Showing posts with label sunlight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sunlight. Show all posts

Friday, December 11, 2009

Schizophrenic Weather



That we've been having a very mild winter is obvious even to me, who has lived most of my life in California and where 45˚Fahrenheit is a cold day.  We've rarely dropped below that here, and here we are nearly halfway through December.  What we do have is a plethora of rainy days.  Not pouring down rain, not all day long rain, not flooding the streets rain, but some rain nearly every day.  Gray skies, wet sidewalks, smeared dog droppings kind of rain. 

We've learned not to leave the house without an umbrella, how to maneuver on the narrow sidewalks with packages, umbrellas and other pedestrians, and most importantly, to wear boots at all times.  I'm actually dreaming about wearing some pretty flats or pumps rather than being prepared for puddles at all times.  There are worse fates, I suppose, but I do love those shoes.

For a few weeks I thought we might not see the sun again until spring, but one day I woke earlier than usual and noticed that it was shining.  Rushing out to play in the sun, I felt, if not physically heated, emotionally warmed.  Then, by midday, the dark skies were back.  A revelation: it's sunny in the mornings!  We've been trying to reset our body clocks, which tend to have us up late at night and sleeping til mid-morning, to allow us a few hours of that blessed sunshine.  It's sort of working.



At least we see enough sunshine to remind us it will come back someday.  The forecast for next week is snow.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Snapping Away at the World



I used to be a bit embarrassed about pulling out my little camera and snapping away at anything that caught my eye.  Wouldn't want anyone to think I'm a tourist, would I?  Now it never even crosses my mind.  How to resist trying to capture the momentary light slanting across that building front as one bank of cloud moves away and before the next covers the sun? 



How can you not record the sudden appearance of this icon when you turn around and find her looming at the end of the street?  And when the need to buy train tickets takes you to the Gare de Lyon, how not to take pictures of Le Train Bleu, the bar where you have a coffee?



What remains difficult is taking pictures of people.  Easy enough when they're turned away or so occupied in doing something that they don't notice, like these musicians playing in Place Colette, just in front of the Comèdie Française,



or this young flutist mesmerizing his little audience under the arcades of the Place des Vosges,



but I'm not yet quick enough nor confident enough to shoot the fast-moving long-legged young women dressed all in black who are here for Fashion Week, or the older man impeccably dressed in a tan coat over a yellow vest and red patterned scarf around his neck, hat turned just so, and an unlit pipe in his mouth.

But I'm working on it.  I wasn't quick enough to get this intense young reader coming, but I caught him going.