Thursday, December 27, 2012

France - Summer 2012


My niece, Jordan, made her first trip to Europe this year. 
In July, she went with her grand-father and grand-mother,
first to Paris, then to Normandy. 

We got her a new camera just before the trip,
and gave her a little coaching. 
I encouraged her to "click away",
and she came home with almost 1700 images. 

Here, she's chosen her "Top 10" to share.

Photo by Jordan Laughlin
 Near Notre Dame Cathedral.

Photo by Jordan Laughlin
 Notre Dame itself...

Photo by Jordan Laughlin
 L'arc de Triomphe.

Photo by Jordan Laughlin
 Montmartre, Paris

Photo by Jordan Laughlin
 A phone booth in Bayeux.

Photo by Jordan Laughlin
 Bayeux Cathedral.
 
Photo by Jordan Laughlin
 On the road to Normandy...

Photo by Jordan Laughlin
Some of the many thousands of Allied graves near Caen.


Photo by Jordan Laughlin
Self-Portrait
(in reflection of an Invasion Glider skeleton).
 
                                                   Go Jordan !!

- Uncle Mark
 
 


Saturday, November 24, 2012

Seoul (II) - 2012

 
I had another visit to Seoul, South Korea last week. 
The city is beautiful this time of year. 

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
The residents of Seoul have planted trees all throughout the city,
no doubt selected for their wonderful Fall colors.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

There are several temples, many parks,
and ample green (well, at the moment red and yellow) spaces
planted along roadways, medians and around buildings.

But an interesting thing about Seoul, in South Korea, is its nearness to its warm, friendly, northern neighbor, North Korea.  Driving north from Seoul, well before you run out of "city", you begin to see concertina wire and guard towers, continuously, along the side of the highway, which runs on either side of the river, which soon becomes part of the border between North and South.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
You see, in 1953, the Korean War didn't end in the way we think of wars ending.  It just "stopped", with armies pulling back, each 2 kilometers away from the Front Lines that existed when fighting ceased.  And there they sit, to this day, armed, and ready to rejoin the fight if the other attacks.
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
The wire is there to keep out intruders from the North, intent on doing mischief, or sabotage, abductions or other harm in the South.  Tensions rise from time to time, and shooting still happens. 


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
A roadway heading into the Demilitarized Zone, now closed to all but Military traffic.



Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

At Imjingak, a park where people come to remember family members trapped on the other side of the wire, ribbons are tied to the fence, with wishes and prayers for their return.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
One reason for the open nature on the South side of the border is to keep people aware of the constant danger from the North...


By CHOE SANG-HUN, The New York Times, Published: March 26, 2010
SEOUL, South Korea — A South Korean Navy patrol ship sank near the disputed western maritime border with North Korea early Saturday after suffering damage to its hull, South Korea’s military said. The sinking immediately raised suspicions about the possible involvement of North Korea, whose navy has skirmished with South Korean ships in the waters off the Korean Peninsula…


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
At Imjingak, I was no more than 50 feet behind this young gentlemen on his 24/7/365 watch.  The machine gun on the stand in front of him wouldn't be there if it weren't needed...

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
There is limited manufacturing cooperation between North and South these days.  This railroad bridge was recently rebuilt, alongside one that was destroyed in the first part of the fighting in 1951.



Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
A nice map of the area, painted on glass, through which you look Northward, seeing the recently rebuilt bridge, and the bombed out pylons of the older one.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

As you can see from this shot of our navigation system (trace the double blue line northeast from the bottom-center of the map, to the arrow at top-center-left) and you can see we were basically, "at the end of the road".


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
On an earlier trip, during the summer, we ventured to another place to see the border, a bit east of where we were this last time.  There, a widening river forms the border.  Pill-Boxes and observation posts line the Sothern side of the river.  The rice fields and the "city" above have been constructed on the North side by North Korean authorities, to display to the world the idyllic living conditions in the "victorious" North.  But, on close inspection with binoculars, you can see that the buildings are all fake, no glass in the windows, and no people in site. 


