Tuesday 27 November 2012

Sri Lanka: Don't Mention The Boar. Sunday 11th November



Sunday 11th November

To get from my room to the restaurant, I had to get past a herd of wild boar. Thankfully, they were as wary of me as I was of them.  The monkeys were always ready to steal anything that wasn't nailed down. I didn't see any elephants at the reserve, which is probably a good thing if this notice is anything to go by. The writer has a sense of humour...

Much as I appreciate the chance to visit Sri Lanka, I felt that this trip was a missed opportunity; too much time spent on a coach with almost no contact with locals. Our guide was interested in history but not in the wildlife. Shame.



Sri Lanka: Elephant Orphanage






Thursay, 8th November 2012
Orphaned elephants at Pinnawala, near Kandy. The elephants are taken to the river twice a day, watched by lots of tourists. The Mahouts are there to make sure that they don't wander off to the far side of the river. There are currently around eighty elephants at the orphanage. Around a third of them were brought to the river this morning.
Elephants at Pinnawala are used to contact with humans and so cannot be released back into the wild, unlike at the Elephant Transit Home where they are kept away from people as much as possible.
Controversially, Pinnawala has sold Elephants to private interests leading to allegations that some have been neglected or mistreated.

Elephant Transit Home
Elephant Orphanage


Sunday 25 November 2012

Sri Lanka: Tasty & Toasty








































Sunday 4 November 2012

I've just started my final tour of the season - Sri Lanka. I'm here without laptop or fancy lenses as I've got shoulder problems and lugging heavy gear around is giving me grief. I took this shot of the chef at our first hotel in Colombo with my iPhone.

Sharing A Moment



Sunday 14 October 2012

This is Maria Meerovitch & Sergei Nakariakov rehearsing on board ship on the 2012 Music Cruise, from which M & I have just returned. It was fabulous, but hard work. This could be the last of the Music Cruises, at least, for the time being. We've been doing this for ten years and had a great time but all good things come to an end.








































We also had Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, Behzod Abduraimov, Maxim Vengerov and a host of other brilliant musicians - a worthy swan song for the cruise, if that's what it proves to be.

Dame Kiri


Maxim Vengerov & Lawrence Power























































Music Cruise 2012

Previous Music Cruises

Muscle Shoals Alabama: The Queen of Soul



Wednesday 26 September 2012

I've been to Sun Studios in Memphis, where Elvis, Johnny Cash, Howlin' Wolf and many others made their first recordings and I've been to RCA Studio B in Nashville where anyone who was anyone in country recorded. Today, I visited FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama where Jerry Wexler of Atlantic Records brought the newly signed Aretha Franklin to try and harness the magic that she possessed. That day, she worked with the Muscle Shoals Horns, organist Spooner Oldham found the groove, the musicians followed, Aretha responded at the piano and let rip with that voice and the result was I Never Loved A Man & Do Right Woman, Do Right Man. A star was born.
I can now die happy (but not too soon).




The Canadian Maritimes: Fiddler's Elbow & Other Stories



Friday 14 September 2012, Judique, Nova Scotia

We got our whale watch in at 7.30 this morning in Cheticamp - saw a few pilot whales but mainly it was just nice to be out on the water early in the morning.

Lunch was at the Celtic Music Centre in Judique, an area that has produced more than it's fair share of fiddlers as well as singers and other musicians. It was a nice way to round off a musical tour for me: I'd seen Gordon Belsher & Richard Wood in Charlottetown, Sylvia LeLievere in Cheticamp and Kinnon Beaton here for the second time. I'm just fascinated by the way he holds the fiddle upside down and back to front.

We'd also spent a couple of days on the French Shore in New Brunswick, where,as the name suggests, the locals speak French. There are also French speaking communities in Nova Scotia (Cheticamp is one) but most are in New Brunswick. They are Acadians, descendants of the original French settlers in North America. The Acadians were forcibly removed from Nova Scotia by the British in 1755 during one of the many conflicts with France. Some ended up in Louisiana (a French colony at the time) and became known as Cajuns. Others either took to the woods  in Nova Scotia or escaped across the Bay of Fundy or to Prince Edward Island.
Most just wanted to return to their homes in Nova Scotia. When the war between Britain & France ended, they were allowed back but most of their lands had been given to English speakers, mainly from New England, so they either ended up in small pockets dotted around Nova Scotia or they moved to what is now New Brunswick (followed by many Loyalists who had fled the New England Colonies during the War of Independence).
Officially, around 37% of New Brunswickers speak French but they have to work to keep the language and culture alive, though in common with many minority cultures and languages, there has been a reclaiming and resurgence of pride in their culture and identity.
The bottom photo is of a dory at Peggy's Cove, Nova Scotia.


