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May 20, 2006

The Big Uneasy:

At least they're having some fun in New Orleans on election day. Amazingly, in the mayor's race it's a dead heat. You can follow the returns as they come in at NOLA.

I just finished Douglas Brinkley's book on Katrina, The Great Deluge (highly recommended). I don't think people even now realize just how bad things were in New Orleans after the hurricane, flood and breakdown of civilization. Brinkley collected accounts of survivors and rescuers and reconstructs events to paint a picture of the natural and man-made disaster and of the suffering of those caught in the middle.

Body
(A body lays rotting in the heat. I took this photo in central New Orleans a week after the storm. I was hesitant to post it in the first round of photos, but since a similar photo of the same body was published in Brinkley's book, I decided to go ahead and post it.)

Brinkley has plenty of criticism for people all levels of government who dropped the ball, but with Nagin running for re-election, today the focus is on him. From the book:

One person not often seen on the streets, at the Superdome, or on a rescue boat of any kind was Mayor Ray Nagin. Occasionally he'd pop up inside the Superdome, clinging to the exit doors, then disappear. Since the storm had approached the Crescent CIty, Mayor Nagin had been cloistered in the Hyatt, lording over the Superdome. From the get-go he was terrified for his own personal safety...

As things reached crisis stage, Nagin did nothing.

...His primary post-storm initiative was to get a generator hooked up to the elevator so he wouldn't have to walk all those stairs [to get to his room in the Hyatt]...

...At the Superdome in New Orleans scared citizens needed Nagin. But he feared that if he mounted a soapbox at the Superdome, he'd get shot, lynched, or bloodied up. He made the costly mistake of viewing the displaced persons as malcontents. He had squandered the golden moment, putting his own personal safety ahead of those poor and elderly in trouble.

Nagin's inaction, incompetence, lack of planning, lack of coordination and lack of judgement, as described by Brinkley, was stunning. Landrieu on the other hand, comes off looking much better. He did go out in rescue boats and, according to Brinkley, acquitted himself well in the crisis.

I can only imagine Nagin's campaign slogan: "Hey it probably won't happen again, but if it does, I'll try to be less ineffective."

Wettruck

UPDATE: Here's an articulate slate of endorsements from a poster at the New Orleans Metroblog.

October 2, 2005

Vacation:

Not much excitement, but that's the idea.

Birdtidalpool

Onthewing

Beachwalk-1

Pelicandance

September 18, 2005

Recovered New Orleans photos:

I had a CF card go bad while I was in New Orleans. I used Photo Rescue to recover these few straggler images mostly from Jefferson County.

Superdome
The city skyline.

Continue reading "Recovered New Orleans photos:" »

September 12, 2005

New Orleans Photos Part 1:

Downtownflood-1

Tulane Avenue looking towards downtown.

To see all the photos in each section, click the "Continue reading..." link below each photo, or for the whole series click the Photoblog 05 link to the right. But it that will take some time to load.

These photos were taken between September 5th and September 9th in and around New Orleans. All rights are reserved by the photographer and use without permission is prohibited. (Linking in to display a photo is OK (with attribution) as long as my bandwidth holds out.) Most of these were taken by me, but there are several, where noted, taken by Tim Connolly.

Continue reading "New Orleans Photos Part 1:" »

New Orleans Photos Part 2:

Soldier-And-Dog-1

A soldier takes a break while an adopted stray keeps close by.

Continue reading "New Orleans Photos Part 2:" »

New Orleans Photos Part 3:

Nopdstripptecvctr 1

A stripped New Orleans police cruiser outside the Convention Center.

Continue reading "New Orleans Photos Part 3:" »

New Orleans Photos Part 4:

Guardsmen
Soldiers take in the destruction.

Continue reading "New Orleans Photos Part 4:" »

New Orleans Photos Part 5:

Haveagun

The warning speaks for itself.

Continue reading "New Orleans Photos Part 5:" »

New Orleans Photos Part 6:

Soldiersfq-1
A patrol takes up a position on Bourbon Street.

Continue reading "New Orleans Photos Part 6:" »

August 28, 2005

Harvest fair:

Ring

Originally a harvest fair for the south shore, the Marshfield Fair has been through a few changes over the years including a long stint as a horseracing attraction. The racing is gone, but despite the carnival midway and monster trucks, the fair still has a grounding in agriculture. Here are a few shots from this afternoon.

