Posts tagged tourist

20
Nov 14

Fondation Louis Vuitton

Bois de Boulogne, Paris, France 48º52’35″N 2º15’48″E

Frank Gehry has designed a building that, through its strength and singularity, represents the first artistic step on the part of the Fondation Louis Vuitton. This large vessel covered in twelve glass sails, set on a water garden created for the occasion,

Frank Gehry has designed a building that, through its strength and singularity, represents the first artistic step on the part of the Fondation Louis Vuitton. This large vessel covered in twelve glass sails, set on a water garden created for the occasion, blends into the natural environment, amidst the wood and the garden, playing with light and mirror effects.

http://www.lvmh.com

 

28
Oct 14

Saint-Malo

Saint Malo, Brittany, France 48º38’54″N 2º01’34″W

Saint-Malo is a walled port city in Brittany in northwestern France on the English Channel. It is a sub-prefecture of the Ille-et-Vilaine department.

22
Sep 14

“Defini Fini Infini, Travaux In Situ”

Marseille, France 43º15’41″N 5º23'46″E

French Artist Daniel Buren exhibition “Defini Fini Infini, Travaux In Situ” at the MaMo art center, Cité Radieuse Le Corbusier,  Marseille.

French Artist Daniel Buren exhibition “Defini Fini Infini, Travaux In Situ” at the MaMo art center, Cité Radieuse Le Corbusier.

28
May 14

New York City

New York, NY, United States of America. 40º43’13″N 74º00'03″W

Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States of America.

16
Dec 13

Vietnam

Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam 10º49’18″N 106º37’46″E

Vietnam,  officially the Socialist Republic of Vietnam (Cộng hòa Xã hội chủ nghĩa Việt Nam).<br />
Ho Chi Minh City (Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh),  formerly named Saigon (Sài Gòn), is the largest city in Vietnam.Dĩ hoà vi quý.
Making peace is treasured.

Vietnamese proverb.

16
Oct 13

Hong Kong

Hong Kong, 香港, 22º17’59″N 114º12’23″E

Hong Kong Island is an island in the southern part of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. It has a population of 1,289,500. The island had a population of 3,000 inhabitants scattered in a dozen fishing villages when it was occupied by the UnitedNo other city is quite like this. Hong Kong is perpetually on the go, between the present and the future, it is hyperactive, like the world itself in the early years of the 21st century. Founded by Europeans, developed by Asians, governed by Chinese, designed and run by entrepreneurs, architects, economists, and adventurers from the four corners of the world, in its streets and waterways you may sense the turning of the Earth itself.

27
May 13

Kalifornia

San Francisco to Los Angeles road trip, California, United States of America

Road trip between San Francisco and Los Angeles, California, United States of AmericaAmerica has always been linked with the car and this drive, in the Golden State, links two of the US’s best loved cities. Highway 1 stretches along the Californian coast, and the section between San Francisco and Los Angeles is a decidedly cool trip.

18
Mar 12

Treasures of Napoleon Beach

Napoleon Beach, Bouches-du-Rhône, France 43º20’37″N 4º52’10″E

The Earth Should Not Yield Plastic Alone

The earth yields treasures. As examples: the fruits we eat and, arguably, diamonds. On my daily ocean walks I have never seen either. I do see a lot of plastic though. So, too, does Christophe Launay, whose photographs from Napoleon Beach document similar findings. It is at this beach that the Rhone (Rhine) River meets the Mediterranean Sea.

Close to the ocean, where I live, I cultivate an annual vegetable garden, and am hopeful that last year’s raspberry plants will yield fruit again this year.

But back to France. French senators last July voted to outlaw hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, a process that uses a mixture of chemicals, sand and water injected under high pressure to release oil and gas trapped in rock. As we know, the earth also yields natural gas and oil.

Earth Day approaches, and so I googled the phrase, “The earth yields.” Lo, the first few entries were Biblical quotes from Psalm 67 in the New American Standard Bible.

psalm 67:6 The earth has yielded its produce; God, our God, blesses us.

67:7 God blesses us, That all the ends of the earth may fear Him.

And in French: 67:6 La terre produira son fruit; Dieu, notre Dieu, nous bénira.

Fruits of the earth.

Hmm.

Ditto in Spanish, La tierra ha dado su fruto; Dios, nuestro Dios, nos bendice.

And in Hebrew, the word rendered “increase” can be interpreted to mean “properly produce,” or “that which the earth produces when properly cultivated.”

Who is ‘properly cultivating’ the earth, and what does this mean? I think we know, and best-selling authors like Michael Pollan and Barbara Kingsolver have spelled it out pretty clearly for North America, where fracking is widely practiced.

As you’d expect, the usual green groups (those protecting the fruits of the earth) and some politicians who led protests quite effectively in France, saying fracking could cause environmental damage, like earthquakes and water pollution. Government ministers and industry representatives say it is the only method currently available to extract hydrocarbons from the rock. At what cost should we be extracting those hydrocarbons?

And because Google put God at the top of the search let’s drag Him into this one last time. Remember that bit about “fearing Him?”

We’ve heard He works in mysterious ways, but it’s not overly mysterious that if you inject chemicals underground to remove materials that are part of supporting materials on top of them, and deep wells are used to dispose of liquid wastes, then tremors will be on the rise. And about water pollution from the chemicals, like arsenic? Well, that hardly seems like we are properly cultivating the earth to yield anything other than a big mess. We should be afraid.

While protests are underway in North America, if you’re not the protesting type, but you are a bit afraid of what you see above the ground, and can’t yet take on what’s going on underground, or in Heaven for that matter, here’s a place to start. Easy, point-form facts and courses for action.

Look for the handy link to Take Back the Tap

We must keep our water clean and cut down on the plastic bottle waste so prevalent in these photos and the pollution at all levels on this fine earth, which when cultivated properly we know, yields the most wonderful fruits.

Oh, and here’s one more link to check out.

Words: Trixie B. Wadson is a freelance writer, independent publisher, graphic designer and photographer. The rest of the time she is busy collecting eggs from the family chickens while they cultivate the garden.
www.trixiewadson.com

26
Jun 11

The Beauty of Waste

Al Jazayer Beach, Kingdom of Bahrain 26º02’58″N 50º28’33″E

24
Jan 11

Morocco

31°47'13"N 7°05'43"W

I kept dreaming of desert sunsets, boundless Ocean, other world until I got there, perhaps, in some of this pictures, we can see the spirit of the essential, eternal and unchanging Morocco.