I’m going to take some time off for the holidays, so I’ll wish you a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year now. Happy Holidays to all of you, and thank you for taking the time to look at my blog. I appreciate it so much.
See you next year!
{carole}
I’m going to take some time off for the holidays, so I’ll wish you a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year now. Happy Holidays to all of you, and thank you for taking the time to look at my blog. I appreciate it so much.
See you next year!
{carole}
This is probably old news to some of you, but I just learned about a study that says the sounds of a coffee house may boost creativity. There’s actually a web site called Coffitivity which plays a coffee shop soundtrack called “Morning Murmur.” You can also get an app for your phone.
I’m not a fan of doing actual work in Starbucks, but I once had a boss who wrote most of her thesis in a coffee place. I don’t like writing in complete silence; I need music. Somehow it clears my mind of useless prattle and allows me to think about what I’m doing. As of this week, my preferred background is Mozart’s Requiem in D Minor. Not depressing, just beautiful.
How about you? Total silence, white noise or music?
{carole}
We just happened to be in Taos the weekend of the Hot Air Balloon Rally. It’s not the big balloon festival–that happened in Albuquerque a week or two before. But instead of hundreds of balloons and over 100,000 people, this is a nice little event that takes place right off the main drag.
The desk clerk at our hotel told us we could see the entire rally from the hotel parking lot. Um, no. Too far away, so I got up early and braved the 35-degree weather and waited for the windshield to defrost (no scraper with the rental car) and drove towards the balloons. I was kind of amazed that they were taking off really close to the main road. I could have walked right up to them, but decided to stay out of the way. I needed distance to take photos anyway.
That’s a street light on the left. There were power lines and shops around too, but no mishaps.
It was so fun to be right under the balloons. I could hear the flame and people’s voices pretty clearly.
One minute they were right above me,
then way up high.
They had to have incredible views of the mountains up there. One day I’m going up in one of them.
This one reminds me of the movie “Up.”
Can’t keep a straight face when I look at the one on the right.
Love the stars and stripes.
I think they were giving rides in this one, because it made frequent landings.
Since I didn’t have gloves, my hands were freezing, so I took one last shot:
And went back to the hotel for an early breakfast.
There are two way to get from Santa Fe, New Mexico, to Taos: the High Road and the Low Road. I read in a guidebook that the High Road could take from four to seven hours, so we took the Low Road to get to our hotel before dark.
Scenery just outside Santa Fe. Reminds me of the Badlands in South Dakota.
The golden cottonwoods and blue skies went on for miles. It was wonderful.
I loved seeing snow on the mountains.
Then the terrain changed:
The river you’re looking at is the Rio Grande. The Low Road follows it for quite a while. We were told it’s a great place for rafting in the spring after all the snow melts.
This was at a little road stop.
Just outside Taos. You can almost see the town in the distance.
The Plaza in Taos is not quite as impressive as the one in Santa Fe, but the clouds were pretty amazing:
There were touches of that beautiful blue too.
I liked this little place for its architecture and the way its colors contrast with the vivid blue skies.
We were lucky enough to be in Taos when the hot air balloon fest was held. I’ll post those photos on Friday if all goes well. Christmas baking and shopping are making things just a litle bit more hectic.
Hope your week’s going well so far.
{carole}
Just wanted to pop in and let you know that society6 now offers tote bags with my images.
And just in time for Christmas, they are six dollars off tomorrow (Sunday) from midnight to midnight. 🙂
Free holiday shipping, worldwide through Sunday too.
{carole}
I shot this outside Taos, New Mexico. The light was so strange that day. In Taos, it was sunny and dry, but as we drove north, we saw rain and then a rainbow.
The truck was completely in shadow, so the iPhone had trouble adjusting, but I like the way this turned out. The watercolor sky provides such a sharp contrast to the rusty old pickup. And the WordPress snowflakes add a funny touch, don’t they?
Great weekend, everyone . . . .
{carole}
On a whim, I purchased some Madeleine cookies at Costco, just to see how they compared to the ones I had in France. To my surprise, they were great! The perfect accompaniment to a cup of tea, which reminded me of reading A La Recherche du temps perdu in college:
“She sent for one of those squat, plump little cakes called ‘Petites Madeleines,’ which look as though they had been moulded in the fluted valve of a scallop shell. And soon, mechanically, dispirited after a dreary day with the prospect of a depressing morrow, I raised to my lips a spoonful of the tea in which I had soaked a morsel of the cake. No sooner had the warm liquid mixed with the crumbs touched my palate than a shudder ran through me and I stopped, intent upon the extraordinary thing that was happening to me. An exquisite pleasure had invaded my senses, something isolated, detached, with no suggestion of its origin. And at once the vicissitudes of life had become indifferent to me, its disasters innocuous, its brevity illusory – this new sensation having had on me the effect which love has of filling me with a precious essence; or rather this essence was not in me, it was me.”
~Marcel Proust (translation by C.K. Scott Moncrieff and Terence Kilmartin)
Here’s the original French:
“Elle envoya chercher un de ces gâteaux courts et dodus appelés Petites Madeleines qui semblaient avoir été moulés dans la valve rainurée d’une coquille de Saint-Jacques . Et bientôt, machinalement, accablé par la morne journée et la perspective d’un triste lendemain, je portai à mes lèvres une cuillerée du thé où j’avais laissé s’amollir un morceau de madeleine. Mais à l’instant même où la gorgée mêlée des miettes du gâteau toucha mon palais, je tressaillis, attentif à ce qui se passait d’extraordinaire en moi. Un plaisir délicieux m’avait envahi, isolé, sans la notion de sa cause. Il m’avait aussitôt rendu les vicissitudes de la vie indifférentes, ses désastres inoffensifs, sa brièveté illusoire, de la même façon qu’opère l’amour, en me remplissant d’une essence précieuse: ou plutôt cette essence n’était pas en moi, elle était moi.”
Hope your week’s going well so far . . . .
{carole}
The other night I noticed that some pretty dramatic clouds were forming near the beach, so we raced down and barely made it to the sunset.
One thing I’ve learned is that the sky can be even more beautiful after the sun has set:
I’ve also learned to look at the sky in all directions:
South.
And north.
I love the way the sky’s reflected in the windows of this house across the street.
Thursday is Thanksgiving, so I’ll be back next Tuesday. If you’re celebrating, have a wonderful holiday!
{carole}
The doors on Canyon Road in Santa Fe turned out to be one of my favorite subjects:
I liked the colors on this wall a lot.
The turquoise mailboxes too.
Then, of course there were the autumn leaves:
Great weekend, everyone!
{carole}
Canyon Road in Santa Fe is now one of my favorite streets. Block after block of beautiful galleries and shops and very nice scenery. I pretty much went nuts with the camera there, so I’m dividing the post into two parts. 🙂
The reflection in the window? Across the street:
Yes, those are scissors . . . .
Every now and then there’s a break in the galleries and trees so you can see the snow-covered mountains in the distance.
Part II on Friday.
{carole}