Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Ice Skating
This year is my fourth Christmas in Syracuse and I hadn't yet been downtown to ice skate at Clinton Square. It was ridiculously festive and fun and I didn't even fall down. Heck yes.
Saturday, December 5, 2009
Saturday, November 7, 2009
Friday, October 30, 2009
Spain III
Creepy wall art in our hostal in Salamanca.
I recently spent a week in Spain visiting my boyfriend who's studying abroad there for the semester. I hadn't been to the country before so it was really nice to spend the week exploring Madrid and Salamanca with him. I've determined that I love spanish food, specifically, tapas.
Labels:
Guernica,
Madrid,
Reina Sofia,
Salamanca,
study abroad,
Syracuse
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Monday, September 28, 2009
Apologies
I am immensely lame for not touching this in a month and a half.
Life's a lot less exciting now but I'll have to make due somehow.
Updates soon.
Life's a lot less exciting now but I'll have to make due somehow.
Updates soon.
Monday, August 17, 2009
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Reykjavik food
Supposedly the best lobster soup in the world? at Saegreiffin, on the harbor. Tasty stuff, and fresh.
Afternoon pick-me-up
I will try almost anything
but there are some things I will not eat
and this is one of them. $12 for a whale shishkabab.
but there are some things I will not eat
and this is one of them. $12 for a whale shishkabab.
Tomorrow Sadi and I are going on a whale watch to hopefully see some live whales and puffins. The weather was glorious today, hopefully it'll carry on tomorrow.
Saturday, August 8, 2009
Friday, August 7, 2009
Reykjavik
Icelandic delicacy! Fermented Shark aka Hakarl
Candy stand at the flea market. Icelanders love their candy. I've been in grocery stores small enough that they only have something like four racks of food, and never fail, one of those racks is always devoted to candy.
Mask stand, Flea Market, downtown Reykjavik
Aleece and I took our second day off of the trip and went down to Reykjavik just to wander around. We've been staying at a university outside of Borgarnes, called Bifrost, couchsurfing with a Korean exchange student here, Sol. She came down with us for the day and introduced us to some of her awesome Icelandic friends, one of whom, Finn, ended up showing us around for most of the day and night.
Friday, July 31, 2009
Dikes
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Iceland
Friday, July 24, 2009
Snaefellsjokull and Stykkisholmur
Yesterday we took our day off and headed up to the Snaefellsnes peninsula. It was pretty kickass. We fit in a lot, visiting a few museums and touring around the peninsula. Saw some seals and tried the fermented shark, which was probably my one goal for Iceland. We tried to go up to see the Snaefellsjokull glacier, but alas, our little red Corolla wasn't up to the steep dirt roads and we didn't want to get stuck in the middle of nowhere.
In Stykkisholmur, where we spent Wednesday night, there was this awesome church up on the hill. We stopped by when we first got there and since it was closed, we decided to come back during the morning to check it out.
I visited dozens of European churches when I studied abroad and Icelandic ones are so different. The inside was very graphic and modern. Behind the altar was a very beautiful but definitely untraditional painting of Mary holding the baby Jesus and the place was lit by these two windows on either side of the altar and all of these hanging lightbulbs that were all on different lengths of pieces of wire. So simple and beautiful.
Labels:
church,
Iceland,
Snaefellsjokull,
Stykkisholmur
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Iceland: Sunsets
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Blue and white
Friday, July 17, 2009
Jökulhlaup
A boy plays under a bridge that was destroyed by a jökulhlaup. Jökulhlaups are glacial flood bursts, often pouring out of glaciers with extraordinary force, usually destroying whatever is in their path, such as roads, bridges, and power lines.
There wasn't much in the way of people or civilization in the areas characterized by these floods and probably with good reason.
There wasn't much in the way of people or civilization in the areas characterized by these floods and probably with good reason.
Skagastrond
The shoreline by Skagastrond. A gabbro outcrop that Sadi, the other undergraduate was mapping and studying the faults of.
Before coming to Iceland, I emailled an Icelandic photographer whose work I enjoyed to see if he had any advice on gear to bring for working in Iceland. He recommended a wide angle lens, which is way out of my budget right now, and graduated neutral density filters, which isn't. I bought two, although I'm pretty sure I was accidentally sold the same one twice and as I bought them the day I left, didn't notice until I got here.
I really like how they help bring out more accurate colors in the sky, I feel like the blues always get blown out, and I definitely used them for the picture above.
Before coming to Iceland, I emailled an Icelandic photographer whose work I enjoyed to see if he had any advice on gear to bring for working in Iceland. He recommended a wide angle lens, which is way out of my budget right now, and graduated neutral density filters, which isn't. I bought two, although I'm pretty sure I was accidentally sold the same one twice and as I bought them the day I left, didn't notice until I got here.
I really like how they help bring out more accurate colors in the sky, I feel like the blues always get blown out, and I definitely used them for the picture above.
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Iceland
I’ve been in Iceland for three weeks now, and the time is going by so quickly. I’m here as a field assistant with Dr. Jeff Karson, the head of the Earth Sciences department at Syracuse University. For the past week or so, I’ve been with one of the grad students, Aleece, near Borgarnes, doing some field work on part of her Phd project. I’m working on a project mapping dikes for the next few weeks, but I’ve managed to find some time to shoot along the way.
We’re currently camping in a tent, sometimes at a campground, sometimes near a stream off the main road. It’s kind of like I’m getting paid to be a homeless vagabond. We spend from 8 to 10 hours a day at the field site, a stream cut outside of town. Currently we’re at Bifrost, a nearby university using their internet.
Iceland is really, really gorgeous. There is everything from glaciers to volcanoes to huge waterfalls, all on an island the size of Ohio. I’m posting a few photos from the trip so far, access to the internet and those crazy luxuries like electricity isn’t always easy to come by, so a lot of my photos aren’t edited yet.
We’re currently camping in a tent, sometimes at a campground, sometimes near a stream off the main road. It’s kind of like I’m getting paid to be a homeless vagabond. We spend from 8 to 10 hours a day at the field site, a stream cut outside of town. Currently we’re at Bifrost, a nearby university using their internet.
Iceland is really, really gorgeous. There is everything from glaciers to volcanoes to huge waterfalls, all on an island the size of Ohio. I’m posting a few photos from the trip so far, access to the internet and those crazy luxuries like electricity isn’t always easy to come by, so a lot of my photos aren’t edited yet.
a roadside stop where we got out to look at the rocks
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