Showing posts with label Las Vegas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Las Vegas. Show all posts

Monday, December 29, 2014

2014 through the lens of my iPhone...

Like most of us now, I'm almost never without my camera-that-also-makes-phone-calls. So--some of this year's scenic mobile-photography highlights, from the Desert Southwest to NE Asia, Chicago and the Cascades...

 The first light of the year, spilling into the Grand Canyon; sunrise on January 1st, 2014:

 The year began with a mini road-trip--up to the Grand Canyon and then over to Santa Fe:
(so honored that this photo was included in

Paris Las Vegas. So weird.

As spring arrives in the Arizona,
     mountain snowmelt turns the lower desert green--
          in the Santa Catalina foothills:

...and the deserts bloom;
     for miles, globemallow carpeted the ground to the west of Phoenix:

...and late spring brings out the saguaro-bouquets:


Summer found us in South Korea,
traveling around the country for a month.
This was my fifth trip there,
but even the familiar can be framed by the unexpected:
In Seoul's Itaewon district, on a Friday afternoon,
you'd be forgiven for mistaking the streetscape
for a Middle-Eastern scene--Hallal groceries 
surrounding a hilltop mosque--
globalization and migration patterns... 

 Languid summer mornings along the river in Jeonju:

A four-hundred-year-old lecture hall in a Confucian academy, still used for classes:

 Back in Seoul, inside architect Zaha Hadid's newly opened Dongdaemun Design Plaza:

 ...like a spaceship on the outside, eh?

Looking down on Seoul's old South Gate--the view from our room on a one-night hotel splurge:

Facing the hills, in Busan's Gamcheon district:

Over to Ulleungdo island--the most beautiful island you've never heard of, off the east coast of Korea: a lush, vertical volcanic landscape rising out of Siberian and Japanese currents, rich in seafood and medicinal mountain vegetables, splendid isolation, and hardy smiles. Very few non-Koreans make it here; GO NOW before the government's "Mysterious Island" campaign draws too much attention to this rugged wonder.


...and we got to stay here:



 ...and 'the unintentional poetry of an old brick wall,' in the port of Mokpo, on Korea's SW tip:
--featured on http://www.iphoneographycentral.com/apps-uncovered-1-august-2014/
     For this scene, I used the PerspectiveCorrect app to straighten the bricks’ vertical lines a bit, and then Snapseed’s “details” option to bring out the wall’s texture.
     Earlier this summer, I spent a month traveling around South Korea, and toward end of my stay, I decided to spend a couple of days in the city of Mokpo, a port on the SW tip of the country–one section of the country that I had never before visited. The old center of the city is full of architecture from the Japanese Colonial period (1910-1945), some of it being preserved, but lots of it in varying degrees of photographically-interesting decrepitude. It was an incredibly muggy afternoon, and after a morning of hiking, I had just finished a lunch of the local specialty, octopus soup, when I walked past this wall around the corner from the restaurant. 
     I was immediately struck by how aesthetically pleasing the proportions of the differently colored sections of brick and tile were–pleasing, and yet completely unintentional: the outline of what once had been a staircase, the weeds growing luxuriantly in what had once been an adjacent building… What gets built, what gets torn down, what gets left behind, what is deliberate versus what is spontaneous–so much goes into building a city, into deciding how to relate the history of a place, into considering what’s worth keeping and commemorating or what should be forgotten…
     Korea’s 20th-century history has been such a fast-paced combination of painful humiliation followed by dizzying, breathtaking modernization; the seaside city of Mokpo illustrates all of that in such a compact space, and this particular wall, to me, seemed emblematic of it all. Three days later, I flew back to the U.S.



Back to Southern Arizona, escaping the summer's triple-digit heat by spending some time up on Mount Lemmon--almost alpine, with wildflowers, evergreens, and a ski-lift:


Just after Labor Day, a few days up in Seattle, with a day-hike up on Mt. Rainier:


And a week in Chicago in October:





I thought it would just be gimmicky, but I must say, I thoroughly enjoyed the glass-floored "Ledge" on top of the Willis Tower:


And back to Tucson for the remainder of the year.
As cliché as they might be considered,
desert sunsets just never get old...


This fall, Hipstamatic came out with its TinType app...
     great tool for portraits--fun with making faces:









...and what it looks like here NOW
'Fall'-color peaking late here in Tucson;
December in Sabino Canyon is glorious...

