Category Archives: Travel Photography

Cleveland’s New Powerhouse Attraction

After reading a Columbus Dispatch review of the Greater Cleveland Aquarium, we decided to test the waters ourselves.

Located in the FirstEnergy Powerhouse, the Greater Cleveland Aquarium has repurposed this national historic landmark in a way that takes architectural juxtaposition to a new height.

Designed by New Zealand based Marinescape, hard surfaces of exposed brick walls and steel girders contrast with flowing water and the constant movement of its inhabitants. A worm’s-eye view looking up through the massive overhead smokestacks provides a reminder of the building’s original purpose – generating electricity for the city’s 19th century streetcar system.

The main attraction, a walk-through shark tank, gives visitors a unique overhead view of sharks, rays and fish as you wind your way through a curved, acrylic tunnel surrounded by 500,000 gallons of saltwater.

The aforementioned review had sighted filtration problems, which had left the shark tank water cloudy. If you’ve ever set up a home aquarium, you know the adjustments involved to get it just right. Now imagine half a million gallons of water filled with sharks.

With the problem solved, divers like the one pictured above swim among the well fed sharks, constantly cleaning the tank’s surface to ensure a clear view.

Fresh water and salt water exhibits offer visitors an underwater view and education of various ecosystems. As you enter, you’re immersed in a history lesson of the Great Lakes region, which contains nearly one-fifth of the earth’s surface freshwater.

Additional exhibits explore the watery worlds of the Amazon, the Florida Everglades and Coral Reefs.  From brook trout to clownfish (Finding Nemo), the aquarium is a lure for anglers and children alike.

A Touch Tank encourages those of all ages to get an up close and personal view of stingrays, sandpaper-skinned sharks and horseshoe crabs, as employees in wet suits wade through the water displaying smaller ocean creatures on trays.

The Discovery Zone teaches the importance of protecting our environment – a part of  Marinescape’s philosophy of Environmental Education through Entertainment.

Nestled in the Cleveland Flats, the aquarium could be viewed as a phoenix risen from the ashes of Cleveland’s industrial past – a positive image for the crooked river that lays to rest Cuyahoga River’s former reputation of the river that once burned.

As a Cleveland native, who’s recently returned to the north shore, I can recall past ups and downs of a city now once again undergoing major revitalization. I’m hopeful that the Greater Cleveland Aquarium, coupled with the adjacent Jacobs Pavilion, a 5,000 seat amphitheater, will help breath new life into the Flats, an area that has experienced its own ebb and flow over the years.

Please visit the Greater Cleveland Aquarium website for information on tickets, hours and school tours.  The facility also houses a catering venue on the second floor, with views of the water and downtown skyline.

Written by Pamela J. Willits

Photography by Larry Hamill

Colors and Textures of Ecuador

Our last post on Ecuador was dated November 2010. And so the journey continues. What follows is a visual post of the colors, textures and faces found in an environment almost frozen in time.

Hummingbird frozen in air.

Market vendor – with a little technological help.

Making Panela

Boiled sugarcane is poured into blocks. Soluble in any liquid, it retains many of the components of raw cane juice, but in higher concentrations. Colombia holds the world record for the heaviest panela block. Created in 2009, in the city of Palmira,  it weighed 1,576 lbs.

Igloos south of the equator?

A parting shot….

A New Year – A New View

Our 2012 Columbus Skyline Poster Calendar has arrived.

Calendars are available for purchase at the German Village Meeting Haus – 588 S. Third Ave. in the Village.  Proceeds will benefit the German Village Society.

Give a Holiday gift that’s functional all year and serves a good cause too.

Hours are Monday – Friday: 9 am to 4 pm and Saturdays: 10 am to 2 pm. Closed Sundays. Calendars are selling for $10.00.

 

Gone West – Purely Visual

Redwoods National Park

Rouge River Oregon

Lichen Life

Avenue of the Giants

Rouge River Pano

Lake Tahoe Pano

Tahoe Rocks

Lassen National Park

Sunrise over Shasta

Holland: Panos and Details

More Than Wooden Shoes, Tulips and Windmills

Even though only 3% of the Dutch population works in the agriculture sector, Holland is the third largest exporter of agricultural products, trailing behind only the U.S. and France.  Moving goods is not a problem, as the city of Rotterdam is the second largest port in the world.

