Categories
Architecture

Mid-Life Crisis

We celebrated the end of the pandemic with a trip to visit family in Victoria, B.C. That was last November just days before the omicron variant arrived and forced us to rethink the idea of an “end” to the pandemic. For a brief few days, we got to pretend life had returned to normal. Our worries were restricted to minor issues like flooding, washed out infrastructure, and food and gas shortages. Ah, those were simpler times!

On my second morning there, the rain let up so I walked down to Ogden Point where I caught the sunrise. To get back to the hotel, I went up Douglas Street with apartment buildings to my left and Beacon Hill Park to my right. About half way along the park, I paused to admire an apartment building probably built in the 1950s. In particular, I found myself mesmerized by a simple retro design feature: square white-washed concrete blocks with a star motif in the centre, stacked to form a low wall in front of the building and repeated on each of the balconies. Apart from UFOs and drive-thru burger palaces served by bobby-soxers on roller skates, I can’t imagine anything more emblematic of the 1950s.

I paused to take a shot, then continued along the sidewalk where a sign came into view: Beacon Tower, a 55+ building. I stumbled a little. You see, it isn’t so long ago that I passed that 55+ threshold. I turned back to the building and stared at the retro blocks. Christ, I thought, I qualify to live in an “adult lifestyle” building.

The fact is: I graduated from high school only two or three years ago. Mentally at least (my wife insists I’m far more immature than that and have only graduated from junior high). Because I’m still in reasonably good shape, don’t suffer inordinate aches and pains, and don’t experience shortness of breath when I exert myself, I’ve never come up against anything that challenges my admittedly distorted view of myself. My rational brain tells me I need to grow up which means I need to worry about cholesterol and book an appointment for a colonoscopy. But my rational faculties have always been the smallest part of my brain.

I wonder if the posted 55+ threshold isn’t an artifact from the days when the apartment building first opened its doors. Our perception of what counts as old has changed. In 1888, Edward Bellamy’s utopian novel, Looking Backwards, 2000 to 1887 imagined life in the year 2000 where workers retire at the age of 45 so they have at least a few good years left to enjoy life. No doubt, Bellamy’s threshold was influenced by the deplorable working conditions in Victorian England and their impact on average life expectancy. In the 1950s, we could push that figure along by 10 years. Now, I can’t imagine putting up my feet at 55 and drifting from there into my sunset years. In fact, I can’t imagine putting up my feet at any age.

The gradual deferral of what counts as old age also finds a correlation in changing expectations about when one should start a family. That decision determines how old an infant’s grandparents are. When I was born, my grandmother was 41. When my son was born, his grandmother was 50. As for me, I’ve surpassed them with no prospect of becoming a grandparent. That’s just as well, as I’m only a couple years out of high school and hardly fit for the task.

Categories
City Life

Good-bye 2021

Tonight we show 2021 the door. A year ago, people made jokes about saying good riddance to 2020. By implication, 2021 had to be better because nothing could be worse than 2020. And then 2021 came along …

To be fair. It’s not a competition. Each year has turned out to be shit fucked in its own special way.

This image nicely captures how I feel about 2021. I identify with the skeleton playing the mandolin. I didn’t even bother to interrogate the year or give it a fair trial. Instead, I chopped off its arm and ran a sword through its chest. Then I sat on a log and played a madrigal. They call them madrigals for a reason. If you sang them when you’re happy, they’d call them gladrigals.

Categories
Street Photography

Industrial Window

Window at the E & N Roundhouse, West Victoria, B.C.

There is a gap in my photography between what I think I’m shooting and the image I actually take home with me.

In this case, I thought I was shooting an image of a window in an abandoned industrial space. I liked the brick, the variegated panes of glass with one missing, the expanded metal to protect the glass and peeled back where the pane is missing, as if to prove the point: see, you need the protection, otherwise your panes of glass will go missing.

But what I took home is something different. If you look near the top of the image, a little to the left of the centre line, you’ll see that someone has stuck a tiny pink heart there. It’s kind of funny, really. There I am, with my serious pretensions at producing a gritty commentary on post-industrial life. And somebody comes along and sneaks a tiny pink heart into the scene. Message received.

Window at the E & N Roundhouse, West Victoria, B.C. (detail)
Categories
Landscape Photography

Container Ship

Container ship appears at sunrise viewed from the Ogden Point Breakwater, Victoria, B.C.

When I first arrived in Victoria this November and was still on Toronto time, it was easy to get up early in the morning and catch the sunrise from the Ogden Point Breakwater. Although B.C. has been tormented by atmospheric rivers and extraordinary rainfall, there were times when a little sunshine broke through to remind us of all the forest fires during the summer.

Here, massive clouds loom overhead, but a thin band of light appears on the horizon illuminating the mountains in Washington state. Meanwhile, an empty container ship chugs into the frame. The gears of commerce grind on, lending visual interest to photographs everywhere.

Categories
City Life

Chevrolet

Chevrolet parked at the E & N Roundhouse, West Victoria, B.C.

I’m not a car guy. I was drawn to this car mostly because of the way the late afternoon light struck it against the backdrop of red bricks. I think it’s a Chevrolet because the word “Chevrolet” appears on the hub cap, but for all I know the hub cap could come from some other car. My Dad used to be able to tell me the make model and year of any car on the road. But that was easier to do when there were only 3 big manufacturers in North America and foreign imports barely had a toehold on the continent. Now, there are so many different models on the road, my Dad just shrugs. It’s hard to keep up.

According to an article in the Toronto Star, car thefts are up this past year, presumably a consequence of supply chain issues which make it harder and more expensive to buy new cars in some markets. Topping the list is the Lexus RX350 and the Honda CR-V. Nobody cares about Chevrolets. According to the article, the stolen cars either go to chop shops for parts, or they go to Montreal where they end up in shipping containers bound for Europe, Africa or the Caribbean.

I’ve read that there is a shortage of shipping containers too, so I guess even car thieves face logistical challenges and rising costs in these unprecedented times.

Categories
City Life

I Like Trains

Boxcar at the E & N Roundhouse, West Victoria, B.C.

I like trains. On November 23rd, I found this scrawled on the the side of an abandoned boxcar that sits by the E & N (Esquimalt & Nanaimo) Roundhouse in West Victoria, B.C. This message or declaration or cry to the gods was brand new. I know this because I had shot the same boxcar only two days earlier and, at that time, it had no message spray painted on its side.

I don’t know why people need to declare to the world their privately held personal preferences. Isn’t it enough just to stare at the boxcar and admire it? Maybe the message isn’t about what it says, but about what it does. Maybe there’s an implied bit that can be added to the message: I like trains and I exist. The spray painted message satisfies a basic existential need: it confirms to the spray painter that they aren’t invisible but can act in the real world. I arrive on the scene with my camera and amplify that confirmation by sharing it with the rest of the world.

Boxcar at the E & N Roundhouse, West Victoria, B.C.