Saturday, October 5, 2019

25,000 Visits !!! ... ( Thank You !! )


Hello Friends !

Well now, WrittenPost has been up and running for a little over 8 years, 

and has recently passed 25,000 visits ... from a total of 114 countries !!

As always...Thank You !! for "tuning in" !! 
I appreciate your reading and I always appreciate your COMMENTS and e-mails !!

Y'all take care,
- Mark

Great Wall, China - Mark W. Laughlin
USA   Japan   Canada   Singapore   Denmark   Iran   Ukraine   Finland   India   Germany   Spain   United Kingdom   Peru   Estonia   South Korea   Russia   Bahamas   Netherlands   Brazil   China 
"A bridge too far..." Arnhem, Netherlands - Mark W. Laughlin
  Lebanon   United Arab Emirates   France   Taiwan   Thailand   Italy   Kazakhstan   Zimbabwe   Philippines   Sweden   Ireland   Viet Nam   Moldova   Romania   Saudi Arabia
A donkey - M.
   Malaysia   Lithuania   Trinidad and Tobago   Suriname   Mexico   Georgia   Nigeria   Pakistan   Israel   Belgium   Chile   Poland   Serbia   Switzerland   Turkey   Austria   Colombia   
A little east of Marfa, Texas, Dawn - Mark W. Laughlin
Belarus   Panama   Morocco   Croatia   Luxembourg   Slovakia   Indonesia   Bulgaria   San Marino   Australia   Portugal   Norway   Oman   New Zealand   Argentina   Iraq   
Helsinki, Eastern Harbor, also dawn - Mark W. Laughlin
South Africa   Bangladesh   Sri Lanka   Hong Kong   Czech Republic   Montenegro   Greece   Ecuador   Sudan   Costa Rica   Egypt   Paraguay   Turkmenistan    Antigua and Barbuda   Mongolia  
Chur, Switzerland, alpinehorn - Mark W. Laughlin
Tunisia   Bhutan   Namibia   Syria   Ghana   Jordan   Qatar   Ethiopia   Guam   Rwanda   Algeria   Guyana   Boznia-Herzgovenia   Afghanistan   Hungary   Myanmar/Burma 
Holi-Houston, festival of color - Mark W. Laughlin

  Palestine   Liberia   Kenya   Seychelles   Honduras   Cambodia   Nepal   Azerbaijan   Equatorial Guinea   Macao   Albania   Cyprus   Kosovo …
Cochin Ferry, Kerala, India - Mark W. Laughlin
THANK YOU !! 

Asian Rhino, Kaziranga, Assam, India - Mark W. Laughlin










Friday, May 3, 2019

West Texas - II ... Observatory and Seminole Canyon


The "center piece" or our trip was a visit to The University of Texas' McDonald Observatory, a working observatory about 20 minutes northwest of Fort Davis, Texas.  It has several large telescopes and also has programs for visiting amateur astronomers.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
You check-in at the visitors center which has a museum, theater, cafe and gift shop.  They have a "twilight program" indoor at the center that ends when it's finally dark enough to go out and observe.  They start the outdoor portion by pointing out several stars, planets and constellations in the night sky. 

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
After the twilight program, we went to the "Star Party", where you look through several smaller and medium telescopes and visiting with the observatory staff.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
If you take the in-depth program, they take you in a bus up to one of the main telescopes where you spend the evening talking with the professional astronomers, viewing what they see, and hearing about their research (but that's not available every night, so we'll try that again later).

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
We had a clear blue sky in the afternoon, but it began to cloud up later.  One thing about going in April, the altitude and the season combined to get a bit chilly.  It was 38 degrees (3 deg C) when we left, about 11:30 pm.


Our next stop would be Seminole Canyon State Park (next post).  To get to our guided tour, I had to get my lovely wife up early.
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
We headed east from Alpine well before sunrise and saw the dawn just east of Marathon, Texas.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
Snapped this one just a second or two before the sun peaked over the hill.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
The Pecos River meets the Rio Grande (which is the Texas/Mexico border) at what is now Lake Amistad (friendship).

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
Out on the highway, traffic is quite light and the cars travel pretty fast.  The speed limit is 75 mph (125 km/hr), but people tend to drive just a bit faster, say around 80-85 mph (130-140 km/hr).  I noticed quite a few of the small night-critters, rabbits, etc. fall prey to the night-time traffic, providing a steady diet for the local buzzards (Turkey Vultures).

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
Next stop, Seminole Canyon, where several thousand years ago, paleo-Indians spent their winters under the protection of the overhanging cliffs along the Pecos River.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Y'all come visit.
We'll take a drive.  ;-)

- Mark


Saturday, April 20, 2019

West Texas - I ... Big Bend


Last week, Brenda and I took a drive.  We headed WEST !

One drawback about visiting West Texas, is that there is a whole LOT of it, and it's quite spread out.  So, you have to do a bit of driving to see it.  We saw some, but of course there's still a lot more of it out there.