Goat

Eagleeyes

Teams

Barker

Candyapples

Trust

Not for the faint of heart.

Skyoverthefair

There was a great sky overhead as the blues festival got underway.

Curleytaylor
Curley Taylor and Zydeco Trouble
brought the house down.

Great Blue Hill:

Bhalong

Why it's called Blue Hill Ave.

Cheeks

Carib festival dancers take a break.

Bhanight
Traffic nightmare as the festival winds down.

August 7, 2005

Uncommon:

Parkstreet

While walking to the subway after watching Commonwealth Shakespeare Company's Hamlet on the Common, I couldn't resist this shot of the Park Street Church.

Tonight's the last performance of the play. It's free.

July 17, 2005

Down by the river:

It was a hot day and the dogs needed a swim and a bath.

1-Mallory

I think she knows where we're heading.

5-Land-Dog

One swims, the other walks.

3-Quick

You have to be quick to get a shot. Especially when she's heading towards the water.

4-Mal-Swim

The Loch Ness lab.

6-Niles

The golden watches the action safely from the shore.

7-Lacrosse

The lacrosse stick is a must for lobbing tennis balls into the river.

8-Niles

Another regal pose.

9-Home

And back home, tired, happy and cooled off.

July 9, 2005

Saturday afternoon walk:

Reflection2

Reflection3

Foam

Reflection1

July 5, 2005

Down by the river:

The weather was perfect for the concert and fireworks on the Esplanade.

I prepped my good camera, but walked out the door without it, so the shots I got were with a backup Lumix digital.

Campers
Come early for the best seats.

Flagboy

As the sun went down, people began to get anxious.

Joyce

Joyce worked on her lines as everyone waited for things to kick off.

Vantage

These are the good seats.

Flyby
The excitement started with the fly by over the Charles River

Mastro
The show started and soon the maestro led the orchestra in the 1812 Overture.

Flagwaver
The usual publicity shy folks were out front waving and dancing.

Guns
As the 1812 progressed the guns were ready to do their part.

Ready, aim...

Fire
Fire!

Headliners

The headliners, Big and Rich, with Gretchen Wilson and Cowboy Troy, sang America the Beautiful.

Confetti

At the end, the confetti cannons exploded as the VIPs, including Big and Rich, et al, along with Martin Scorsese and Martin Sheen headed to the river to watch the fireworks.

Burst

Crowdfw

Fizz

And that was it.

June 25, 2005

DC always looks better in black and white:

Capitolcranebw

Abebw

Washmontonebw

Whitehousebw

Vietmembw

Mallbw2

June 12, 2005

China travel log:

I promised some folks notes and photos from the China trip. Here they are. Be warned, it's a long post.

Continue reading "China travel log:" »

Life along the river:

China Cron Slideshow - 148

A bridge crosses a small gorge along the Yangtze.

China Cron Slideshow - 129

A fisherman heads out in a sampan for a day of fishing.

China Cron Slideshow - 091

Boats cue up for the locks at the Ge Zhou Dam near the town of Xi Chang.

China Cron Slideshow - 068

In the town of Yichang, a woman waits to carry supplies to a boat on the Yangtze.

China Cron Slideshow - 183

Kids beat the heat in the Jialing River in Chongching.

June 10, 2005

Home again:

The China trip was an incredible experience. Started in Shanghai, then Yichang, Shashi, Wanxian, Chongching, Gulian, Xi'an and Beijing with stops in small towns and villages along the way.

Here are a few people photos. I'll post more stuff later when the jet lag wears off.

Ethnicwoman 2

Balls 1

Momsback

Meatman

Captain3 1

Violin 1

Oldwomanfarmclose 2

Farmer 2-2

Hatgirl 1

May 30, 2005

Leaving Shanghai:

Shanghai-Line-2

The skyline of Shanghai seen from the Bund, as distinctive as it is, doesn't do justice to the scope of the city. (Although the nighttime view is pretty spectacular with colored strobes, flashing lights and a giant video display on the Aurora building on the right. Watch out Times Square.)

Shanghai-Development

Twenty to thirty story buildings, mostly apartments and condos, go on and on.

Shanghai-Highrise

Although life is modern in the city, one thing missing, maybe because of power concerns, is electric clothes dryers. People hang their laundry out the windows or on the porch. The Three Gorges Project should alleviate many of the city's power problems.

Outside-Rug-Factory

Many restaurant kitchens are open-air.