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
A dull, dreary view into a dark and dangerous country.



Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
One positive side effect of the Demilitarized Zone...it is now an undisturbed wilderness area where no one interferes with the many species of birds and other  Asian wildlife living there.  As you can see, these geese are not bothered by the miles (and miles) of barbed wire.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
As the sun slowly sank into North Korea just over this ridge, we began our drive back to Seoul, and began seeing buildings, lights and other signs of the robust economy of South Korea, just a few miles from the "front".


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
 
Your "roving reporter"...
                                      ...Mark W. Laughlin
 
 

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Austrian Springtime

 
 
Vienna, on a beautiful day - Mark W. Laughlin
 
 
There's been a bit of a delay, due to my being so busy this year,
but finally here are photos from a visit to Austria in May-2012.
 
The Royal Crest atop the Palace.
 
 
The Palce Tour is quite interesting, especially the "Kitchen Tour" which takes you through the areas where all the state dishes and silver for the massive state dinners are kept.
 
Lots of copper roofs,
and lots of churches in the city.
 
 
 
 
Lots of shopping. 
Local arts and crafts, as well as high-end name-brand stores.
 
 
I'd love a window like this to look out of at breakfast...
 
 
On the bus from Vienna to Salzburg.
 
 
Uber Salzburg, the lake area near the city of Salzburg. 
 
 
Salzburg is beautiful. 
The Old City perches high on a hill,
overlooking the river and the "new" city.
 
 
The Old City is a tourist Mecca,
lots of restaurants, shops, wonderful in the Spring.
 
 
 
Try Austria, whether Vienna, Salzburg, or further West to Innsbruck. 
Beautiful, accessible, friendly...most enjoyable.
 
 
- Mark W. Laughlin
 
 
 

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Emergency (Hurricane) Supplies...



Colorado Sky - Photo by Mark W. Laughlin


Some Winners and Losers among the things we keep for emergencies:

Several things are suggested for Texas Gulf Coast residents to keep on hand, in case of emergency.  Basically, when we say “emergency”, we mean Hurricanes.  We get tornadoes of course, but in lower strength and lesser frequency than north of here in “Tornado Alley”.  We don’t have earthquakes or damaging ice storms, so when we “prepare”, we are preparing for hurricanes.

In trying to plan for a storm, you have to narrow down what it is exactly you are preparing for.  With some focus, you can gather supplies that will be handy, without wasted expense, or winding up with stuff in storage that goes bad and is useless when you finally need it.  So as a target, we say we are preparing for a storm that cuts power, water and land-line phones, for a period of about three days, during which time we need to remain at home, because places of employment are also without power, traffic lights don’t work, etc.

Several things are recommended by authorities, and others present themselves, there on the shelf, without your ever expecting that they would be of use.  Some examples:

Batteries:  (Winner)  Important, but make sure you have the right ones, and in proper amounts.  As you’ll see from “flashlights”, LED flashlights are best as they are highly efficient, and thus don’t consume the batteries quickly.  As with all supplies, it’s best not to simply stick them in the drawer and expect them to be charged and ready four years from now when the next hurricane finally strikes.  It’s best to use a battery size that you might also have use for in normal conditions.  As you occasionally buy fresh ones, “rotate your stock” by putting the fresh ones in your emergency supplies, and take out the oldest to use in your daily routine. 

Flashlights:  (Winner)  LED, it’s the only way.  I have a nice (but inexpensive) LED light that takes either 3, 6 or 9 AA batteries.  I used it in my attic once to do some work, and when I came down, I forgot, and left it.  Seven days later, I was again looking for the light, and thought maybe I’d left behind in the attic, I looked and found it…still on and lighting the darkness.  Still on after seven days !!  Get an LED light.  A big winner !!