Kinnon Beaton
Acadian Gentleman, New Brunswick





Peggy's Cove: I'll Go To Sea No More




London 2012



Monday 6 August 2012
Commuters?
Probably not. These three Japanese ladies were on their way to Wembley to watch their women's football team take on the French (and win). It was a terrific game and as usual, the fans were fantastic. The guy next to them didn't seem to be too interested in the outcome of the match.

We happened to see three of the Japanese football matches; it was great fun being amongst the fans as they really went overboard when it came to decorating themselves to support their teams: rivers of facepaint were used, tons of fabric in costumes and flags. Add to that their good natured enthusiasm whether they were winning or losing and you had a photographer's dream. The fans are what makes the Olympics so much fun.

We also found a few French fans who'd got into the spirit of the occasion. There are lots more fan pics via the link below.




More London 2012 Photos

London 2012



Thursday 2 August 2012




There was no work for us during the Olympics so we went out and enjoyed them, taking in football in Coventry, Newcastle and Wembley, visits to the Olympic Park, a trip to the top of Anish Kapoor's Orbit tower, beach volleyball and just mooching around London.

Today was another great day at the Olympic Park. I saw a gold medal up close, around the neck of the USA cyclist Kristen Armstrong, who won the women's time trial yesterday for the second time. she was appearing on America's "Today" programme, the equivalent of our breakfast televison. It goes out live from the Olympic Park, starting at 7am on the US east coast, which is noon here.
Apart from athletes, Jamie Oliver popped up to do a bit of Olympic cookery for the Americans. I also saw Boris Johnson holding forth by the side of the river - risky for someone with his track record. Excuse the pun...
I took many photos today but this one, which was the first of the day is my favourite.

We also had a chance to mooch around London, just enjoying the the Olympic vibe. We encountered this patriotic family just outside the Excel, where boxing and martial arts were being held.




Vienna



Tuesday 10 July 2012: Grand Finale



A group photo of all the participants in the Youth Music Festival, including The Milwaukee Youth Symphony Orchestra, who we looked after (They are in the balcony on the right, dressed in black). This was taken in the Koncerthaus, another fantastic music venue in Vienna.
The festival was fun but bedlam. The organisation was non-existent, but what the heck.
The festival included young people from everywhere, including the girls & boys of the Maibuy' ISkahile Youth Development Choir, who struck a pose every time a camera was pointed at them.
I'm off to bed as I have to be up in five hours to see the first part of the group off.




Striking A Pose Backstage At The Konzerthaus


L'Italie!



Thursday 28 June 2012

I'm in France, in Nice. There's a big football match in the European Cup between France & Italy & there are quite a few supporters of both nationalities around. I've just come in to see that Italy are two up against France, so these two must be even happier at the moment.




Spain: Local Culture



Monday 18 June 2012

Cuenca. Our travels in Spain with The Chicago Youth Symphony Orchestra.The group had dinner in a restaurant on the Plaza Mayor in Cuenca while Spain were making hard work of overcoming Croatia in the European Championship. Some of the group wanted to watch so a few of us stayed in the bar so that they could see the game the way it should be seen. They really enjoyed the experience though one or two were nervous about me taking the pic, just in case the folks back home get to see their offspring being corrupted in the dens and dives of Europe.




In Valencia we had lunch outside the old market and one of the kids ended up joining in with the street musicians: a coming together of generations and cultures through music.

Grrr.



Tuesday 5 June 2012

A big black bear near Whistler. It looks well fed. I've managed to see bears at Whistler on my last three visits, each time from the ski lift, however this one was taken on a trip into the back country where we could get a lot closer to them.

