This blog is now continued on my website. If you wish to contact me, my email is larryshortell@gmail.com or larrysnaturalwonders@yahoo.com. You're also invited to visit my website, www.larryshortell.com, to view a portion of my photographic portfolio or see my most recent blog entries.. If you are interested in purchasing my book "Summers Off: The Worldwide Adventures of a Schoolteacher" please visit Amazon.com or bn.com.
Sunday, December 28, 2008
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Log/Pic 64 Blast from the Past 2004
So I started 2004 with a trip to Belize. I spent a week in Placencia at a little guest house. I shared the second floor with a nice family from Belgium. When I wasn't diving, I was chilling in a hammock on the porch staring at the ocean.
I took a couple of buses to Belize City, then a couple of more to the Guatemalan border. I took yet another bus to the largest ruins in North America, Tikal.
In the months of June and July, I went on a trip I had dreamed of since I was a kid, and one I had been planning for several years, a safari in Africa. My friend Tusker had planned this vacation, having been there a hand full of times prior. Punda and Nyani joined us for the trip of a lifetime in Africa's most populous wildlife country, Kenya. As this photo shows, we would rise early each day for a safari at dawn.
In the months of June and July, I went on a trip I had dreamed of since I was a kid, and one I had been planning for several years, a safari in Africa. My friend Tusker had planned this vacation, having been there a hand full of times prior. Punda and Nyani joined us for the trip of a lifetime in Africa's most populous wildlife country, Kenya. As this photo shows, we would rise early each day for a safari at dawn.
We visited a Masi Mara tribe. They welcomed us with a display of their traditional high-jumping abilities. Note the huts made of cow dung in the background.
I ended up enjoying the giraffes the most. Watching them up close as they ate was almost as stunning as watching them gracefully run along the open plains.
I saw a group of about 150 baboons cutting across the dirt road we were traveling on. Many had babies either clamping onto their bellies or riding them like a horse.
We watched these three cheetahs for about 45 minutes. They whined for their mother, wrestled and rested.
Towards the end of one day, we witnessed the rare sighting of a leopard cutting across a field. It had in its mouth some sort of deer.
After visiting all the major national parks in Kenya, we ended on the coastal town called Mombasa. We breathed the clean ocean air to help expel the dust in our lungs from the dirt roads we had been traveling on for two weeks. The conditions of these roads took its toll on our bodies and for two days at this five-star resort we just relaxed...when we weren't playing water polo in the pool or scuba diving in the Indian Ocean that is.
Monday, October 20, 2008
Log/Pic 63 Motorcycle-Foliage
After admiring the vibrant colors of Vermont, we rode east to New Hampshire. We followed Lake Winnapasaki around and to it's tip, then stopped at Buzzie's cabin for a bonfire.
That evening we drove to my fun cousins in Hampstead, NH. Sunday was for playing and watching football. We needed some non-motorcycle time after putting on 200 miles per day since the start of the trip. Our last stop was at the cottage in MA, close to where this photo was taken.
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