Water:  (LOSER !)  You need water of course.  During the aftermath of Hurricane Ike in 2008, we lost water pressure for 24 hours or so.  My problem was that I had a LOT of water stored.  It isn’t something we were successful at “rotating stock” with, and so it got old.  The big problem with that was, getting old mostly resulted in the plastic bottles cracking and leaking.  Fortunately for me, I had stored them, 6 gallons each, in plastic tubs that I could more easily move if need be.  The tubs caught the leaks before it made a mess.  So, store a little, and find a way to rotate it.

Matches / Candles:  (LOSER !!)  First, they are dangerous.  If something catches fire, that’s bad, if it happens at the peak of a storm when emergency services cannot respond, it could be a disaster, maybe for your house, maybe for those downwind as well.  Use flashlights, safer, more portable, better all around.

Hand-Crank Flashlights:  (WINNER !!)  We got a few of these from a couple of different sources, mostly trade-show give-aways I think, with various logos on them.  No dependence on batteries, safe, handy, store forever, a real winner.

Hand-Crank Radio:  (WINNER !!!)  We got one some years ago, as a premium gift for donating to public radio.  An AM-FW-Short-Wave Radio, with places for batteries, a plug-in adapter for if the power is on, and a really cool hand-crank on the side, for when all else fails.  You can get storm information, or just listen to music or radio-talk when power is off and the TV-Cable-Computer-Cell-Phone electronic-baby-sitter-devices we all are addicted to, are all dead.  At one point, my younger son (then 19) and I were sitting on the couch, cranking away and listening to music.  My wife asked, “…but, doesn’t it have places for batteries ?”, we just looked at her like she was interrupting and said, “yes”, and went back to cranking.  It gave us something to do.

Glow-Lights:  (A BIG Winner !!!)   You’ve probably seen them, maybe at a hardware or home supply store.  They are about 6 inches (150m) long, ½ inch (12mm) in diameter, and in a foil wrapper.  There is an outer soft plastic shell.  Inside it is a green fluid and a fragile glass vile containing a second fluid.  When you bend the outer tube, the glass vile breaks and the fluids mix.  The tube then begins to glow with a soft, cool green light that lasts about 12 hours.  Perfect in a power outage !  I would break one about the time it got dark, and it would last until morning.  A cool, safe, green glow in the night.  I hung one up so it would be seen by anyone coming up my front walk…wanted all to know someone was home.  Cost about $1.50, last a long time in storage, everyone should have a few.

Paper Plates:  (Another Winner)  When the power is out (ours was out for 16 days following the storm), number one, you don’t have a working dishwasher anymore.  Second, you don’t have air conditioning, and hurricanes are a “warm weather sport”.  So, you don’t feel much like washing dishes.  Worse, if you have electric water heating, you are without a way to properly sanitize dishes (unless you do it the old fashion way, with boiling water, but that means you have access to some other alternative fuel, and not everybody does).  Paper plates, plastic cups, and the like are a big help.

Canned Food:  (Loser)  Well, we failed.  We didn’t rotate our stock, so the cans aged and went bad.  It seems simple enough to, let’s say, keep additional cans of your normal stock of cans on hand, and regularly rotate new for old, so you maintain a fresh stock.  But we also were not desperate enough to sit around eating out of cans, heated on a backyard grill, wanting not to get pans dirty, because we couldn’t wash…  To hell with it, within a few hours of the wind dying down, a Chinese restaurant we know, whose power comes from the line the Hospital is on, was up and running, setting up a makeshift buffet, and feeding all the neighbors.  Toss the cans, go for Sweet and Sour Pork !

Non-Perishable Foods:  (Loser)  First, there’s no such thing as “non-perishables”, cans, crackers, whatever, they all slowly go bad in storage.  Without “rotation discipline”, it’s garbage.  (see above…go for Chinese).

