09.01.2005

113003 new orleans street

A Tribute To New Orleans

The Paris of the Americas, America’s International City, The Gateway to the Americas, The City that Care Forgot, The Crescent City and The Big Easy are all nicknames for New Orleans.

Some of us have family or friends in this city full of history and culture. Many of us have visited the historical area on vacation to experience the colorful sights.

But after this week’s tragic visit from hurricane Katrina, the deep-rooted enchanting sounds of jazz and blues won’t be heard on Decatur or Bourbon streets in the French Quarter for some time.

The exotic smells of Cajun, Creole and Caribbean foods won’t be filling the streets.
Poor boy sandwiches won’t be made with fried oysters.

Tourists won’t be wondering the streets with a drink in hand and a bag of trinkets.

Locals, like this man pictured above, won’t be dressed in costume to panhandle money.

Instead, this romantic city and the surrounding metropolitan area now lie under the flood waters of Lake Pontchartrain and the Gulf of Mexico.

But this city and its famous French Quarter are no strangers to strife. Inhabitants have resurrected their city after fires and have adjusted to different rulers throughout its existence. The hurricane is only another hardship to overcome.

After the healing of losing loved ones, the reconstruction of roads and rebuilding of homes, New Orleans will bounce back with its original character of blending the old with the new.

04.09.2005

Atop Shenandoah Montain is High Knob Lookout in this 2-hour exposure.

This star trail photo was taken on 400-speed film for a 2-hour exposure. I hiked for 2 miles in the dark to get to this spot along the Virginia/West Virginia border.

05.01.2004

050104 beltane mileage

Me and my baby (2000 Saturn) in Land Between the Lakes — we’ve been thru a lot together. She hit 100,000 miles in less than four years of ownership.
Yeah, I go places.

06.12.2003

061203 newspaper remodel2

It’s not everyday the newsroom gets to be remodeled. And we were given permission to vandalize the walls before they were tore down the next day.

A note to editors & publishers of the newspaper world: if you’re going to remodel . . . . let your employees boost their moral by taking it out on the walls of their office.

061203 newspaper remodel1

04.17.2003

041703 corbin high

I spent a lot of time today in a high school, on assignment, of course… and began thinking of my high school years back home in Nebraska, almost yearning for them again. It was an odd feeling.

Back then, it seemed that every experience was new and fresh . . . and it was such a great time for us, my generation, discovering our identities in the pop culture’s birth of grunge and the death of hairbands, political unrest, environmental activism, the coming of new age spirituality, the death of Reaganomics, mind expansion in and chemical drugs out, homophobia dying and tolerance growing, HIV education and prevention, materialism out and spiritualism in, corporate america clueless and the young taking over their lives.

What a truly exciting time it was and I was glad to be a part of it!