My poor old ’99 Impreza hadn’t had any TLC for thousands and thousands of miles. It was starting to complain to me. It whined when I cranked the wheel to pull away from the curb. It slammed its wipers into the hood with every wipe. It stubbornly plodded when I tried to spur it on.
So, on a drizzly bay morning before work last week, I dropped it off for servicing in west Berkeley. Unfortunately, my bike doesn’t quite fit in the little guy, so after running down the list of complaints to the service manager, I left on foot. I missed the Ashby Ave bus by seconds. Off I went on my damp, 2.5-mile walking commute through Berklandville. While I was hurrying to get to work, I decided to make the most of it and stop to shoot when necessary. Like when I came across these guys, slowly disintegrating in the urban wilderness of the East Bay. At least I got my Subaru feeling better before it came to a similar fate.
Apparently, someone over by my place of employment is into overseas Fords. While walking to Market Hall for an afternoon snack, I spied a couple of sixties-looking foreign cars parked on the street. Or is that foreign-looking sixties cars? Anyway, both turned out to be Fords. A search online revealed that the Anglia was a British car made by Ford for a good long time. And stylish too! Stay tuned for a photo of the other one, a Ford Cortina.
My sister-in-law has been living in San Diego for the past year, and we finally had a chance to visit here there for her birthday last month. Her second cousins also live there, and the day we were leaving we visited them at their home near Point Loma. They were kind enough to whisk us off for a quick tour of the peninsula. This was the view from the historic lighthouse there.
As we were returning to work from lunch, a co-worker asked if I had seen the hieroglyph couch. I said I hadn’t. She pointed down the block and across the street. I detoured over to take a look. This is about the fourth or fifth large piece of furniture left out on this four-block stretch of Shattuck over the last few months. But it’s the first to feature such fine inscriptions. The long-dead christmas tree was an added bonus.
Yesterday I posted a first shot of recent trip to Crockett and Port Costa on the Carquinez Straight, home of C&H Sugar’s corporate headquarters. Here are a few more from the trip. Click on the images below to view the gallery.
This is the first one of a little batch of photos shot in Crockett and Port Costa last weekend. 10 years in the Bay Area and it was my first visit to this charming, David Lynch-like oasis. If only I had known, I would have been out here every weekend.
An alternate treatment of night photos taken late last month at Mission Beach, San Diego. Monochrome versions of some were posted yesterday.
High-contrast monochromes of some night photos taken in San Diego in late February. I’m also working on color versions with highly processed effects.
The car reminds me of a girl I knew in high school. She used to go around saying that a fortune teller told her she would not live to be 21. Of course I didn’t believe her. But it turned out to be true.
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