A short two day weekend means a short trip. But a short trip doesn’t necessarily mean a disappointing one as the super bloom plays out.
I decided to take a hike in Torrey Pines extension, a hidden piece of Torrey Pines State Park not far from but not on the beach. If you look at the pictures, the very last one is from an overlook on the Extensions’ southwest corner overlooking the rest of the park. If you are familiar with the beach area, the picture might give you a clue as to where the extension is, hidden on all sides by houses and apartments and a school.
But the
It makes me think of the line from the movie “The Color Purple”. “I think it pisses God off if you walk by the color purple in a field somewhere and don’t notice it.” I suspect it pisses God off if you walk by the violets and the yellows, and the whites, and the reds, and the oranges, and the blues, and medleys, and the textures, and the shapes, and the compositions, and the views, and everything else in that field God put there for us to experience. I could have taken a picture of everything without feeling like I wasted a shot. I managed to get it down to this. Hope you enjoy.
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1vzG9PeOIxSbWOaX90WrYGYqMNBn5rLPA
author.mike.angel@gmail.com
P.S. I snuck in one picture of Lake Hodges and Escondido Mountain stained
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Up close, our guide drones on about the construction story. It took twenty-two years, a Persian designer, a board of architects, twenty thousand laborers, and a thousand elephants to build. Design and detail everywhere on the building. Up close, I can see the intricate patterns, the huge blocks of marble, and the attention to symmetry. But I don’t need to hear all the detail or even see it. The Taj is the forest and not the trees. The guide gets frustrated as our group drifts to appreciate and photograph rather than absorb useless facts and get suckered into a post-Taj shopping misadventure.
Indian tourists wait in a line that wraps completely around the building into a marble courtyard filled with a maze of twists and turns for the privilege of seeing the inside. I don’t know what it means to them to justify waiting for so long. We are rushed around the gravesite so that the throngs of visitors each has their chance at a viewing before closing time. Muslim law forbids the elaborate decoration of graves. The Shah followed the letter of Muslim law more so than its intent, judging by the excessively ornate and elaborate surroundings. Only the graves themselves are plain.



