travelswithkathleen
I am a native in this world And think in it as a native thinks
Saturday, January 3, 2026
Geese in Flight
This is my favorite of the sculptures. It's in the Guinness Book of World Records as the largest scrap metal sculpture in the world, standing 110 feet (33.5 meters) high and 154 feet (46.9 meters) wide. It's the only one of the sculptures that's visible from the interstate, and you can see it coming from a long way off.
The approach has mini-geese mounted on the posts, which look like they're flying up the hill.
Labels:
art,
North Dakota,
public art,
sculpture,
world records
Saturday reflections
A not very interesting look at the main street in Regent, North Dakota. It's the terminus of the Enchanted Highway, a series of scrap metal sculptures along 32 miles of road through farm country. We met the artist, Gary Greff, who started the project in 1989. He now gets a subsidy from the state, but for many years he financed the project on his own.
Friday, January 2, 2026
Happy new year!
A (bad) phone photo of one of the jumbotrons set up for viewing Zohran Mamdani's inauguration as New York's mayor yesterday. We had tickets for the viewing party, but this was taken from the wrong side of the barricades because the bitter cold and high winds made the idea of standing in a crowd for several hours unappealing, much as I like Mamdani.
Instead we walked a few blocks downtown to the Fraunces Tavern, which has been in business there since 1762, and was a favorite hangout for Washington, Hamilton, and Burr, among others. And which serves a scrumptious grilled cheese sandwich with tomato soup that made up for missing the speeches.
Instead we walked a few blocks downtown to the Fraunces Tavern, which has been in business there since 1762, and was a favorite hangout for Washington, Hamilton, and Burr, among others. And which serves a scrumptious grilled cheese sandwich with tomato soup that made up for missing the speeches.
Wednesday, December 31, 2025
Leaving Cierva Cove
Bringing the kayaks back to the ship as we prepared to set sail.
It's several hours till midnight, but I can already hear the helicopters flying over Times Square a few blocks away. I usually manage to sleep through the cheers greeting the ball drop and hope to do it again.
I think I speak for many people when I say that 2025 sucked in so many ways that I'll be very glad to see it in the rear view mirror. But it helps to remember that it wasn't all terrible, that I saw so much beauty along the way.
Tuesday, December 30, 2025
Two views
Some amazing blues and greens. I couldn't decide which view I liked better, close up or more perspective (with more ice) so I'm posting both.
Labels:
Antarctica,
Cierva Cove,
glaciers,
ice,
icebergs,
water
And still more color
I'm guessing the green here is lichen, rather than iron in the glacier water, but I could most definitely be wrong.
Labels:
Antarctica,
Cierva Cove,
glaciers,
ice,
icebergs,
mountains,
water
And more color
I have no idea what made this ice look this way (iron oxides are supposed to give glaciers and icebergs a greenish cast, so maybe?) But it's beautiful.
And a little color
Those deep blues always look tropical to me, but that's marine ice, which forms underneath ice shelves and is highly compressed, so nothing remotely tropical about it. That color comes from the way the light refracts on the dense ice.
Monday, December 29, 2025
The big(ger) picture
All of this zeroing in on the wildlife was of course taking place surrounded by towering mountains and huge icebergs. Sometimes I had to force myself to quit watching the penguins and just look around me.
Labels:
Antarctica,
Cierva Cove,
ice,
icebergs,
mountains,
water
Another OMG I missed this!
I had previously posted a video showing one of the gentoos flying out of the water and landing on the rocks. (You get some idea of how crazy fast they can move through the water by the amount of momentum they have when they're leaving it.)
This picture captures two penguins in midair, about to land. I missed it at first—oh look, more penguins—but the water trail caught my eye and I realized what I was looking at.
Labels:
Antarctica,
bird blogging,
birds,
Cierva Cove,
penguins
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)


















