Tag: Portrait

Marshall, Ma & Pa

July 28, 2010

Last month I got a chance to head down to Atlanta and see good friends and meet their ten month old baby boy, Marshall. Corey, a college friend and practical neighbor from NJ, married the wonderful southern belle, Kortny, and after spending some years in NYC, they’ve retreated down to the slower-paced Georgia. They live in a great old building with one of my favorite porches ever! Southern architecture with large columns, exposed brick, hardwood floors, and large white covered porches with ceiling fans and plenty of plant-life. The 95 degree June days couldn’t have been a bother sitting out on such a porch on a relaxing Sunday afternoon with book in hand. I need a porch, stat.

But anyway! Onto the people and pictures . . . On Sunday we took an hour in the late afternoon and braved the outdoors for some family portraits on this first Father’s Day for Corey. Then headed inside and shot a few more in Marshall’s room. The family was great, Marshall was a ham (some personality he’s got!), and with very limited gear (one camera, one fixed lens, and one meager pop-up flash), I think we got some nice shots!

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And with all the ‘serious’ photos down, I can’t help but post this one. I call it “When the Braves Beat the Mets”. (If you’re not much of a baseball follower, the NY Mets and Atlanta Braves are long-time rivals. Corey’s a Mets fan, transplanted to Atlanta, where Kortny’s a Braves girl.)

; )

; )

Corey, Kortny, and Marshall, so nice seeing y’all and thank you for a great visit!!

Spring in Shenandoah

June 13, 2010

One of my favorite things about DC ever since moving here in 2007 is not only the wonderful park space within the city (Meridian Hill, Rock Creek, …), but the close proximity to the beautiful Shenandoah Valley and National Park. A one and half hour drive west puts one up at 4000 ft on the Skyline Drive, alongside the Appalachian Trail, overlooking the vast countryside and countless vineyards of northern Virginia. And until my dream of owning a small mountainside cabin comes true, a weekend getaway from the city will more than suffice!

A few weeks back, Aida and I headed due west . . . windows down and sunroof open on this fine Saturday morning. Visited a few vineyards at the foot of the Blue Ridge mountains before heading north to pick up the start of the 105 mile Skyline Drive. The weather couldn’t have been more perfect, nor the company.

Afternoon in the vineyards . . .

Afternoon in the vineyards . . .

The sun hung high in the sky as we drove south along the mountain crest, through the forests and past the expansive views as the car hugged the dramatic rocky road curves. Eventually leaving the drive, we descended to Luray Town (est 1812), just west in the valley bordered by the mountainous George Washington National Forest to the west and the Shenandoah National Park to the east. The historic town boasts a small town country charm and a relaxed pace so closely removed from the nation’s bustling capital.

Aida, feeling strange getting her photo taken ; )

Aida, feeling strange getting her photo taken ; )

Main Street, Luray Town

Main Street, Luray Town

Candid and defenseless as the sun goes down

Candid and defenseless as the sun goes down

Sunday after a wonderful breakfast of croissant french-toast and fresh fruit, we visited the famous Luray Caverns, discovered in 1878 and the largest on the east coast. And large they were!! 4,000,000 centuries in the making and some rooms nearly ten stories tall. The one hour audio guided tour took us some 3.5 hours to cover the several underground acres of caverns with stalactites and stalagmites of mere inches to over a hundred feet. So very cool, and unbelievable to consider once back out in the parking lot, how much exists underground, and where other caverns may exist where we live and work, and we have no idea. Here are just a few of the incredible views! And for those of you in the DC area, I highly recommend a trip out to see them for yourselves. Then come back and buy a print. ;)

Cavern appreciation . . .

Cavern appreciation . . .

Yea, that's what he was looking at!  CRAAAAAAAAZY.  (Hint, it's called Dream Lake)

Yea, that's what he was looking at! CRAAAAAAAAZY. (Hint, it's called Dream Lake)

Giant's Hall

Giant's Hall

For charity.  Every year the well is drained and the money collected for a different charity.  Over $700,000 raised to date!

For charity. Every year the well is drained and the money collected for a different charity. Over $700,000 raised to date!

