Circle grid view from a bus on the Pont de l’Île,
crossing the Rhône river on a rainy morning in Geneva, Switzerland.
(Photo taken March 2015)
In response to The Daily Post’s weekly photo challenge: “Grid.”
"There is some good in this world…and it's worth fighting for." ~ J.R.R. Tolkien
Circle grid view from a bus on the Pont de l’Île,
crossing the Rhône river on a rainy morning in Geneva, Switzerland.
(Photo taken March 2015)
In response to The Daily Post’s weekly photo challenge: “Grid.”
One piece of history that I learned recently: for decades, thousands of people gathered on the hillside adjacent to where the turtle fountain is now to watch a popular annual children’s pageant. According to the Minneapolis Park & Recreation Board, “The public visibility of the gardens got a boost beginning in 1917 when the first playground pageant was performed on the hill above the rose garden overlooking the lake. The playground pageants included performances written specifically for the occasion and featured children in costumes from every park in the city. The first year the pageant drew a crowd of 15,000 and in later years the performance was extended to two evenings and played to crowds of 40,000. The pageant remained a popular annual event, with a hiatus during the Depression, until 1941. The pageants drew such large crowds that in 1930 the park board considered building an 18,000-seat amphitheater on the hillside at Lyndale Park to accommodate pageant crowds and host other outdoor concerts. With the onset of the Great Depression, however, funds for such a project never materialized.”
Meanwhile, in downtown Minneapolis, the 1915 Edmund J. Phelps Fountain, with its bronze turtles, sat at the center of the Gateway Park’s Beaux Arts Pavilion. During the Great Depression, the park became a gathering place for the unemployed, homeless and transients moving through the area looking for work. Eventually, the city drained the water from the basin of the turtle fountain to keep men from bathing in and drinking from it. Turns out that the turtles in my neighborhood park’s fountain were mute witnesses to dire poverty and suffering.
The turtle fountain was spared when Gateway Park was demolished. In the early 1960s, a Perennial Garden was added just east of the rose garden. The fountain was relocated in 1963 from downtown Minneapolis to the east end of this garden.
The turtle fountain, a familiar neighborhood icon, is different when seen from every (historic) angle.
See more responses to the Weekly Photo Challenge here.
This photo, which I accidentally took while working in my hotel room in Geneva last month, fits perfectly with the theme of this week’s Photo Challenge. See more responses here Weekly Photo Challenge: Beneath Your Feet.
I was in Oxford, England for a conference last June. My visit just happened to coincide with the summer College Balls. I took this photo of students ready for the ball on my way to a meeting.
In response to The Daily Post’s weekly photo challenge: “On the Way.”
Trees in winter, enveloped in Spanish moss.
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
This post was inspired by the Weekly Photo Challenge: Enveloped. See more responses here.
There are more than 2 billion mothers in the world today by some estimates. In my travels, I have seen the special role that mothers play in making the world a better place for all children.
A mother’s love is a force of nature, whether making sacrifices to ensure that her daughter is able to get an education or fighting for justice for their children. The mothers of the disappeared (ANFASEP) in Ayacucho, Peru lost their sons during the long, violent conflict in Peru. For nearly 30 years, these women have been trying to find out who killed their sons and where their remains are.
With their love, mothers are changing the world – one kid at a time.
Happy Mother’s Day – and thank you – to each of you mothers!
Early morning view from my window at the Kathmandu Guest House in Nepal.(March 2015)
This post is a response to the Weekly Photo Challenge: Early Bird. See more photos here.
In response to The Daily Post’s weekly photo challenge: “Afloat.”
The stupa at Swayambhunath (also known as the Monkey Temple) in Kathmandu, Nepal.
In response to The Daily Post’s weekly photo challenge: “Scale.”
I really love this photo, which I took at the University of Liberia in Monrovia in February, 2008. I love it because it of the sheer entrepreneurial spirit that you often witness in post-conflict societies.
The photocopy entrepreneur was not there on that day, but you can bet your bottom dollar that students on campus knew when s/he would be there to provide the services they needed. Although I have always wondered whether it was possible that the photocopier somehow managed to bring a photocopy machine to this spot by the electric pole. What do YOU think?
In response to The Daily Post’s weekly photo challenge: “Express Yourself.”
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