Into The Blue



Saturday 26 May 2012





























Ogden Point, Victoria, BC, Canada, looking across the Strait of Juan de Fuca toward The Olympic Peninsula in Washington State, USA. Our hotel is on the Inner Harbour in Victoria, about a twenty minute stroll from Ogden Point.
There are a couple of Otters that hang around close by, near a group of houseboats at Fisherman's Wharf. They are used to people and quite easy to photograph, though I made a bit of a hash of it.

Vancouver



Friday 25 May 2012

Day two of a tour through British Columbia. The view is of downtown Vancouver with the twin peaks (The Lions) in the background, taken from Queen Elizabeth Park. There was also a great view of Mount Baker, one of the volcanos in the Cascade Range. It's seventy miles away from Vancouver over the border in Washington State but it dominates the skyline. I didn't have time to get a pic of it though.
I went for a stroll along the shore of the Burrard Inlet, where seaplanes ferry commuters to and from varius places but mostly Victoria, the provincial capital.






New York Grand Central Terminal



Monday 14 May 2012:

I spent an hour at Grand Central Terminal, trying to get the picture I wanted of the movement of the crowds passing through, with one person standing still amongst the shifting masses, giving a sense of isolation or loneliness. Fat chance.
Too many people were standing still -mainly photographers of all stripes, from camera phone users to monopod toting heavyweights, all grabbing their Grand Central Kodak Moment. At times it seemed they outnumbered the commuters and my Kodak Moment was never quite within grasp, but this will give you an idea of what I was aiming for.

Every now and then someone walks across from one side of the station to the other on gantries that take them through the huge windows, seemingly floating above the people below who don't know that they are there.




Jurassic Coast.



Friday 4 May 2012: Jurassic Coast.

I'm just in, having spent all day running around Dorset. What a beautiful county! For some reason, I've never been here before, apart from one visit to Bournemouth around ten years ago.
I went to Lyme Regis, Cerne Abbas to see the Giant, Tolpuddle to tip my hat to the Martyrs, Lulworth Cove, Durdle Door, Weymouth (actually, I've been through Weymouth on the way to Jersey, so it doesn't count.) and Corfe. I managed to get turned around in Weymouth as several roads were closed and went round in circles in Poole becuase an event was on and barriers were being erected.
I'm glad I came down as there are quite a few things to sort out before the tour.
Time for a beer, I think.
This is the famous Chesil Beach with a very imposing chapel on the hill in the foreground. - no idea what it is or why it's there but I'll find out eventually.

Edit: It's St Catherine's Chapel. That was easy, thanks to the internet.


Farewell, Big Sis (and Mum & Dad)



Wednesday 4 April 2012: Farewell, Big Sis










































This is me and my sister on the back steps of the house we lived in in 1958 or 59.
She died last night, just me and her daughter present though her son, our brothers and her best friend had been with her most of the day and came back as soon as they could.
She went very quickly and peacefully and though we are devastated we are relieved that her suffering is over.
Everyone is taking a deep breath for a couple of days, coming to terms, starting to grieve. Her illness and death has brought us closer together - I think we will all be grateful for the time we spent with her and each other over the last months of her illness.
Our hearts are heavy but we are happy to have shared our lives together.


March 2013

The photo below was taken on December 20th. The last one of Mum & Dad together. We'd persuaded Dad to come to visit Mum at the home, which he was doing less often as he became more infirm.. It was the Christmas party, complete with someone playing the organ loudly and singing out of tune. It was hard to get Mum's attention for long because the music was annoying her.
Mum died on January 31st after developing gout. She was diabetic and a cut on her leg became infected. It wasn't noticed by the staff in the home; my niece picked up on it but by then it was too late. I often wonder whether the care she received in that home was up to standard, especially given the recent revelation that the Quality Care Commission lacked both quality and care. Still, "they will learn from their mistakes" - is there a more meaningless phrase in use these days?
With Mum gone, Dad more or less gave up the ghost. I flew back from Costa Rica and got home a few hour before he died on March 15th. We went from a family of six to three of us in less than twelve months. To quote Dad: "It's a bugger."


