two rolls of film from May were lost in the mail for more than 3 months, a flaw in the 35mm process that further convinced me to buy my digital camera. Anyway they finally made it to the developer. They included photos of the puppy's first weekend, a trip to my dads new boat slip in San Pedro, a sail and Easter in Sierra Madre.
Days before Sophie turned 8 months
Mia and I flew up to San Jose early Saturday morning and met with her family to help in any way we could to get James moved into his first year housing at Santa Clara University. We were all super excited and happy be there and see such a big moment. In the afternoon he had orientation meetings to attend and the rest of us went to Livermore to see my mom, scott Nicole and Sophie at Tenuta Vineyards. It was a perfect few hours to hang out, followed by a really fun dinner in Livermore and then back to San Jose. Sunday we hunt around to run any errands and finish setting up anything we could before catching a flight back home.
Scott, Nicole and Sophie make for a photogenic family
my friend Connor owns and lives on Sea Casa, his Hunter 31 that he has been preparing for a long open-ended sail down to Panama and East to Florida. For over a year since he made his decision he has been taking on all the precautionary and maintenance projects that this sailboat could ever need. the other weekend he sailed to MDR to a more reputable boat yard for a set of all new standing rigging. Because he's a liveaboard he had to get it back to Redondo while the yard worked on the rigging. I tagged along for a mast-less motor on a weeknight. Weather was great considering the night before was the thunderstorm and the seastate was comfortable enough to make it pretty easy. It made me want to go night sailing.
A week later he texted me to see if I'd be available for a night sail and I was. The wind was light enough around 6-8 knots so he hoisted up the asymmetrical spinnaker while I handled the lines and steering. We went from 1 knot to 4.5-5 in the light wind.
Just before leaving San Luis Obispo Sunday night we saw lightning flashes through the fog. A quick check of radar maps let us know we'd be driving through a building thunderstorm for basically the entire way to LA. I was excited, Mia was not. For most of the trip lightning was appearing over the water or on the horizons except during the highway 154 pass which is up the back of the Santa Barbara mountains. Mia was covering her eyes and ears and lightning bolts were striking very close and through heavy tropical rain. When we got back to Redondo around 11:30 Mia wanted to watch the weather because on radar, it was out safely beyont Catalina Island. We grabbed our cameras and phones and watched from the main channel and then out on the breakwall. I got lucky a few times with using a manual focus lens and 1 second shutter speeds.
Neighbors project vehicles
Took a drive up to SLO for a quick weekend trip, marking Mia's brother James's last weekend before moving north for college. We all visited the horses both days and took a walk with the puppy Sunday morning, played tennis, had lots of fun.
a stranger having and easy Sunday morning
Rosie has gotten so much bigger than the last time I saw her, she's 5.5 months now.
Willow is perpetually stuck on whichever side of the house that Rosie isn't in
A four day weekend, I went to Cabrillo and hung out on my dads boat, went to a birthday pool-party in downtown LA at Mia's friends insanely nice apartment complex, went to Sierra Madre to see Mia's family and was surprised by this bear family.
This was the only time I turned on my camera.
I grabbed my 42-150mm lens and zoomed in as close as possible as fast as possible. When the cubs went into the neighbors yard for the small waterfall pool, I crossed the yard and went up some outside stairs to get a better angle.
There's another heat wave. I got home just in time for sunset and a sailboat race finish. The weather felt monsoonal and dumped some heavy rain drops on me whiling driving home but fortunately made for a great sunset.
Long 5 second exposure using a railing to keep the camera still.
A new powerboat on the dock... I don't think he's used the anchor for a while.
The sun finally showed through late on Sunday while the rest of the weekend was cool and cloudy, apparently there's a heat wave going on everywhere else
The photos above are all from attaching my old 28mm wide angle lenses to the new mirrorless camera. This allows for fun of manual focus and the lens acts more like a 56mm (2x) due to the sensor size of the digital camera. It also looks rad.
Got some small projects done and looked more into my instrument panel wiring as well as organizing the aft port storage. Reinstalled the autopilot around the wheel back on the steering pedestal.
Sunday we took a minute to stop by the inside breakwall
Here's what Mia was looking at
On Friday I left work and went bodysurfing on the way home, Conditions were bad and felt sharky so I hurried home to take some photos before it got dark
one of the only boat projects I've done lately was putting a bug screen up around our companionway to allow breeze in while keeping mosquitoes out
Saturday we went with friends to a multiple band music show at the Queen Mary in Long Beach. One of the members of the hosting radio show took a photo with me. 2 years ago he waged a small social media feud against me because I pointed out that he makes this same ridiculous face in every photo. He didn't know that I was that guy from 2 years ago when he posed for this photo and I knew he was going to make the face
Lake Louise on a smokey morning
the hike up offered and empty trail and cool air while the sun was behind the mountains
just off the trail on the way up, trying slower shutter speeds to blur the water
Mia and Maeve already did this hike earlier in the week before I arrived but Mia really wanted me to see it, the only way to fit it in would be by waking up at dawn on the final day - which we did, and Maeve was a trooper and came along with us
the tea house at the top of the trail and Abbot one of the house dogs. Tea house workers haul up propane and supplies and stay for about a week before hauling down trash before they get a few days off and do it all over again
we had tea and biscuits while listening for glacial or rock falls. They echo through the valley sounding like thunder.
on the way down we were actually running (during the safe parts) because we had to get back to the hotel before checkout and were losing time
by this time in the late morning the bottom of the trail was a mob of people clogging the path, people riding horses to the tea house rather than walking, and rock climbers doing their thing
another stop off the trail on the return to peek at the rushing glacial stream which fills Lake Louise
We spent the last afternoon getting a post-hike breakfast and strolling around downtown Banff and the Bow River to Bow Falls and finally to the airport
Moon rise