problem Solving Exercise.

Josh's Problem Solving.


I dashed down to Houston, TX for a quick weekend to attend my niece’s college graduation. While there I shot this skyline of the Post Oak area on the west side.

Houston at night.

Best Photographs of 2010 – Part Two

I haven’t really thought of myself as a “people photographer” in over a decade. I know I can get good shots of people and have in the past, but I just don’t do it very often anymore. This year however I made an effort to shoot people once again.


Woody and his wagon.

I’ve known Bill Woodcock for over 15 years, but I rarely see him. On a recent trip to the Bay Area for work I managed to zip up to Berkeley to check out one of Bill’s skunkwork projects – an EV conversion of a pre-war Ford truck. I like how this image captures both the project and its creator.

Mike, Stacey, and Sue.

Stacey, a dear Law School friend of Sue’s, was diagnosed with cancer last year. She and her husband came to Seattle last summer and we all met downtown for a nice dinner. As we were heading back to our cars I snapped this shot as they crossed University Street. All sorts of poignancy in this image for me. Just looking at it makes Sue cry.

X-C Skier

Nick took on a new sport this year, cross-country skiing. He joined the Bend High School X-CS team, and I tagged along with my camera to their first practice, and then their first race. I try to shoot at least one photo of every racer on the BHS team as they went by. This shot struck me as particularly good.

The Look.

At an X-C practice I stood off from the kids with a long lens so that they wouldn’t feel the need to “pose.” Sure enough I caught this wonderful moment between a girl and boy.

Awesome Nick is Awesome.

Nick approaching the finish of his very first X-CS race. He passed several of his team mates and placed 7th out of 30-ish skiers on the BHS team. I was impressed!

Christopher.

I like this photo of Chris, relaxing in the Banff Springs Hotel. He rarely smiles if a camera is pointed at him, but this half-smile is good enough for this one.

Ken & Beaver Skull

“Alas, Poor Yorick of Corvallis… I knew him, Horatio… , a rodent of infinite jest, of most excellent mustard. He hath bore me on his back a thousand times, and now how abhorr’d in my imagination it is! My gorge rises at it.”

In the “early days” (ie: September) at the Prineville site, when it was pretty much Ken Patchett & I as the only Facebook employees there, we’d take a ride out on the periphery of the property to escape the hubub of activity around the construction… mostly to clear our minds and mentally refuel. On one of these rides we found three beaver skulls.

PRN1

Four of us were standing in front of the Facebook Prineville Datacenter discussing some matter, when I whipped out the G1 with my favorite ultra-wide angle lens, and I tugged on the sleeve of Dan Lee, the Mechanical Engineer on the left side of the photo. I art directed him into position, the other two subjects, Ken Patchett and Joshua Crass remained oblivious to me and the camera as I shot. I posted this on an internal Facebook corporate page and the best joke caption was something about it looking like an album cover.

Brian Talarowski

Our office at the PRN1 site for the past 6 months has been a single-wide trailer. A handful of us Oregon FB staff, plus many visitors from FB HQ every week – until the main building is finished, we’re all packed into a small space. The weather for the past two months has been very cold. Brian is the Cabling Lead on site. I don’t recall what he said when I pointed the camera at him, but be assured it was a wise crack.

Alex in the glow of his laptop.

This is my favorite “people shot” of 2010. This shows Alex Renzin in the foreground, and Tom Cook right behind him – working to turn up core services for a cluster inside the datacenter while construction continues behind them. It was cold inside the facility that day, and Alex is all bundled up to stay warm. The cold light on his face from the LCD screen just reinforces the overall chilled impression.


Construction.

While I’ve taken part in several small-scale builds, Prineville is the first “greenfield” construction project I’ve participated in at this scale. It is a huge project – so large in fact that it is impossible to represent in any single image. My photographic skills were noted early on, so I’ve been appointed to archive the process. I never thought that a construction project would present photographic opportunities but once I opened my eyes and started looking around plenty of amazing images presented themselves. I post an image or two a day on an internal FB page dedicated to the project. Company policy prevents me from sharing with you any images from inside the facility that show any technologies specific to this installation, but here are my favorite images of what I can show you.

Crane.

I never think of shooting black and white, but this image just looked so much better in that format.

First Snowfall.

Winter came early in Prineville this year, with the first snow arriving in October, and then once November arrived we saw snow almost every day. It dramatically changed the construction site, making a lot of work harder, but the upside came in the form of interesting scenery. I love the mantle of snow on this truck.

Ironworker.

Ironworkers.

I left Prineville in early October for two and a half weeks. The extension we added to the north end of the building (effectively doubling the size of the facility) was only a set of steel fittings in the ground. When I returned the Ironworkers were a day away from completion of their task. I escorted a reporter from the local newspaper out to the site to observe the “Topping Off Ceremony”, where the final high beam is put in place. She had to leave before it actually happened, but I stayed to watch it, and observed the Ironworkers complete their work. It was amazing to watch these guys work. They were so skilled, and so efficient – so it was no surprise how they were able to put up so much framework in so short a time. It was a privilege to later eat and drink with these guys, and share with them my photos from the day. One of these two images above was also picked up by the local paper, and an album of my shots was posted by Facebook on the public site for the project.

The Architect.

Jay Park is the man at Facebook responsible for designing the Prineville Datacenter. Here Jay drives a buggy around the site checking on project progress.

The Monolith.

My first task upon arrival in Prineville was handling the delivery and setup of this item. Yes, it holds a large, smooth, featureless black monolith. Want to see it? I’m sorry Dave, I’m afraid I can’t to that.

Old School Tie Downs.

A Fiber Installation Tech does it old school.

Pipefitter.

One of the great things about the Prineville Project is the overall happy nature of the site. Everyone is glad to be there and the morale of the site is very high. I’m always impressed with the friendly nature of everyone here. This image captures just a bit of the spirit, with Pipefitter Robert Harju cracking a smile as he works.

Wednesday Safety Meeting.

Every Wednesday all the workers on the site pause for a Safety Meeting. I was assisting a contractor with the network configuration of their equipment, and was near the spot where the meeting took place. I quietly wandered around and took shots with the self-timer and the monopod. I like the lighting and composition of this shot.

Spindrift Avalanche.

A recent milestone was the completion of the walls on the north extension of the building. Once enclosed, work could begin on the inside. I happened upon this scene where a worker was removing some of the crane hoist points on a concrete wall slab, and the vibration caused the collected snow on the slab to fall all around him. Slabs arrive on a flatbed truck, and then are lifted into place, so the top slab in this case was covered with snow.

The Wall is Up.

This image was picked up and published by the local newspaper a few weeks ago – illustrating the wall completion milestone of the project. I remember because they made me go back out onto the site and find the guy pictured to get his name.