=============================

Five weeks ago, today, I had the trail-'incident' that has exiled me from running.
Most of the last few weeks, I've felt like this:
'jailed' by my crutches...
(but having fun with the XNview PhotoFX app)

Time has passed, physical therapy is coming along,
and I finally got the okay to retire the crutches.
So, this past weekend I tried a short hike...
...back on the same trail where I had the bad fall.

Not often you see this--
the exposed 'cacto-skeleton'
of a decaying prickly pear,
covered in lacy ice crystals:

Just behind the little dam in lower Sabino Canyon:

The Santa Catalina Mountains...



Hoping to run around these hills again soon...











Sunday, January 26, 2014

900 miles to 'Paris'...and why Paris is NOT 'overrated'...and Gyeongbokgung Palace does it again

With three days off last weekend, my wife and I decided to take another little road-trip. Neither one of us had ever been to Las Vegas, and as a language teacher, for years I've had many of my French students ask me "Have you been to the Eiffel Tower in Las Vegas?" (Having lived in Paris, France didn't quite suffice, I guess...) As part of my professional duty, then, I decided the time had come to check out the real-faux-thing.


Up and back in just three days: 900 miles and about 14 hours in the car. Worth it? For this first time, yes. But if/when we return it'll either be by plane or we'll stay for a longer visit...


Between Phoenix and Las Vegas, there's no interstate (yet),
and for about a 50-mile stretch,
the highway is officially known as the Joshua Forest Scenic Parkway.
The Mohave desert meets the Sonoran desert ecosystem here,
where these plants--straight out of a Dr. Seuss book--thrive...

About half-an-hour out of Las Vegas, you'll cross over the Colorado River on the newly completed (2010) O'Callaghan-Tilllman Memorial Bridge, 890 feet above the gorge, with a stupendous view of the Hoover Dam, built in the 1930's.
You can't see the view while driving, though--walls keep your eyes focused on the road--pull off right after crossing the bridge and you can take a winding road to a parking area with pedestrian access...It's the 2nd-highest bridge in the U.S. and the highest concrete-arch bridge in the world.

We're not gamblers, and we stayed with a friend instead of staying in one of the hotels on The Strip...but, of course, you can't go to Las Vegas and not go to The Strip (which is not the same as 'downtown'), so here are some first impressions.


The half-scale replica of the Eiffel Tower dominates the streetscape across from the Bellagio:


Such a glitzy collection of high-rise simulacra here--carefully concocted essences of elsewhere...I couldn't help but approach the whole scene with an anthropological mindset...

Obligatory stop at the water-show in front of the Bellagio--more impressive than I'd imagined it would be, especially considering the bone-dry desert that surrounds the city...
...and then inside the Bellagio, the world's largest chocolate-fountain.

And the current botanical exhibit in the Bellagio's conservatory is Chinese New Year:


A bit of off-the-Strip abstraction...

And, there's just nothing like a well-placed pair of googly-eyes, no?
(seen on some art on the façade of the Paris casino.)

Las Vegas IS a foodie-destination, and we had to eat lunch somewhere, so,
Fusion cuisine doesn't work all of the time, but when it does, it cries out to be savored. At Julian Serrano, on the ground floor of the Aria hotel, the tried-and-true Spanish plates are eminently tasty, but explore the "new style tapas" section of the menu as well.
One of the plates we ordered was the ahi tuna tempura: served on a bed of seaweed salad and avocado-rocoto-mayo along with ponzu sauce, garnished with slices of fried garlic. This dish would seem to be equally at home in the Ginza or Granada...appropriate enough in Las Vegas, where geography is incidental, but flavors matter.
Named by Esquire magazine as one of the nation's best restaurants in recent years, this is a hotel-lobby-eatery worth checking out.

 The Venetian:

A country-Italian dream, no?
Because what says "Venice" more
than this duo of country-singers?

