Sunday, January 25, 2015

Seoul Color


With any city, sometimes you see color, and sometimes you don't.  Looking back through my recent Seoul photos, several of the more colorful jumped out.
   
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

 Nothing like a rising sun to highlight colors.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Bright sun, blue sky, fall day...


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Lots of shops, with colorful things to sell...


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

There's a kind of tree you see all around Seoul, that turns a brilliant yellow in the Fall...


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Some colors are pretty subtle...


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Just love a beautiful, blue-sky day.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

 Even their parking garages can be colorful !


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

One thing you see in Seoul are these areas with tons of signs, which need color if they are to stand out.  (Love the Monks !)


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Glass reflecting trees and sky...


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

More signs... (Many more...)...


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Even at night you can get some color !


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

...but nothing beats the shops with bright lights to show off their wares.
 
 
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin


Beautiful !

Y'all take care,

- Mark


 

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Houston Marathon 2015

 
No...We weren't running...
                ...we were photographing...

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

I had in mind to pop down to the 2014 marathon, to try and take some photos.  But, that trip didn't work out, rather difficult to get around downtown with all the closed streets, so I made, a year in advance, reservations at the Hilton that sits immediately adjacent to the Finish Line.
 
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Bren and I went downtown on Saturday afternoon, had dinner, and took a walk around Discovery Green.  It's a park in a central part of the city, in a space framed by the baseball park, the basketball stadium, the convention center, and the Hilton Americas.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

It has a small reflecting pool, paths to walk around, lawns for musical events, fountains for kids to play in during hot weather, etc.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

The Finish Line sits in the street right out in front of the hotel.  The staff member in the yellow jacket saw my camera and asked if we'd like to cut through and take some photos. 

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

The big events are the full marathon and the half-marathon, which are run on Sunday morning.  From 5 to 6am, there is a steady stream of runners into the convention center, to register, check bags, stretch and prepare themselves for the run.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

We hiked 12 or 15 blocks over to the starting area.  They "corral" the various groups on several side-streets, in order to manage the 25+ thousand, yes, thousand, entrants.  Of course, after the bombing at the Boston Marathon, security is very tight.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

They arrange the start so the expected front runners aren't caught up behind that massive crowd.  Here you see the earliest full marathon group, lead from the beginning by the African contingent.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

At that hour, the low light makes it difficult to stop the action of the quickly moving runners. 
 


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

We were very close to the action.  I was right on the curb, without any fence, trying to make sure I didn't lean out too far and get hit by the shoulder of a runner.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Like I say, you only have the light you have, so you have to get what you can get.

 
 
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

There was a solid stream of people, running quickly past us, no gaps, for a full 38 minutes to let the whole 25,000 of them pass.
 
 

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

So then we ankled it back over the Finish Line area, arriving just in time to see the fastest finishers of the half-marathon.  By the time I got in place and could take some shots, I got the first women.
 
 
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Not long after, the first of the full marathon participants using hand-powered cycles and wheel chairs came in (well ahead of the runners).  (The "half'ers" were running right of the line of cones in the photo, and on the same street, the full'ers were running on the other side).

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

More and more coming in, most of the half'ers coming in before the first full'ers...

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

 The youngest of the ages I heard called out was this eleven year old fellow.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
 

And finally, here came the first of the full marathon runners, this year, as goes for most years in Houston, it was the Ethiopians and Kenyans who claimed the fastest times...

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

 ...both for men...
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

 
...and for women.  You can see that this young lady was most pleased to be coming to the finish.
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

And, as I mentioned, given what happened in Boston, security for the Houston Marathon is in the hands of several thousand pretty serious looking dudes.  Bully for them !!
 
 
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

So that concludes our little impromptu trip to the marathon.  Knowing more about the layout, we might place ourselves a bit better for the Start (but where we were this morning wasn't bad).  The Hilton is right at "ground zero" for racing activities, so clearly we couldn't beat that.
 
 
 
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Oh...I must have had some fans in the crowd.  ;-)

Y'all take care,
-Mark
 
 
 

Monday, January 5, 2015

Something Fishy ... (Chungbu Market, Seoul)



Trip before last, when driving in the taxi toward the big curvy, stainless steel building (see below "Dongdaemun"), I saw a market.  I couldn't tell what kind of market it was, but it looked interesting, so I decided to go back...

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

So, when you are walking by yourself in a foreign city, sometimes you have to look around, hoping  for clues as to what's going on.  It's coolest to have a friend to guide you, translate and explain, but (at least when you're in a safe city) you can't just "not go" because you don't have anybody with you.  So, in I went...

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Ok, so the first things I see are "dried things", nuts, almonds, peanuts, cashews, pumpkin seeds...all bagged in bulk, like maybe the customers here are restaurants...


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

...and then other dry stuff, dried bananas, peppers, maybe apricots...


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

...and then, dried (very small) shrimp...several sizes, sorted carefully by size, the smallest about 3/4" (20mm) long.  And then I saw what I expect is the main product here, dried...


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

...Fish !!
These look they are slit down the belly, gutted, and spine/bones taken out.  Then the sides are spread out until the fish is flat, and it's dried, stacked and bundled.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Then surely, this being the Far East, if you have dried fish, you gotta have dried octopus !!


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Over and over in Seoul, I see small businesses, small stalls selling ALL sorts of stuff, as you see in the several market areas I've posted photos of.  This facility is one of the nicest, newest places I have seen such stalls set up in.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Chest-high bundles of those same, flat-dried fish...


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Here's another variety.  Hard to see, but there is a stick, stuck through the top of the fish's head, coming out by its chin, and going into the next fish, 10-fish-to-a-stick.  About 16" (400mm) long, VERY uniform, maybe farm-raised, to get all at the same age/size, and maybe 150 fish to a bundle.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

And really surprising, these are all small-to-tiny, silver-sided fish.  The biggest are smaller than sardines, the smallest are maybe 3/4" (20mm) long.  Tiny, and a GO-zillion to a box, box-after-box...


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

More nuts, seeds, peas (green pumpkin seeds)...


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

This I didn't understand.  Eight to ten inches (200-250mm) long, tied 5 in a set, with yellow plastic, they didn't look gutted, or dried, to me. 


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

I took this fellows photo, he smiled and didn't mind.  I should be braver, and ask more people.  But...I was by myself.  There were several little old ladies, all bundled up against the 18 deg F (-8 C) weather.  I think they wouldn't have minded.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

One characteristic of ALL these markets is the tight, cramped spaces.  Seoul has a LOT of residents, 25 million I think, so space is at a premium.  A guy with a 2-wheeler, carrying a huge load of boxes into and out of the market is a scene I've seen repeated many times. (this is very early in the morning, sun is just up, no customers are in the market yet...throw in several hundred shoppers, and THEN it will look crowded !)


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin


This kitty has a nice quiet refuge...

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Peppers, LOTS of them...

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

In this stall they are grinding the peppers (from coarse to fine)...might be ground sea-salt in the front containers.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

More dried fish...


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

 More bundles / pallet-loads...fish, fish and more fish.


So, the lesson is, as I always say,
photos don't come to you,
you gotta' get up (pretty early sometimes)
and get out there,
hot, cold or whatever, go !


Seoul
I shall not,
soon tire,
of this city !
 

Y'all take care,
- Mark