Plastic-Ware:  (Big Winner !!)  My (dear) wife works full time, as do I of course, so we eat take-out food frequently.  Quite often, as a matter of habit, the restaurant places small packets with each dinner, containing a small paper napkin, and a plastic knife, fork and spoon.  Nowadays many restaurants will ask if you need such supplies, before throwing them in the bag, and having you just throw them away later, because instead of eating at your desk, you are taking it home and eating with your normal stainless.  My (dear) wife had a habit of taking the unused packs and sticking them in a box with our camping supplies (hello, we haven’t gone camping in years !).  I of course occasionally fussed at her for hanging on to them and contributing to our (considerable) mess.  Boy was I wrong (dear) !!  Those little things are DAMN handy when the power/water are off.  A BIG winner.  Keep a couple of big handfuls around.

Alcohol Wipes:  (One more Winner !)  I keep the single, foil pack alcohol wipes in my briefcase, car, and office desk.  When there isn’t any water handy, you still need to wash hands and face.  They store well, don’t cost much and have plenty of uses.  Keep some.

Charcoal:  (Neutral)  It stores forever, doesn’t cost much, and could be handy if you need an outdoor fire.  I have the “self-starting” kind, so it’s easy to light.  As it happened, we didn’t need it, but it has other uses, so no big deal.

Propane Gas:  (Winner)  We have an outdoor propane gas grill.  It has a gas bottle that mounts on it for fuel.  I got an extra bottle and keep it in the garage.  Not only am I covered in an emergency, I also don’t sweat running out of gas with the whole family standing around looking at half-cooked burgers on the grill !

Paper Towels:  (Winner)  Like paper plates, they come in quite handy.  No storage or cost issues, so make sure you have them.

Rain Ponchos:  (Neutral)  Had ‘em, didn’t need ‘em, but if we had to move, they might have been handy.  But, they store easily and keep forever, and they are cheap, so why not.

Containers / Portability:  (Winner !!)  You never know when you might have to move.  Water could rise, a tree could destroy your roof, windows could blow in, you might have to leave your primary shelter (your house) and go elsewhere.  Having your supplies in some boxes, baskets or containers that enable you to move them more easily is a really good idea.

Cash:  (Winner)  Absolutely indispensable…opens doors, enables transactions with there is no power to run computers, cash registers or ATM’s, stores easily, doesn‘t spoil.  Everybody should have a little stash of cash (helps to have a safe).

.357 Magnum:  (Another Winner !!)   With Law Enforcement busy securing the city and deterring looting, I slept just fine with my “little Friend” next to me.  Some TV Reporter asked a local Sherriff what he would do in the case of looting.  He said, “We don’t have looting in Texas…Next Question” (and we didn’t !).

 

Take care and…

…Be Prepared.  (Old Boy Scout talking)

 

 

-          Mark W. Laughlin

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

People...


The "No-Nonsense Patrol", Plaza del Sol, Madrid, Feb-2012
 

 don't take too many photos of people...
          ...and definitely not many set-up and posed.
 

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
Here's one of a lot of people at once,
a crowded day at the Yu Yuan Temple, Shanghai.

 

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

...or just this one little guy.
(in the post a few days ago about Mutianyu Great Wall, near Beijing)
 
 

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

I love the green color in this one, Paris, very near the Tour Eiffel. 
I tell people it was taken seconds before the birds attacked, and ate the man. 
 
 

 
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Saw this guy painting Chinese characters, Art Street, Seoul.

 
 
 
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

This was a surreal scene.  Brilliant lights cutting through the evening fog,
lighting a permitted protest group, Seoul. 
They were sitting still, quiet, watching a rock singer off to the right,
screaming at the top of his lungs.
 
 

 
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Night life, Madrid, on the Plaza de Castilla.
 

 

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

A bunch of gringo tourists, a Segway tour at the palace, Vienna, Austria.
 

 
 
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

I love this one.  It looks like people sitting on the roof, but it's actually a two level walkway, flower shops below, promenade above.  Tallinn, Estonia.
 

 

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

And sometimes, art is just lying there in the sun,
waiting for us to walk by.  Montreal, Quebec, Canada. (on a warm day)
 
 
Photos just happen...be ready.
 
 
- Mark W. Laughlin