Sunday, November 7, 2010

Cliffhanger 2010

More than 1300 people participated in the 2010 Cliffhanger race/walk along Cliff Drive Sunday morning....another record. Gladstone Boulevard was packed with cars and folks as the starting point for the race was the east entrance to the Drive.
This post is a sample of the pix I took..... all of them can be seen at: http://gallery.me.com/dremley#100059&bgcolor=black&view=grid


Above...sheep or dog? Below one of the teams including, left to right, Brendan Rhyne, Scott and Laura Wagner, Michael Bushnell 4th from left who is also the Publisher of the Northeast News and loves to be called "Mongo" and Elizabeth Hodges.


Above the race begins.... below the first of the runners....



Above, Amanda, ten-times more energetic than Hyper...local Mom, Wife, Business Woman and point person for Scarritt on spooky stuff.


Above Jennifer.... Scarritt Renaissance Board Member and KCPD loyalist... :)

Lots of critters.....




Leslie ... new resident of Scarritt ...



Above new School Board Member Crispin Rea who, below, showed Hyper the winning form he planned on displaying when he finished......

Above, wagon load and, far left, secretive, anonymous Editor of the Northeast News (Emily).



Above.. race leader heads for the finish line about 600 meters to go...

Although the race was a week later than last year, the trees still put on a colorful display and Parks and Rec did an excellent job of cleaning up the Drive. Kudos to Kevin Evans and his crews.

Above, Jessica from Pendleton Heights.....who cooks a mean hearty stew.....


Above my neighbor Tim and his sons Ciaren and Aiden... his wife Mel was helping organize the run.


Above, Malenda...beautification expert (true) ..
Above... the last curve before the finish... below...Amy....
Below.... "Mongo" still standing.... finished in fine form...


Above, Wagner Squared... I expected Laura to sprint ... but she was kind to Scott.

Finishes produce smiles and below... the runners/walkers headed to Gladstone School for Chris Cakes and results.....
Congratulations to Susan Robinette and her crew for yet another great race.... no extra charge for the awesome weather... it's always like this in Northeast.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

This Budds For You


Judge Azariah Budd (1824-1890) Made Northeast his home and, on his death, gave back to the community donating 21 acres of his property to the city for a park to bear his name. The only stipulation was that the City was to give give his surviving wife a stipend of $3,000 per year until she passed away. Naturally some contested the legality of the city doing so... but a judge ruled it was legal. Below this shot of the park is an entry detailing the transaction.

Budd is well maintained by Parks and Rec and has cleanups by the Indian Mound Neighborhood Association a few times a year... it has been staying remarkably clean lately.


Walkers use the paths morning and evening for exercise.... it's particularly nice with the fall colors.


In Northeast in many of the street corners (including the one Hyper lives on) are tiles giving the cross street name. Parks has been successful in duplicating the look when sections of the sidewalks have to be redone. Hypers street says "Lakota Avenue"... which was its name until the mid-thirties when the City Council changed it to Sunrise Drive.
There are two playgrounds, one is shown above, and a swimming pool, below. A soccer field, ball diamond, basketball court and several shelter houses.

Above... the Budd House still stands on the south side of the park on Budd Park Esplanade... when I was growing up there were remains of a barn on Hardesty Avenue just a block away from the house....
It's still a single-family residence and is being restored....







There is a massive oak that could date from the Budd years in the yard on the east side.... massive tree.




We are lucky over here to have such great parks.... and thanks to the Judge for his donation :)

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Firsts in Photography (Maybe)

Firsts in any field are important and usually treasured and photography is no exception. Occasionally, when talking to a group, I will ask if anyone knows roughly when the first photograph was taken. The answers vary widely generally according to age. Adults know that there are photographs from the Civil War and thus the process must pre-date 1861. Younger folks tend to not think in that way and will say anything from 1940 to the 50s. The truth is below... Frenchman Joseph Nicephore Niepce took the image below from the window of his upper-story workroom at his Saint-Loup-de-Varennes country house. It shows the the outbuildings, courtyard, trees and landscape as seen from the window. The year was 1826.Shot above is enhanced... original is shown in the two shots below. Talk about archival quality.
Exposure time was eight hours on a polished pewter plate coated with bitumen of Judea (a kind of asphalt). After the exposure the plate was removed and the latent image was rendered visible by washing it with a mixture of oil of lavender and white petroleum which dissolved away the parts of the bitumen which had not been hardened by light. The photograph which Niepce called a "Heliograph" is now in the collection of the University of Texas at Austin.

Below.... the first photograph of a person? Due to the very long exposures involved in making the early photographs, there exist almost no early pictures with people in them. The image below of the Boulevard du Temple in Paris was a ten-minute exposure of the street scene in April or May of 1838. Although there was probably much traffic both pedestrian and vehicular on the Boulevard the length of the exposure meant that anything moving would not be recorded. The exception is the man standing on the corner apparently getting his boots shined.... he stood still long enough to become a part of pictorial history.
The above image is a a Daguerrotype a metal plate coated with silver halide that, after exposure, was placed over a lightly heated cup of mercury which revealed the latent image.
The process was developed by Louis Daguerre together with Niepce creator of the first image above. The process was patented in 1839. Is this the first photograph of a living person? It certainly is for now. I can just imagine trying to photograph a two year old with a ten-minute exposure. Thank the Lord for digital.