Posts Tagged ‘fun fun fun’

Puerto Escondido — ¡Carnaval!

March 21st, 2011

I spent most of Saturday on the beach in a little town called Mazunte about an hour south of Puerto Escondido. When I returned in the evening, “Supermoon” was out in full force and I grabbed my camera and headed out to the beaches to see if I could get some decent night shots. To my surprise, downtown was full of lights and music and color and people — turns out Puerto Escondido was celebrating its Carnaval de la Costa.

I am a bit bummed that I missed the beginning of the party, as described by the Oaxaca Secretary of Tourism web site: “The fiesta starts with the ‘Burning of the Bad Mood,’ symbolizing the disappearance of all negative feelings to give way to boundless joy and good humor.” Who doesn’t love a therapeutic reason to burn things? But, I did catch a few minutes of the parade, the pumping music and the chicks on the floats absolutely working it.

¡Viva Carnaval!

Enhanced by Zemanta

Puerto Escondido: Dolphins!

March 11th, 2011

I assure you that few things could get me willingly up and out the door by 6 a.m., but a combination of boating and seeing one of my favorite creatures in their natural habitat — in this case, dolphins — had me watching the sunrise from a small fishing boat tooling out of Playa Marinero.

Our party was truly international, with me as the sole American along with a couple from the Czech Republic, a guy from Germany, a guy from England and a woman from South Africa (and, of course, our Mexican boat captain and first mate). The trip was billed as a fishing expedition in which you were guaranteed to see spinner dolphins, sea turtles and other marine critters, but none of us passengers paid much attention to the fishing part. Our boat cruised up and down the mouth of the large port, with us scanning the shimmering morning waters for movement.

Before long, shrieking flocks of seabirds circled a big school of fish, and where there are fish, there are dolphins. Our boat turned in that direction and headed over. It wasn’t long before we could see a pod of dolphins among the cacophony of birds, just their silver-finned backs undulating out of the water, creating a bubbly ripple effect over the choppy blue-gray waters. They scattered when we cruised up. We kept going like this, following the birds, and either the dolphins got more comfortable with us or we found different dolphins — because after that they started swimming right alongside our motorboat, riding the wake, keeping up with our speed, weaving in and out of the surface of the water, so close that I was worried our boat was going to whack one of them (it didn’t).

At one point, three of them started bursting — and I do mean bursting — way up out of the water, one after the other, almost as though they were seeing who could jump the highest. Maybe they wanted to provoke a response from those of us in the boat — if that was their intent, they succeeded. We could hear them squeaking and screeching while they jumped. As long as I remember this, I will always wonder what, exactly, they were saying to each other. Luckily, it all happened on my side of the boat.

That was the only big show we got — but just being surrounded by racing, undulating dolphins, as we were, would have been enough. We also saw manta rays flying out of the water, but not nearly as close to us as the dolphins. I never knew rays jumped out of the water like that and wished I could have seen them closer; they looked like wiggly kites springing up from the ocean. We crossed paths with three or four big sea turtles, but their giant powerful flippers propelled them away before I could take a decent picture. Like the manta rays, they probably didn’t like us that much. We also saw one sea snake, a baby compared to some of the ones I’ve seen while diving in Southeast Asia, but our boat captain told us that this kind was poisonous. Eeep.

And here are some snaps from a truly stellar morning:

NYC: Xmas and the City, Part 3

January 4th, 2011

The last of my holiday 2010 snaps from New York City.  The photos from this last installment were all taken Christmas night. The holidays may be over, but the decorations are still up. Which is nice, since the Big Apple is currently a giant dirty slush puddle from the blizzard that dumped two feet of snow onto the city the day after I took these shots.

Happy New Year, y’all!

NYC: Xmas and the City, Part 2

December 30th, 2010

Here are a few more snaps taken in New York City on Christmas Eve and Christmas, 2010.


Enhanced by Zemanta

NYC: Xmas and the City

December 19th, 2010

The Big Apple decked out for  the holidays is always thrilling. There is a mixture of over-the-top showmanship, tasteful glamour and gritty neighborhood festivity that permeates the streets and sidewalks, along with the intoxicating warm smell of roasted chestnuts combined with steam pouring up from the street grates; the noise:  horns honking, voices, music, people rushing past, Salvation Army Santas ringing bells, the bite in the air as the wind whips your scarf around. Christmastime is the essence of Manhattan: bold, loud, energetic, breathtaking, overwhelming and a giant rush to all the senses.

Enhanced by Zemanta

My Stephen Colbert Photoshop Challenge entry

December 17th, 2010

One of my favorite people-I-don’t-know-in-real-life, Stephen Colbert, has issued a challenge to remaster his portrait and thus turn it into ART.

Here is my entry, “The Joy of Painting Stephen.”

A merging of two great men.

————————————————-

I must give props where they are due: to my friends Robyn and Vicki who, in the past, have used this setting for fabulous creative endeavors of their own, and my friend Rich, who is obsessed with Bob Ross.

Canada – North Vancouver: Capilano Suspension Bridge

December 10th, 2010

While visiting British Columbia last month, I had the chance to check out the stunning Capilano Suspension Bridge in North Vancouver. The bridge is a simple 136-m. suspension bridge dangling over the rushing Capilano River, 70 meters below. It was originally built in 1889 by wealthy landowners wanting access to the miles and miles of pristine, forested mountains that lay on the other side of the steep Capilano River gorge. Originally built from hemp and cedar, the bridge was rebuilt with steel cables. It has retained its original simple construction.

The area around the bridge has become a cultural center devoted to the aboriginal people of British Columbia, and the early pioneers who settled there and made the first modern efforts to live and work in those rugged, majestic and humbling environs.

Here are some snaps taken from an autumn 2010 visit to one of British Columbia’s most popular tourist attractions:

Photogenic Montréal

December 5th, 2010

Here is a photo tour from a recent trip to the fabulous Montréal, Québec! Wish I could have stayed longer … I’ll definitely be back.

Congo: Gorilla Videos!

July 30th, 2010

Here is some video evidence that I did, indeed, hang out in close proximity to Congolese mountain gorillas. Much of the video clips show them playing with each other: running, chasing, swatting, rolling around, wrestling.

According to the BBC News, gorillas play games of tag like humans … and that looks like what we’re seeing here:

Here are some of the younger gorillas. The littlest one kept coming right up to us, so close that the gorilla guide had to keep shooing him back:

Here are some of the young gorillas hanging out, and toward the end the silverback comes charging through … just to keep the young’uns in line (and also to show the visitors who’s boss).

And here is the silverback a bit later, high up in a tall tree, foraging for fruit (and tearing the hell out of some big, thick branches at the same time). He looked like King Kong!

Here is some info about how to get involved in saving the Congo’s endangered mountain gorillas — either to go gorilla trekking yourself, or make a donation.

~ peace, love, and giant apes ~

Congo: Gorillas!

July 27th, 2010

Here are some photos taken while gorilla trekking in the Democratic Republic of Congo, July 2010.

I went on this expedition with the rangers of the Virunga National Park. Here is my blog entry for this day, “Close Encounters with Mountain Gorillas.” Here are video clips I took while gorilla trekking.

For permission to reprint images without watermark, please contact me at eileenploh@gmail.com.

Thanks and enjoy!