The Maasai of Ilkilorit

February 21, 2010
The new ICROSS Ilkilorit clinic awaiting a doctor to staff it

The new ICROSS Ilkilorit clinic awaiting a doctor to staff it

Pauline ene Koilel

Pauline ene Koilel

On Thursday (18 Feb), I took a day trip with two ICROSS employees, Saruni and Joe to a Maasai area and site of a future ICROSS clinic / dispensary called Ilkilorit. Saruni, of the Maasai tribe himself, navigated us (in Toyota truck) over the dirt roads and the large rocky hills, past small schools, locals carrying water, firewood, and other goods home, and a woman suffering from diarrhea (thought to be cholera) incapacitated alongside the road with her friends caring for her.

Pauline ene Koilel is one example of a woman’s duties in Maasai culture . . . a young woman, a strong woman, fetching firewood and milk while caring for her child and walking many kilometers to do so. Here, Saruni speaks to her of her village and the current healthcare situation in the face of the cholera outbreak.

Awaiting porridge...

Awaiting porridge...

...lined up by class

...lined up by class

Upon arriving in Ilkilorit, the school children were outside playing in the dry lands, awaiting lunch. Porridge was the special on this fine day as I played with the younger children and watched the older boys boil it up over the blazing coals. The heat wavered around 90F and while the hot porridge couldn’t have looked less appetizing to me at the moment, the well-behaved and excited children eagerly awaited the time when their class/grade was called to line up and fill their cups. After being served, they all scattered to their respective shade and enjoyed what they were afforded. There’s no McDonalds out in Maasailand… that’s for sure!

Wow, children full of life!

Wow, children full of life!

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As the children filed back into the classrooms, we moved down the road to a local manyatta (village) and met with some of the locals. If I haven’t mentioned previously, the Maasai believe that you steal their soul when you photograph them, so many are less than cooperative. Others, like Nkinaiyo ene (wife of) Koiyiankai are wonderfully friendly and welcoming and are happy to have her photograph taken. Nkinaiyo lost her eye many years ago after getting hit by a cow’s tail while milking it. I also came to learn that her daughter’s new husband had past away just the day before. And meanwhile, we were invited into her (dung hut) home to take tea with her… a Maasai tradition. Saruni and I entered and sat on the edge of her bed and they spoke as she prepared the tea. If it was 90F outside, it was easily 100F inside where we enjoyed the hot tea… tasty though!

Taking tea inside Nkinaiyo's home with Saruni

Taking tea inside Nkinaiyo's home with Saruni

Nkinaiyo ene Koiyiakai

Nkinaiyo ene Koiyiakai

Outside, Silentoi ene Koiyiakai, a second wife of the same man, approached and was similarly receptive to being photographed, even as she was suffering from a stomach illness. Saruni discussed the final stages ICROSS is working through before the clinic is opened as everyone in the area is looking very much forward to it, especially in these times of cholera (and other related) outbreaks.

Silentoi ene Koiyiakai

Silentoi ene Koiyiakai

Nkinaiyo ene Koiyiakai, Silentoi ene Koiyiakai, & Saruni ole Lengeny . . . all Maasai and the two women, wives of (ene) the same man (Koiyiakai)

Nkinaiyo ene Koiyiakai, Silentoi ene Koiyiakai, & Saruni ole Lengeny . . . all Maasai and the two women, wives of (ene) the same man (Koiyiakai)

Back in classrooms...

Back in classrooms...

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And with school back in session, we visited the children one last time and distracted them momentarily from their studies (all taught in English). I felt like royalty walking into the classrooms where all the children would immediately stand out of respect. They were so excited for their visitors, surely a day to run home and tell mom about! As usual, they couldn’t jump in front of the camera fast enough, as they’d all close in as one child jumped in front of the other and so on. Others held up their books and their pens and pencils, appreciative of the little they own. And still others played shy as they’d flirt with the camera from the back.

All wonderful kids, well behaved, and full of life!! Every child I’ve spoken to over the last month truly enjoys school and will even push their parents to go when they are sick. The boy of an ICROSS employee did so just last week, then unfortunately vomited and fainted in school, and discovered to be suffering from malaria. Quite the contrast from my youth, when children would fake an illness just to avoid a day in school!

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