When in The Venetian, all things Italian might come to mind, but go up to the 10th floor of the Venezia Tower, think French, and you'll find the best--and most elegant--breakfast on The Strip, which we did on Monday morning, before driving back down to Tucson:

Make your way down the elegant marbled corridor with views of the Pool Garden courtyard, then turn right at the dark wood paneling: Thomas Keller's "Bouchon." Amidst the potted palms and soaring windows, this is relaxing old-school-chic...
Get the Bouchon French Toast: layers of warm brioche, custard, apples and maple syrup. Whoever you're with should get something savory with the Lyonnaise potatoes--they're the best breakfast potatoes I have ever had...And don't skip the pâtisseries. Splurge on this breakfast as you would on a several-course-meal; you won't regret it.
Purists might protest, saying that in France, eggs, potatoes and "French toast" are nonexistent at a traditional breakfast table--bread, butter, jam, and café au lait should suffice. True. But, that's the beauty (if 'beauty' is the word) of Las Vegas--it's full of carefully crafted essences of elsewhere, but copies don't always have to be faithful in every detail. At Bouchon, you can feast tastefully in the morning as the French might, not as they actually do.

The exciting highlight that broke up our drive back to Tucson--the London Bridge. The real deal, not faux. In the late 1960's, after being painstakingly deconstructed and transported across the ocean, the London Bridge was re-built on the shores of Lake Havasu on the Colorado River. 
It's worth stopping if you're driving through the area--but my wife and I both agreed that this would not really be a 'destination' for us. Ever again. It's a curiosity. And yes, there is water. And according to some, this bridge is the second-most-visited destination in Arizona, after the Grand Canyon. But...
At least it's free. I mean--if you really want WATER, Lake Mead--or San Diego!--are not that far of a drive away...(Sorry, Lake Havasu...)

 =====================

Now, back to Paris.
But not this one.


This one:
(For one glorious morning last summer,
this was the view that we woke up to--
literally turning over in bed,
and seeing this from the pillow
in our Montmartre hotel...)

There has been a spate of negative press about Paris recently. In a travel discussion I was part of the other week, several people took pride in saying how 'overrated' Paris is...Huh? 

Yes, I know--I teach French, and so I guess it's entirely predictable that I should come to the defense of the city I was fortunate enough to call home for one heady year...But, really, this recent fad of disdaining one of the world's greatest cities makes my jaw drop. You don't have to 'love' Paris--(and I gotta say, I get hives when I meet language-teacher colleagues who are over-the-top francophiles and adorn every corner of their classrooms with Eiffel-tower-this and fleur-de-lis-that)--but if you're going to be objective and educated-sounding (I mean, at last sound like you know something) you have to acknowledge the importance of this city in the history of World Civilization. (Caps intended.) Portland might be overrated (although I do love 'Portlandia'), but Paris? That's like dismissing the Pyramids or The Great Wall as just, well, you know, piles of rock. Even if you don't know the language, saying that Paris 'just isn't worth visiting' just reveals how much you don't know about what you don't know.

But maybe that's the point. If you don't know anything (or enough) about a place and don't care to find out, then, yes, that place would, according to your uninformed point of view, be 'overrated.' And for people who have a 'theme-park' mentality--those who travel only for diversion and consumption--well, yes, Paris might be 'overrated.' Unlike theme parks, Paris has litter. And homeless. And some of its subway stations smell like piss. So I guess New York and London would also be overrated. And Beijing--puhleez, with its smog and all those people who don't speak English--well, it's overrated as well. So just go to Epcot. Or Las Vegas. Then tell us how 'authentic' it was.

A couple of days ago, TheAtlanticCities.com posted this well-written column, dealing with the same topic, "Hating Paris is So Hot Right Now." Check it out.
I feel compelled to quote Feargus O'Sullivan's conclusion:

...if we scrutinized other European cities as harshly, they'd fare no better. Look hard at forward-looking, exciting Berlin, for example, and you’ll notice that since the millennium its new architecture has become the dullest and most conservative in all Europe. And if inner Paris is a museum city, a pretty stage set from which lower and middle income people are being harried by high costs, then so is London – just without the prettiness. Paris is too old, too big and too beautiful to be over, to be completely out of date or to fail. Its inhabitants are often damned wholesale as rude or stand-offish, but if anything, it’s they who deserve to be shown a little more warmth.

And besides, a city where you can have fresh sushi delivered to you via motorcycle canNOT be 'overrated.'


=============================================

...ending with Gyeongbokgung, the largest of the palaces in Seoul.
A few days ago, the winners of the 2013 Mobile Photography Awards were announced...
and for the second year in a row, 
I'm honored to have a photo chosen among the Honorable Mentions
for the Travel category:
--The Changing of the Guard, seen through Gwanghwamun Gate--
A scene from the same palace grounds,
but taken on a different day, 
placed last year:
--Hyangweonjeon, "The Pavilion of Far-reaching Fragrance"--