Family-Travel

People seen to be always moving. Car registrations are expensive and most folks, and in some cases whole families, use motorbikes or bicycles or mopeds to get around.

Double-Triples

Shanghai-Bikers

These guys, parked for a smoke, are stylin' with their sunglasses and cool 'safety' helmets.

May 26, 2005

West side of Shanghi:

A quick post. In from the airport after 20 hours of flying, I took a walk around the neighborhood outside the hotel on the west side of Shanghi. Here are a few photos using the point and shoot.

Ustreet

Supermarket

Broom

Hanging

Note: outgoing email isn't working so I'll catch-up using webmail later on.

May 21, 2005

In the rain:

Fortress-Lock

Despite the cold and the rain, Summer must be here because the giant inflatable padlock went up today.

Flower-Seller-1

Also, a traffic island flower salesman looks out for Saturday afternoon customers as the rain falls.

May 14, 2005

Bumper to bumper:

Bored, stuck in traffic on a trip down Rt. 3 last night I took these random shots out the driver's window.

Rumble

Clear

Rockwall

Roadkill

Billboard

Trees

May 9, 2005

Sunset:

Cathedral-1

The setting sun reflected off of the buildings at Cathedral housing in the South End.

April 18, 2005

Race Day:

First-Wheelchair
Ernst Van Dy crosses the line to win the wheelchair race.

First-Woman
Catherine Ndereba won the woman's race for the second consecutive year.

First-Woman-Press
Then she had to face the cameras.

Traffic
A race official directs runners and wheelchairs on Boylston Street.

Lenox
These folks had a good perch on the ten story Lenox Hotel, ...but I wouldn't lean too far back.

Getting-The-Shot
Others weren't so lucky and did the best they could, taking photos through a hole in the wall behind the bleachers.

Press
The winner must be getting close.

Winner

Winner2

Winner3
Hailu Negussie crosses the finish line with no one else in sight.

Prize

Not a bad day's work in two hours, eleven minutes and forty five seconds.

March 17, 2005

Columbus and Mass Ave:

Tubman1

Faces on a mural at the Tubman House peer through holes in a wall at the double parked cars on Columbus Ave.

March 7, 2005

Second act:

Pops

Does anyone remember the wind-driven lollipop sculpture that used to be on Summer Street, downtown? It was moved, a few years ago, to a new location in Roxbury. If you're feeling nostalgic, you can visit it by driving down Ruggles Street, where you can see it behind this Shawmut Ave building.

March 5, 2005

Signs of old times:

What's left of the White Rock Soda sign stands over Columbus Ave.

Whiterock

And you can just about make out the Berwick Whoopee Pie ad on this old Dudley Sq. theater, below.

Whoopie

February 7, 2005

Super quiet:

The riot that wasn't. Even with a comfortable temperature and a nail-biter ending to the game, everyone behaved. I think the schools and the city also did a good job of preparing and getting the message out.

Sb-Line-2

The troops lined up on Hemenway Street.

Police and media outnumbered students about three to one.

Superbowlwindow-1
Neighbors watch events from a window.

Superbowl-Bike

Part of the show was this guy and his bicycle acrobatics.

Superbowl-Talk

In Kenmore Square, a couple of kids got a friendly warning and then calmed down.

The end result was that all enjoyed the game (well, maybe not Eagle fans) nothing got broken and no one got hurt.

February 5, 2005

Late night:

Steminnight

Working the median strip outside the shelter on Mass Avenue late last night.

January 25, 2005

Random shots:

Stanns

Tonight's sunset behind St. Ann's in Dorchester.

Dudley

A commuter train passes over Dudley Street near Upham's Corner this evening.

Fullmoon

The full moon over Raynor Circle in Roxbury very early this morning.

January 23, 2005

Down by the sea:

I arrived at Brant Rock at high tide. Along the seawall the wind and snow were blasting the power lines.

I had to drive around the back way to Brant Rock center because the main road was closed due to downed wires.

streetflood.jpg

As the tide was peaking, the ocean broke through the seawall flooding the neighborhood. The streets were flooding behind me as I went, not a good feeling.

In the center of Brant Rock, the water rises in the commercial area.

I only lasted about ten minutes out of the car. It was nasty. I couldn't even get near the seawall due to the flooding and the stinging, wind driven ocean spray. And, I had to get out of the area altogether before I got trapped by the water that was rising in the streets. So I got out of there.

But on the bright side, reminders of the warm weather to come were encouraging.

(Image links now fixed)