Our first destination was Alpine, Texas.  Primarily, our trip was to visit McDonald Observatory, run by the University of Texas (my university), just northwest of Ft. Davis, Texas.  Since we were "near" Big Bend National Park (we were 125 miles away), dad suggested we zip down there and take a look, so we did.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
I'm not sure my wife is so keen on it, but I like to get on the road before sunrise.
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
These three shots are from the main road down into the park.
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
One can see a sunset developing and prepare for it.  But one never knows what will happen as the sun rises, because you can't see clouds, colors or potential backgrounds in pre-dawn darkness.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
We didn't drive all the way down into the park, the the southern border of the park is the Rio Grande, the US-Mexico border, and would have taken a couple of hours longer to get down to.
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
We drove up into the Chisos Basin, in the Chisos Mountains, in the north-central portion of the park.
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
I don't know the geological origins of the basin, but it looks as if it could be the crater of an ancient volcano, which blew out on one side.
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
Today of course, the danger of big explosions has passed, and there is a nice restaurant and a campground in the basin.  
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
So we had a wonderful breakfast overlooking the basin and the "gap" in the side, which looks out over the valley below.
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
Then we got back in the car, and started to drive again.

Next:
- photos from the observatory and another sunrise drive
- Seminole Canyon State Part (winter home of "The Walking Men")
- a few shots of a quiet, cool Monday morning on the river in San Antonio


Photo by BRENDA S. LAUGHLIN
Montana says they are "The Big Sky State"...
Sorry, "Big Sky" = Texas !!

Y'all take care,
- Mark





Monday, April 15, 2019

Notre Dame...A dark, dark moment...


Horrible news today, not just for the people of France, but for all the people of the world, whether they have had the opportunity to visit this great treasure or not...

Photos from a beautiful day back in 2009:

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
At this moment, it seems that the two main bell towers are still standing...let's hope.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
But many, maybe all, of the beautiful stained glass windows are gone.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
Some items have been removed from the building because of ongoing renovations.  Let's hope many things were saved in this way.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
But the main portion of the cathedral has been severely damage, the roof has collapsed.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
 ...and the tall spire was completely engulfed and collapsed.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
Hopefully, portions of the massive stone structure will be undamaged, and can serve as a foundation for the rebuilding.

Awful.
- Mark





Sunday, March 31, 2019

Assam - Kaziranga - Rhinos II


Elephant Grass is amazing !!

A "bunch grass", it's easily 12-15 feet (3-4 m) high in places, and there are many square miles of it in Kaziranga.  We rode around in open jeeps, just as we did at the lion preserve in Gujarat, trusting that the "locals" wouldn't jump in and "join us for dinner."
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

The grass is so high and so dense, that these two young male elephants weren't visible at all until they stepped out of the grass, onto the roadway...perhaps 75 m away from us...
Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
...then, having decided that we didn't look too trustworthy, they continued on across the road, again disappearing into the grass.  Seconds after they slipped into it, we drove to the place where they had stood, and could see no sign of them at all...they just vanished into the safety of the grass.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
Safety for them...not for us.  The grass is full of elephants and rhinos, and also of these "tree roots", which turn out to be 6 ft (2 m) long monitor lizards !

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
The grass also hides a considerable population of tigers.  This one was quite distant, could't get a better image of him than this (had to use all my optical and digital zoom, plus some cropping to see it this well...).  It had apparently made a kill recently, and was lounging in the shade.  Several deer grazed calmly a few meters away, apparently aware that a full-bellied, lazy tiger is no danger...for the moment.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
Ox Peckers, resting on a sunning rhino (only about 25 m away).

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
The area we visited on Day II not only had more rhino, but also had some more open areas where we could see them better, sometimes up quite close.  These were just grazing and were not bothered by our presence, but I have seen videos of upset rhinos charging through villages, doing serious damage.  

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin


Most of the houses we saw in the area were up on stilts.  At first, I thought this was because there is lots of rain and flooding during the rainy season...but it's also so your family doesn't wake up in the morning with one of these guys licking their face !

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
This is one of several ranger stations.  The are spread across the park to support armed rangers watching for poachers.  Hindus are quite opposed to killing animals...
....but poachers better beware.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
Some of the "locals" on watch.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
Some of the rangers headed in after harvesting something out on the grasslands...

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
This Kingfisher had caught him a nice snack.  He was just holding it in his beak, until we made him nervous that we might steal it, so he gulped it down.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
Tons of interesting birds...(our guide named them all, but no way I can remember)

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
The Brahmaputra River is huge, even when not at flood stage.  The river bed is easily visible from the air, it's a gravel channel between 4 and 6 miles wide (yes...miles...).  It's a principle river in eastern India for draining snow melt from the Himalayas, and also as watershed for the torrential monsoon rains that fall in Assam.  

The monsoon season starts in June, just about the time snow melting is getting to full speed.  The months of July-September would have a very different view from this vantage point.  The flooding, raging river would be wider than you could see, and I'm not sure, but even my vantage point on this bluff might not be a safe place to stand.


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
This is one of my favorites (I printed one for my wall).


Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
I also like this one.  A Kingfisher, not worried about floods, or rhinos, or tigers, just perched above a quiet lake, waiting for a small fish to wander into that "sweet spot" just in front of him.

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin
If you want to spend a summer as a volunteer game warden, I hear this office is "available" !

Photo by Mark W. Laughlin

Kaziranga National Park and Wildlife Preserve, a beautiful place.  
Fly first to Delhi, then on eastward to Guwahati. 
Drive eastward a bit more to the preserve.  

There are a number of small hotels that you can find online, 
they can arrange everything, rooms, meals, transport from Guwahati, 
and most important of all, jeeps and guides for the preserve.

Give it a visit.
-Mark