Divine Bovine

Viñales, Cuba, 2011.

A Few Days in Seattle

A few weeks back I went for a road trip down to Seattle with Sandra, Jon and Mike. Our main reason for the sojourn was to attend the Radiohead show at Key Arena. Having been a fan since Pablo Honey, I’ve only missed one of their tours on the West Coast. This marked my sixth time seeing the band, and they really knocked my socks off once again with an extra drummer, groovy, complex rhythms and deeply emotional music. I could go on, but why not see for yourself with this live studio clip of Bloom: From The Basement. Yeah, they rock.

We went to the Emerald City a day early and unabashedly embraced the full-blown tourist routine. We filled Pike Brewing growler’s at the Pike Place Market, checked out the infamous Seattle Gum Wall (on the advice of our border guard, of all people), people-watched at the Post (including the colourful, surreal masses attending Sakura-Con – now that was interesting!), bowled in Capitol Hill at night, rode the Monorail to Seattle Center and sat under the Space Needle before checking out the exhibits and jam rooms at Experience Music Project (a must see). Of course, we hit a couple bottle shops on our way back north, loading up on Cascadian craft brews that cost twice as much here in Canada. It was a whirlwind couple days, but with great friends and awesome tunes, that’s my kind of road trip.

Seattle, Washington, 2012.

I got some of my favourite shots on this block for the Disappearing Main Street project. The bold colour and early light was a great combo that morning on Vancouver’s Main Street. Please check out the project as we post images from one block each day until we get to 33rd Ave.

mainstvan's avatar{Disappearing} Main Street

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Bicycle Camping Gear


Keeping with the editorial/bike theme for a minute, I’d like to share a short piece I wrote for Momentum Magazine‘s spring edition (March/April #55) called Bike Camping Gear. We took a selection of MSR gear up to Lillooet Lake, BC for a few nights under the stars last summer and tested a tent, mattress, cook set and utensils. Check out the story for my observations and a few more pics. This is one of my favourite camping spots near Vancouver and I try to return annually for a few nights on this beautiful lake.

Momentum’s Goody Basket

Momentum Magazine just released their second annual Goody Basket gear guide with the May/June issue (#56). I shot the cover one spring afternoon on the seawall with publisher Mia Kohout. We picked up a beautiful Biria Citi bicycle from our friends at JV Bike and dressed it up with some brand new Nantucket Cisco rattan panniers, stuffing those with goodies from the market. Below you can see how the image was designed into the cover and a few outtakes from the shoot.

Vancouver, 2012.

Cordillera de Ansilta, Argentina

Cordillera de Ansilta, Argentina

Pouring over the archives for that shot from Barreal I posted last week, I had a chance to look with fresh eyes at my collection from the San Juan province in Argentina. Not that I’d really forgotten, but the photos sparked memories of how great that trip was and I’m looking forward to sharing more images from those two months in South America. For now, here’s a look at the Cordillera de Ansilta – home to the highest peaks in the Americas – including Cerro Mercedario (6727m) on the far right. This shot looks across La Pampa Leoncito, a completely flat, bone-dry lake bed in the Calingasta Valley, San Juan, Argentina.

Barreal, Argentina, 2007.

Dusk in Trinidad

Dusk in Trinidad, Cuba

Thin shafts of light remain in Trinidad, Cuba moments before sundown on Christmas Eve, 2011.

Riding Bikes: Schindelhauer’s Ludwig XIV

Ludwig XIV

The Schindelhauer I rode a few months back for Momentum Magazine is no longer in my stable. Don’t worry about me though ;)
I have a couple other bikes I’m riding and reviewing as spring comes into effect here in Vancouver. We have a short piece in the latest edition of Momentum about this bike, and I wanted to share this ‘portrait’ of the Schindelhauer Ludwig XIV I shot on top of Little Mountain at Queen Elizabeth Park. That’s Washington’s Mount Baker in the background on this crisp late-winter afternoon.

Vancouver, BC, 2012.

Blowing Smoke in Viñales, Cuba

In Viñales, Cuba we met a man on a horse. He took us into a casa de tabaco amongst the red earth fields and young tobacco plants. Inside, mojitos were prepared using peso rum and honey, the best in the west. Hand-rolled chica cigars were offered, with the larger chico version saved for himself. We sat and listened to the story of the tobacco plant, it’s origin as a seedling in soil, soon splitting into a broad-leafed lily-like plant. Row after row of these plants stretch outside from the casa to the mogotes in the near distance. Slants of light spilled through the thatched roof and cast a diffused spell on the ritualistic table – matches, mint, rum, tobacco, honey and now malanga – a furry, tuber root cooked up similarly to lightly mashed potatoes. It has a rich, nutty flavour and a creamy texture, prepared as they had done.

The malanga, mojito and cigar combo soothed as we were kept rapt with attention, watching the veguero carefully prepare another drink. He slowly smokes his cigar without ashing. A good cigar, he says, will keep it’s ash in tact up to 3cm before dropping. The whiter the ash, the higher the quality of tobacco in the roll. Another farmer comes in from the bright fields, stoking a fire and cooking up some more malanga. He mashes with a silver fork. The horses outside whinny with the approach of cattle. A roll of 25 cigars is offered, wrapped in palm leaves, a natural way to keep the humidity intact without plastics or metal. We buy a good supply, clink a glass one last time and remove ourselves from the relaxing confines of the casa and into the afternoon light. Shadows have changed on the mogotes since we went inside, vultures circle ahead and our horses are anxious to saunter. It’s time to ride again.

Viñales, Cuba, 2011.

The Malecón: A Classic Scene

Havana's Malecon

Can it get any more classic than walking the length of Havana’s Malecón with a bottle of ‘peso rum’ in hand as the sun makes it’s descent into the Caribbean? Doubt it. Wandering from La Habana Vieja to the Hotel Nacional had to be some of the best miles we put on our shoes in Cuba. The drama, romance and crashing waves you’ve heard all about are not exaggerated and a visit to the island’s largest city would be remiss without a stroll along this famous seawall.

Havana, Cuba, 2011.