Happy PPF!
This handsome fellow owns a group of guys having adult beverages outside a cafe in downtown Aspen, Colorado. He posed so beautifully that I just HAD to try and capture him in watercolors. So the picture in the upper portion of the post is my submission to Paint Party Friday.
And this picture is just one showing a proud fellow having cocktails with his family at The Little Nell. The waitress brought him a bowl of water (can you believe it?) and on a tray, no less. I wonder how much was tipped to his server. Since the average cost of a room there is over $600, just the tip given for his bowl of water was probably more than my friend and I paid for beers that afternoon.
I counted five dogs around the Little Nell pool that day. His face is obscured in order to preserve his true identity. (You never know, he might be a celebrity.)
Friday, July 13, 2012
Monday, July 9, 2012
Tripping through the Southwest
Over 2,700 miles and ten days later, with a car trip through Colorado, New Mexico and Texas, I am back to Colorado as a happy camper. Sister Pam and I went through hundreds of small towns on fairly untraveled roads, and also a few congested interstates, with absolutely no car trouble and just a few highway blockages.
Taos, New Mexico was hardly a sleepy tourist community of artists. The evening we were there, a local band played music in the square across from our La Fonda Hotel. It was a bustling place with lots of people reticent of the 1960's. And boots, my the boots!...also drugstore Indians and carved wood totems:
Shops, restaurants, bars and a great favorite place to eat called Doc Martin's (lots of history here) were on the agenda.
Hollyhocks were everywhere, even springing up from concrete cracks on footpaths. They are such happy flowers. I'll be painting some soon as we captured lots of photos of them.
Then Santa Fe, just an hour from Taos, held several delights, my favorite being the Georgia O'Keefe Museum (and gift shop). Long time fan of O'Keefe, I got a refresher course on her background and work from a docent at the museum. Other than buying a gift for my SIL for his birthday and one post card, the entire journey there was worth it just to visit the museum. Here are a few pictures and links:
Taos, New Mexico was hardly a sleepy tourist community of artists. The evening we were there, a local band played music in the square across from our La Fonda Hotel. It was a bustling place with lots of people reticent of the 1960's. And boots, my the boots!...also drugstore Indians and carved wood totems:
Shops, restaurants, bars and a great favorite place to eat called Doc Martin's (lots of history here) were on the agenda.
Hollyhocks were everywhere, even springing up from concrete cracks on footpaths. They are such happy flowers. I'll be painting some soon as we captured lots of photos of them.
Quaint photo opportunity in Taos:
While in Taos, I bought a (watercolor) print from artist Karen Blair. She paints hollyhocks by the bucket load. Take a look at her work here. This is an example of Blair's work, found on her website:
Then Santa Fe, just an hour from Taos, held several delights, my favorite being the Georgia O'Keefe Museum (and gift shop). Long time fan of O'Keefe, I got a refresher course on her background and work from a docent at the museum. Other than buying a gift for my SIL for his birthday and one post card, the entire journey there was worth it just to visit the museum. Here are a few pictures and links:
Pictures of clouds, thunder clouds and rain showers from alongside the road in New Mexico:
This picture was borrowed, but you can imagine the lightning we saw. This just displays it better than I could:
Thousands of wind turbines (close to 7,000 and added daily) lined the highway south and east of Amarillo, Texas. We were told that each landowner was given $10,000 annually for a wind turbine to be placed on their land, and that most of the energy is currently sold to California. Pam and I were amazed that the turbines went on for miles and miles as we drove south and southwest through Texas toward Austin. They are HUGE ... 350 ft. high... and the propellers are almost as long. It was an amazing sight.
(click on picture for close up)
And those ubiquitous iron horses pumping up oil were everywhere alongside the Texas highways, as well as cheery sunflowers:
The trip home, after lastly visiting my friend Kathy and her daughter Ellen in Denver was fairly quick. Kathy and Ellen put on a show, complete with lots of pictures and souvenirs, of their trip to China last summer with the CCAI on the morning I left their house.
(Picture of a picture of Ellen in China last year while on a trip back with adoptive parents and children.)
The longest day driving was home to Grand Junction, Colorado from Austin, Texas was 12 hours, but it went quickly because I listened to an audio book The Distant Hours by Kate Morris. This is a highly recommended read, and an especially highly recommended listen.
Thanks for indulging me by looking at my photos. The trip was definitely worth the drive and more enjoyable than flying there and back, because I got to revisit the southwest and appreciate the beauty of the area without being locked into a specific time frame.
Souvenir of Mexican pottery, home and planted with succulents:
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Back after The Long Ride
Hi, friends. After a road trip consisting of about 2,500 miles, I will be back on line and blogging mid July.
I'll be catching up on reading, knitting, watercolors and family. Hope your plans over the next two weeks are fun and full of adventure. Whatever you do, make the best of it!
On vacations: We hit the sunny beaches where we occupy ourselves keeping the sun off our skin, the saltwater off our bodies, and the sand out of our belongings.
Erma Bombeck
I'll be catching up on reading, knitting, watercolors and family. Hope your plans over the next two weeks are fun and full of adventure. Whatever you do, make the best of it!
On vacations: We hit the sunny beaches where we occupy ourselves keeping the sun off our skin, the saltwater off our bodies, and the sand out of our belongings.
Erma Bombeck
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