The View From Here



Monday 2 April 2012





























This is what my sister sees from her window each morning - the ferry arriving from Dieppe. Not included is the sound of scrap metal being loaded onto a ship - constant metallic booming. I've shut the windows to keep it out.
My sister is in the last stages of terminal cancer. I flew back from Valencia yesterday to be with her. I spent several months here during the winter as she was told last July that she wouldn't survive the disease. The doctor said that she probably wouldn't make it to November and yet here she is.
She and her daughter looked out for my dad so M and I came down to take the load off them.
I got to visit my sister almost every day - we've seen more of each other in the last few months than we have over many years, mainly due to my travelling and her (and the rest of the family) being staunch stay-at-homes. It gave me a chance to see a lot more of my brothers and the extended family which has been good but also a trial at times - families, and all that.
She can no longer speak most of the time and she has a mechanical driver administering drugs. Nurses and carers come in several times a day to keep her as comfortable as possible.
There have been lots of tears but some laughter too. Now we stay with her, talk to her and just let her know that we are with her.

Costa Rica: The Quaker Cloud Forest



Tuesday 6 March 2012

Monteverde Cloud Forest. Lots of rain, which is why it's a cloud forest. It was settled by Quakers from Alabama in 1951. They were pacificsts; concientous objectors, who, when Costa Rica abolished it's armed forces in 1948, decided to move here. They started the dairy industry which is still going strong but also protected the environment long before it became policy in Costa Rica. Thanks to their continued stewardship of the land, this beautiful spot remains relatively unspoiled. (The two roads in are unmade and the locals insist on keeping it that way).

It's not all peace and light though: The hummingbirds were fighting fiercely to claim their place at the feeder. We also saw a Resplendent Quetzal. It is well named. Magnificent.


Walk The Walk: Costa Rica



Friday 2 March 2012

Out at 6.15 this morning to search for wildlife along the canals of Tortuguero National Park
We saw Howler Monkeys, Toucans, Sloths and a few other creatures. I didn't manage to get any decent pictures but on our way back we saw a troop of Spider monkeys swinging through the trees. They had to get from one side of a narrow canal to the other by way of this flimsy palm frond. First up were adults, including mothers with babies. They were across the gap in a shot and my pictures were hopeless. This juvenile took it a bit more cautiously so I got a nice silhouette, which I've sharpened up in Silver Efex.
We are back out this afternoon so I'm hopeful of getting something else.


Great Big Sea



Tuesday 29 November 2011

Another wild and stormy day in Newhaven so we went to the east side of the harbour entrance to photograph the waves hitting the breakwater. Our cameras and everything else were covered in salt spray in no time at all and the wind threatened to bowl us over. Our only shelter was a lighthouse - more a lamppost really - at the end of the pier. It was good enough to allow us to get a few shots and clean our lenses too. Job done!

A Hawai'ian in Harrowden



Friday 4 November 2011

This is Princess Ka'iulani, the woman who would be Queen of Hawai'i. Her story is a romantic tragedy which was made into a film in 2009, which seems to have sunk without trace.
She was sent to the UK to be educated, living in Kettering and being schooled in Harrowden Hall, now a golf club.
While she was here, Hawai'i was annexed by the USA. She returned to campaign for the restitution of the Islands' sovereignty and was regarded as the rightful monarch of Hawai'i by the people. She caught a chill and eventually died at the age of twenty three.
I learned of the connection years ago when I took the Hawai'i' Youth Opera Chorus on tour around Europe (One of my all time favourite groups!), so I popped along to take a photo of the portrait which was presented by a descendant of the princess in 1995. I took the original pre-digital so I finally went back today to catch up with myself. The Lei which is draped around the portrait is starting to disintegrate. Time for another visit, methinks.

Walk On By



Sunday 16 October 2011

I had a nice weekend in London with M who was guiding at Wimbledon yesterday and today, staying overnight rather than travelling up and down twice.
We went to Kew Gardens which I've never visited before, despite having lived close by and driven past it dozens of times and always thinking that I'd get around to it. Well, now I have. It's wonderful and huge. M left to go to work after a while and I ended up staying for around four hours. Now that I've finally made it I must go back - I just won't leave it thirty years (Thirty Years!) this time.
Today, I walked from our hotel in Euston to Wimbledon, a ten mile stroll that took me through lots of different areas of the city, just following my nose. It's a brilliant way to see the Capital. I didn't know I'd be walking ten miles when I set off though!

I took this picture on the Kings Road in Chelsea.



