Friday Mystery Photo

Hello my dear readers, today is last Friday of the summer and beginning of the long holiday weekend. We are planning on a short visit to Asheville and maybe some hiking around Mount Mitchel. I hope weather cooperates and provide us with some nice white puffy clouds and low humidity for comfortable time in the mountains. You go and have some outdoorsy stuff too!

So last Friday was super easy, it probably took you only five second to figure out where Stockyard Café was located. Today we are going to increase the difficulty, no obvious giveaways in the photo, unless, of course you been there and know where it is. There were a lot of pigeons there and they were all spoiled by tourists who fed them right off their hands. But none of them were white, except this guy (girl perhaps?), checking me out from a safe distance. As you can see the walls are looking pretty old, and while I have no idea if they are really old, or they have been recently “remodeled”, they could be very old, because it is that type of place. OK, enough clues, you have to tell us where it is and if that bird is a boy or a girl.

Happy birding!

Weekend Update: Well, no one got this one right, also, only couple people even attempted it. Nope, it is not in Turkey. It is in old town San Juan Puerto Rico.

White Pigeon - Click to see it in High Resolution!

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Colorful Old San Juan

Photo Pirating

This topic comes once in a while on different blogs and publications. Folks discuss copyrights and protection of their photos from unauthorized use, different techniques and their views on the subject. Personally I have never registered any of my photos with Copyright office, I don’t put any watermarks on it and I allow download of fairly high definition version of my photos. I don’t go as far as to allow download of the original photos, but you can download it at X3 size from my SmugMug gallery. For folks who use it for non-profit purposes I ask to provide link back to my site. I do not allow unlicensed use for any money making reuse.

I have never tried to see if any of my photos are floating out on the Internet, mainly because I have no time to seat and search for it. It never been high priority and I actually didn’t think that they have any reuse or large viewing audiences, other than you fine folks, who come here to my blog, my SmugMug gallery or see it on the flicker or 500px sites, or via occasional re-blogging on your WordPress sites.

So out of curiosity, last night I searched for couple photos via Google image site and was shocked and surprised to find dozens to hundreds of links to sites that have some usage of my photos. Blog posts, photo galleries, screen savers, screen backgrounds, mobile applications, to name a few reuses that I found. I did not see a single reference back to any of my sites or my full name. Most reuse had no names at all, some crediting other people (this one is super annoying), some had my first name only (how helpful is that?).

Will I do anything about it? Probably not. When I saw android mobile app (free) that uses one of my photos as background, my first impulse was to find contact information for folks who develops this app and write them a letter to either take my photo out from this app, provide credit information with link to my blog, or share $$$ that they make from advertising in the app from their 50K+ downloads , yeah, right! But reality is that I would probably spend a lot of time, a lot of energy and aggravation and get nothing in return from all those efforts. So I’m not going to do that.

Yes, it is annoying that folks out there on the World Wild Web use my products without giving any credit or sharing any profits. I have no time or desire to spend my time going after people like that. I do believe that there are still good number of folks out there who are honest and if they really like some of my products then they will find a way to provide credit back to the author or license it properly. But I don’t loose my sleep over all those photos floating out there. If I did, I would probably never sleep…

Do you sleep?

Today’s Photo

Old San Juan has couple streets that are used only by pedestrians, they a like a little shortcuts. This is one of them – Escalinata de las Monjas.

Colorful San Juan - click to see in high def!!!

Washed Over

Or not. Sometimes the visual effects play some tricks and make us see what is not real. What do you think about this one?

btw, this is the cemetery in the old town San Juan Puerto Rico and it is not getting washed over by the Atlantic, it seats way above the sea level.

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Friday Mystery Photo

This time around I want to know not just where it is, but whose statue that is and why it is there.

Saturday Update: Well, no one knew this one at all. Even my wife thought that it was in Savannah Georgia, which it is not anywhere close to. The statue is of Queen Isabella I, the queen of Spain who financed Christopher Columbus on his voyage to discover the route to Asia. During his second trip he discovered Puerto Rico. The statue is in Old San Juan Puerto Rico.

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Puerto Rico

During spring break we went for a few days to Puerto Rico to escape prolonged cold weather, catch up on some sun and see something new and different. I didn’t do a lot research on Puerto Rico and really didn’t have a lot of preconceived expectations, other than its being an island in Caribbean and that we don’t need passports to travel there, it’s being US territory. We had a great time on the island and here are some of my observations:

  1. The first thing I noticed is the economical rundown of the island. I was a little surprised about it. I thought that since it is US territory and major travel destination, it will be in a much better shape. I say this simply on visual observation of the San Juan, places where we walked, took a bus or drove around the island. There are a lot of buildings that are simply abandoned, show their dark skeletons, covered with some graffiti or with advertisements, proclaiming that “Puerto Rico Does it Better”.
  2. In San Juan you will see police on almost every corner. Pretty much every house or apartment building around the island, not just in San Juan, has bars on the windows up to the second floor. This tells me that there must be a lot of crime in San Juan and overall everywhere. Otherwise why so much police everywhere? This is probably the byproduct of the first observation.
  3. Food and hotels are expensive, pretty much US or higher prices.
  4. Roads are in great condition. We rented a car for a few days, drove around the island, stayed a few nights in the mountains and I was really impressed with the condition of the roads. Even though they could be a bit wider in the mountains, they were passable with two cars, just had to be very careful and not to drive in the middle of it as it goes left and right and up and down and you never know when oncoming car will show up from around the corner. If you rent a car and plan to drive in the mountains then try to get compact car, it is much better suitable for those narrow roads. And they are all pretty much paved (at least we didn’t venture to any dirt roads) and I saw maybe only one or two pot holes, great condition of their road system.
  5. Cell phone reception was excellent. Even in most places in the mountains (not at our mountain retreat, which was actually nice, being disconnected from it all) we could geo track where we were driving.
  6. Gas prices are priced per litter. Speed limit is in mph, and distances on the roads are shown in kilometers (I think). Some strange combination of US and European metric systems.
  7. I knew that Puerto Rico has iguanas. I didn’t know where they exactly live and if we were going to see any. I saw three of them and in most unexpected places. One was running across busy intersection in Utuado, small mountain town in central part of the Island. The other two were seating next to airport runway in San Juan as we were planning to take off. We didn’t see them anywhere else, not in the mountains, not on any beaches.
  8. The food was excellent. With the exception of our first meal at Subway (we flew in on Good Friday and pretty much everything else was closed) I didn’t have a single bad meal. Everywhere we ate the food was really fresh and well prepared. Sometimes it was delivered to our table on the “island time”, taking from thirty minutes to an hour, but it was tasty.
  9. Buses can be used in San Juan, but they run on their own unpredicted schedule and it might take a while before you get to your final destination. At least they all cost the same – 75c, exact change required.

I took a lot of photos, have not looked at most of them yet, I hope there are some good ones to share with you guys. Here is one to start with. It rained on and off for the first two days, so everything was a bit grey, but really nice temperatures.

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This photo was taken at 400mm focal length. It was taken from Parque del Nuevo Milenio, which is about 3 miles away from Castile San Felipe Del Morro. For this trip I rented Nikon 80-400mm lens and took a lot of photos with it. This lens is very expensive (almost 3K) and I don’t want to buy it, but renting it was a great way to take photos like this, otherwise impossible with lenses that I own.

I use this guys to rent lenses for my trips:

lens rental