One quarter of Holland is below sea level, with its lowest point being 6.7 meters below sea level.  Its highest point – 323 meters above sea level – is referred to as a mountain. With more than 4,400 kilometers of navigable rivers, canals and lakes, sights like the ones below are not uncommon.

The city of Amsterdam is built entirely on piles and has 1,281 bridges.  With water almost everywhere you look, bridges are as ubiquitous as windmills. Holland still has nearly a thousand old-fashioned working windmills.

The Dutch connection to land, water and environment is a way of life. There are twice as many bikes as cars and over 15,000 kilometers of bike paths. Everyone owns a bike – finding it is another issue.

The Dutch are equally serious about art, having the highest concentration of museums in the world – 42 in Amsterdam alone. The Van Gogh and Kroller-Muller Museums house the largest Van Gogh collections in the world.

And yes, The Netherlands and Holland are the same place.

Where Dreams and Technology Meet

A visit to the National Museum of the United States Air Force, located at Wright-Patterson Air Force base in Dayton, is the closest you’ll come to time travel (without a Back to the Future modified Delorean) as you move from the Wright brothers’ legacy to present day stealth technology.

Our visit took us from the Early Years Gallery, starting with the Wright brothers’ vision of flight through World War I aircraft, to the World War II Gallery and the Korean and Vietnam Galleries, landing us in the Cold War Gallery, which houses the world’s only permanent public display of a B-2 stealth bomber.

This blast from the past culminated in the Missile and Space Gallery, a silo-like, 140-foot high structure that serves as a final resting place for Titan missiles and Apollo, Mercury and Gemini command modules and capsules. No Buzz Lightyear here.

Back Down to Earth

Like the two theatrical masks of tragedy and comedy the exhibits entitled, Prejudice and Memory: A Holocaust Exhibit and Bob Hope: 50 Years of Hope, ground visitors with a reminder of the losses endured and the hope retained and at times, laughter shared during times of war.

As Bob Hope used to say - thanks for the memories.                                                   And preserving the memories as well as these massive historic vehicles is no small feat. The restoration division of the museum relies on the talents of volunteers, whose skills range from machine and woodworking expertise to craftsmanship in sheet metal and painting. Their knowledge of aircraft spans years of technology – from World War I fabric covered aircraft to the elite fighters of today’s Air Force.

The Memphis Belle is one of their more recent restoration projects. A B-17F Flying Fortress, the Memphis Belle is one of the museum’s most famous aircraft, with its bomber crews having flown 25 missions against Nazi Germany in WWII. Visit the link below for a slide show of the restoration in progress.

Memphis Belle Restoration

For Museum Hours and Info visit the National Museum of the USAF.

Post written by Pamela J. Willits.

Bison at Darby Creek – No Bull

Six female bison have found a new home on the prairie at Battelle Darby Creek.  Ranging from two to eight years old, they were recently trucked in from The Wilds, a wildlife park in Cumberland, Ohio.

Once the girls (cows) adjust to their new digs, the Metro Parks hopes to introduce a male (bull) bison – perhaps as soon as late spring.  In the meantime, there’s little chance they’ll get cabin fever this winter, as the herd has two pastures to roam free. Native prairie grasses – Blue Stem and Indian Grass – cover the combined 46 acres, providing their primary source of nutrition.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Don’t expect to get as up close and personal to these bison as you might in Yellowstone National Park.  The pastures are surrounded with a double fence – one inner electrified fence to keep the bison in and one outer wooden fence to keep over zealous humans out.

Bulls can stand 6 feet high at the shoulders and weigh up to 2000 pounds, while cows are closer to 4 ½ feet high and weigh in around 900 pounds.  Calves can be 45 pounds at birth. The Ohio State University College of Veterinary Medicine’s large animal services has taken on the task of overseeing the animals’ health.