Privateer



Saturday 24 September 2011

Charlestown Naval Yard in Boston, home of "Old Ironsides". This chap belongs to a naval historical society. Today he was the captain of an American Privateer, a sort of legal pirate as he had a Letter of Marque from the government which gave him permission to attack enemy ships, in this case British as he was representing the War of 1812 - 14.
Of course the Americans were just doing what the English, French et al had done before them - all's fair in love & war.

Giant's Causeway.



Thursday 15 September 2011

Greetings from Derry. A lovely drive around the Antrim coast today with views across to Scotland and later Donegal. The sunny weather held until we got to The Giant's Causeway, where it clouded over and turned quite chilly. Never mind, it was still a wonderful place to visit, though the most popular spot seemed to be the queue to get the shuttle back to the hotel & visitors centre at the top.
It is hard to get a people free picture so here's a peopled picture.

Music Cruise: Becks!



Sunday 4 September 2011: Becks!

Behzod (pronounced Bech -zod) Abduraimov, aged 19 - ish, from Uzbekistan, won the 2009 London International Piano Competition. He is jaw-droppingly good and received a standing ovation last night, even though he was feeling seasick.
We've had wonderful performances from Anna Hashimoto, Sergej Krylov and the ECO, with more to come.



Ruth Contractor,  oboist with the English Chamber Orchestra, catches five in during rehearsals near Syracuse, Sicily.

Ketchikan Headware



Monday 22 August 2011



Cruising the Inside Passage from Seattle.
It's pouring in Ketchikan, as it nearly always is, but beautiful. Sometimes, getting soaked to the skin is a joyful thing.
I've lots of pictures of cruise people in ponchos and with umbrellas but these two girls had to be my favourite. They were in a shop with their would be purchases on their heads. When I asked for a picture, they were happy to oblige, perfectly at ease looking silly for the camera.
I love the direct gaze of the younger one, who must be all of ten years old, looking cool with a cuddly toy on her head.

It didn't rain the whole time...

Blue Eyed Amber



Tuesday 16 August 2011

This is Amber, an Aussie who was working at the Lake Louise Gondola. Her eyes were so incredibly blue, I just had to get a photo. Amber has Maori Heritage - and a bit of Norse, judging by those eyes.
On the way down the mountain, I saw a large Grizzly Bear. I didn't have my camera set up so I missed the chance of a good shot. We've seen three bears already today so the omens are good once again. I may even get a half decent photo of one this time around!

We are at the start of a trip through the Canadian Rockies followed by a cruise to Alaska.

Absolute Bounder!



Saturday 6 August 2011: Absolute Bounder!

Barkerville, British Columbia. The site of a gold strike by Billy Barker in 1862 - which led to the Cariboo Gold Rush and B.C. eventually becoming part of Canada.
The town was inhabited until the Seventies, now it's a living museum. There's still gold in them hills though.
This chap plays a well bred Englishman with an eye for the ladies and a taste for opium and gambling. To keep things fair, his accent did a tour of the British Isles.
There are lots of actors playing characters from the heyday of the town so they inhabit different time periods. It's all great fun.
We started off with a guide called Holladay, who had Heidi pigtails and was incredibly chpper. So chipper, I felt like murdering her. Finally, it dawned on me that she was one of the cast - nobody could be that chipper!
The vicar is the real deal: the Church of Canada found itself in a theme park but have come to an understanding with the Province over their being there.

I Heart Goths



Sunday 12 June 2011

Leipzig: Wave Gotik Treffen.



M & I are on tour with a youth orchestra through Germany and the Czech Repulic. In Leipzig we came across the Goth festival. There were so many people parading around in costume that it was almost overwhelming: families, older people, young girls being shadowed by their slightly anxious mothers, sub/dom couples, tranvestites and who knows how many other genres of goth there were, all of them stunning to look at.
The lovely thing is that there were lots of people out enjoying the show and almost as many photographers as there were people to photograph.

WGT 2011

Angel of The North



Wednesday 25 May 2011

A lovely day in Durham, looking after a 93 year old in my group who was delightful company. I had intended to drive to Hexham to check out another tour later on but problems on the route meant I only got as far as the Angel of the North. No problem - I love the Angel of the North.


Here's another.