4.1.15

My Many Hats (1. The Pith Helmet)

A few weeks ago I alluded (tantalizingly, I hope)  to my "jungle explorer phase." Now, for the first post of 2015 and the seventh year kickoff of this multifarious blog, I give a hat-tip (if you'll pardon the pun) to the current Sepia Saturday theme by delving somewhat deeper into that period of my distant youth.
The author, aka "Bwana," takes aim at a 1963 Christmas wildebeest, or perhaps his baby sister.
I believe that's a red/green/white flashlight at the waist. Note the gunbelt for the de rigeur .45. 
In the early 1960s, I had run across, in the children's section of our local library, the books of one Carl Ethan Akeley.


Akeley won renown in the early 20th century with not only his explorations of the then still "darkest Africa" but his groundbreaking expertise in the lifelike taxidermy of large mammals.


I had gotten hooked on Africa around this time, thanks to this movie.


Set in the modern day, "Hatari" did not have the suspenseful atmosphere of Akeley's books, which despite their dated diction (with a spot of paternalistic racism) were thrilling, set in a time when "white men" had to rely on native tribespeople to guide them through an uncharted, savage wilderness.

I spent many a happy hour memorizing Swahili words from Akely's glossary.
Such as the essential "Bwana."

I was young, and we all were too naive at the time, to register the sad realities of Akeley's adventures, which were primarily undertaken under the auspices of the New York Museum of Natural History, to build a stellar collection of African wildlife specimens. Although he did do a lot of photographing of rare wildlife, including the mountain gorilla and the newly discovered okapi, even designing a movie camera for his fieldwork, most of Akeley's work ultimately meant the shooting of large numbers of animals.

Akeley and his camera
Akeley's famous elephant exhibit, 1914
Still, it was the adventure I was keen on, such as Akeley's famous hand-to-hand combat with a leopard, which miraculously, though not without damage, he won, or his being half-crushed between the tusks of a bull elephant.

Tip: To kill a leopard with your bare hands, crush its rib cage by kneeling on it.
Tip: Don't get in the way of a mad elephant.
 
One panel from a great Akeley comicbook
Carl's wife, Mary Jobe Akeley, accompanied him on most of his trips, and wrote or co-wrote many of the books I devoured.

30.12.14

From branch to water's edge

Not counting gulls, coots, mallards, and Canada geese, a sampling of waterbirds at Coulon Park, Renton.



Cast, in order of appearance: Belted Kingfisher; Common Merganser (female); Hooded Merganser; Gadwall; Common Merganser (male); Pied-bill Grebe; Clarke’s Grebe; Barrow’s Goldeneye; Northern Shoveler

26.12.14

Schoolroom interiors

 The second elementary school in our neighborhood to be torn down in the last ten years.  I took these shots of some of the old classrooms, outer wall sheared off, through hurricane fencing, while fending off a suspicious security guard.





24.12.14

A 2014 Melange

Here it is the end of the year already. I can't believe it. I'm going to sum it up by posting a bunch of 2014 shots that never made it to the page at the time.

JANUARY

Busker, University of British Columbia, Vancouver

Japanese garden, University of British Columbia, Vancouver

Spa Lit

FEBRUARY

Pub, Seattle

Capital Hill, Seattle

MARCH

Coal Creek, Cougar Mountain, Washington

Antique store, Renton, Washington

APRIL

The dancers

MAY

Vintage Ford, Florence, Oregon

JUNE

Boulder, Salmon La Sac, Washington

Salmon La Sac, Washington

Rock, Salmon La Sac, Washington

JULY

Paint, Portland, Oregon

AUGUST

Cobbles, Portland, Maine

Docks, Portland, Maine

Pub wall, Portland, Maine

Gum, Boston

Dulles Airport, Boston

Dulles Airport, Boston

SEPTEMBER

St. Edwards' Park, Washington

OCTOBER

Ferry dock, Orcas Island, Washington

Sunrise, San Juan Islands

Pilings, San Juan Islands

The Cascades, San Juan Islands

East Bay,  Orcas Island

NOVEMBER

Crows, Renton, Washington

Wall,  Langley, Washington

Ferry deck, Puget Sound

DECEMBER