BISON vs. BUFFALO – a lexicon stand off…

BISON – plains bison and wood bison – are native to North America. Having roamed the grasslands of Ohio’s Darby Plains when the first European settlers arrived, their numbers nationwide were in the tens of millions, until the mass slaughters in the 1870s.

BUFFALO encompasses two breeds and two continents – the water buffalo in Asia and the cape buffalo in Africa.  The use of the term buffalo in North America is believed to have derived from French traders, as les boeufs translates to oxen.

Regardless of what you call them, don’t be fooled by appearances. As Mark Ferenchik recently wrote in The Columbus Dispatch, “they appear slow and docile, but are quite agile and can run as fast as a horse.”

Ferenchik further warns, “a bison’s tail often is a handy warning flag. When it hangs down and switches naturally, the animal usually is unperturbed. If it extends out straight and droops at the end, the bison is becoming mildly agitated.  If its tail is sticking straight up, you should be somewhere else.”

Visit the Metro Parks web site for directions on accessing the bison area.

Get Involved: Join the Stewards of Metro Parks

Post written by Pamela J. Willits

Where the Scioto River Meets the Andes

The 2011 Columbus Skyline poster calendar is in, marking our  21st year. This year’s skyline is framed by the Andes Mountain range in Southern Ecuador, with a foreground view of the Scioto River looking upstream from Dodge Park.

In keeping with a tradition started by Fred and Howard years ago, the 2011 Columbus Skyline calendar is available at Hausfrau Haven, located at 769 S. Third St. in German Village.

Enjoy!

Aging Gracefully in the Vilcabamba Valley

Having recently traveled to Ecuador, I spent some time in the famed Vilcabamba Valley. Located in southern Ecuador, the village of Vilcabamba thrives at the foot of the Mandango mountain.  According to a Wikipedia entry, the area has been referred to as the Playground of the Inca having thought to be a retreat for Incan royalty. The presence of Mandango, the Sleeping Inca, is said to protect the area from earthquakes and other natural disasters.

The spirit of the Sleeping Inca isn’t the only thing unique to this valley. Often called the Valley of Longevity, locals claim it’s not uncommon for inhabitants to live past 100 years of age. The claims are not without scientific fact.  Medicinal qualities have been found in the surrounding plant life. Analysis of fruits, roots and herbs in this equatorial region reveals high levels of anti-oxidants.

An article published by the National Geographic in the early 1970′s gave birth to the idea of Blue Zones.  A name given to places where people live longer, healthier lives, the notion of such zones sparked controversy. Yet, elderly people in Blue Zones around the world are more active, youthful and energetic than those in the U.S. Sorry, no Blue Zones here.

In 1981, the Ecuadorian government hired medical journalist Dr. Morton Walker to further study claims of longevity. His research found the area’s mineral rich water was a key to the Vilcabambans prolonged optimum health.

Wikipedia also notes that retinas of 100 year-old residents of the Valley of Longevity are often comparable with those of 45 year-old city dwellers. What they fail to note is the location of the city dwellers – residents of Quito, Ecuador’s capital or those living in New York City. Factor in work related eye strain and medical researchers might not see eye to eye on this study.

In a post on About.com under Longevity Myths and Longevity Legends, Mark Stibich, Ph.D. sights the Vilcabamba Valley’s extreme inaccessibility as a factor, having protected the inhabitants from many modern influences including prepackaged foods and preservatives.

As the Vilcabambans days are spent hiking up slopes to cultivate and harvest fruits and vegetables and eating fresh picked foods, whole grains, seeds and nuts, with little animal products, it’s a safe bet that exercise, a healthy diet and lack of stress have gone a long way in helping them ward off the effects of aging.

Still, the age old debate over Blue Zones continues. The local government plans to convert the Vilcabamba’s Parador Hotel into a senior citizens center in conjunction with INIGER (National Institute of Gerontology Studies) in order to continue researching the benefits of aging under the ageless presence of the Sleeping Inca.

Post Written by Pamela J. Willits

Read more @ Wikipedia and About.com