...of Ushguuuuuli.... February 2009, as usual.
Well, this one's hardly a panorama as the technical definition of such is an aspect ratio of at least 2:1. But it was assembled from a few shots put together.
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Sunday, November 28, 2010
and now back to our regular programming .]
Yes, that's right, another panorama of Ushguli or part thereof, from another different angle, but also from February 2009. I was going pretty crazy shooting these in that month, especially given that I had no idea when I'd find a programme for doing the assembling of the panoramas from the individual images. Seems to have paid off - it's not every year I get to spend a winter or 2 in this fabulous if forbidding location.
Labels:
Caucasus,
panorama,
Republic of Georgia,
Svaneti,
Ushguli
Thursday, November 25, 2010
An Open Letter to the Georgian Government
Dear Sirs and Madams,
I am given to understand that the blogs, Facebook posts and other more public communications output of the TLG foreign staff are occasionally translated into Georgian and read out publicly for your consumption. Therefore, having something to say to you as a group and now discovering that I may well have the means to be heard:
Please do something about the garbage situation in Mestia and all of Svaneti.
The renovation of the town, and the massive attention currently being given to the whole province, are a source of delight to me, a resident of Georgia since late 1999 and recent home buyer (along with my wife) in Etseri. At last, some attention being given to this magnificent, far-flung gem of a region!
I now teach English in Mestia's No. 1 Middle School; and frequently on my way to or from work, I see a nice wheelbarrow of rubbish being dumped straight off a bridge into the Enguri far below. "Out of sight, out of mind", right? If I can't see it, it's no longer my problem. We used to think the same way about the world's lakes and even its oceans - and look at them now! The 5 Great Lakes between Canada and the USA are a great example of the terrifying result of decades of uncontrolled dumping.
Plastic bottles and bags, mattresses, tin cans, glass - anything which won't burn goes straight into that marvelous river, or doesn't get that far but chokes its banks instead.
There is a fine for littering being instituted in various places in Georgia already. What will you, its government, fine yourselves for the ongoing environmental catastrophe still being allowed to occur elsewhere? It's only the people's fault when there is an alternative, when their rubbish is being dealt with by the state. Until then, they are only doing what they can in the situation. Glass is as biodegradeable as rock - no surprise, as they are both mineral. Metals - they do slowly degrade chemically, by corrosion. Plastics? All sorts of nice possibilities there, depending on the variety, mostly turning into chemicals too long to pronounce and too mutagenic or just plain deadly to ignore.
My 18-year-old hiking boots recently gave up the ghost right here in Mestia, after a good walk near the Koruldi Lakes. What can I do?
1) Throw them straight into the Enguri myself.
2) Put them with my host family's unburnable trash and forget about them - make them their problem.
3) Burn them in the family stove! Mmmm, all that rubber and leather!
4) Take them out of Svaneti myself, by marshroutka (I don't have a vehicle at the moment), and throw them away in a city bin in Batumi, Tbilisi or somewhere similarly civilized.
5) Deliver them, and all my other non-biodegradeable garbage, to the Town Hall of Tbilisi and leave it all there on the sidewalk, with a note attached saying, "Welcome to Mestia", while the TV cameras are running.
Yours most sincerely,
Tony Hanmer
I am given to understand that the blogs, Facebook posts and other more public communications output of the TLG foreign staff are occasionally translated into Georgian and read out publicly for your consumption. Therefore, having something to say to you as a group and now discovering that I may well have the means to be heard:
Please do something about the garbage situation in Mestia and all of Svaneti.
The renovation of the town, and the massive attention currently being given to the whole province, are a source of delight to me, a resident of Georgia since late 1999 and recent home buyer (along with my wife) in Etseri. At last, some attention being given to this magnificent, far-flung gem of a region!
I now teach English in Mestia's No. 1 Middle School; and frequently on my way to or from work, I see a nice wheelbarrow of rubbish being dumped straight off a bridge into the Enguri far below. "Out of sight, out of mind", right? If I can't see it, it's no longer my problem. We used to think the same way about the world's lakes and even its oceans - and look at them now! The 5 Great Lakes between Canada and the USA are a great example of the terrifying result of decades of uncontrolled dumping.
Plastic bottles and bags, mattresses, tin cans, glass - anything which won't burn goes straight into that marvelous river, or doesn't get that far but chokes its banks instead.
There is a fine for littering being instituted in various places in Georgia already. What will you, its government, fine yourselves for the ongoing environmental catastrophe still being allowed to occur elsewhere? It's only the people's fault when there is an alternative, when their rubbish is being dealt with by the state. Until then, they are only doing what they can in the situation. Glass is as biodegradeable as rock - no surprise, as they are both mineral. Metals - they do slowly degrade chemically, by corrosion. Plastics? All sorts of nice possibilities there, depending on the variety, mostly turning into chemicals too long to pronounce and too mutagenic or just plain deadly to ignore.
My 18-year-old hiking boots recently gave up the ghost right here in Mestia, after a good walk near the Koruldi Lakes. What can I do?
1) Throw them straight into the Enguri myself.
2) Put them with my host family's unburnable trash and forget about them - make them their problem.
3) Burn them in the family stove! Mmmm, all that rubber and leather!
4) Take them out of Svaneti myself, by marshroutka (I don't have a vehicle at the moment), and throw them away in a city bin in Batumi, Tbilisi or somewhere similarly civilized.
5) Deliver them, and all my other non-biodegradeable garbage, to the Town Hall of Tbilisi and leave it all there on the sidewalk, with a note attached saying, "Welcome to Mestia", while the TV cameras are running.
Yours most sincerely,
Tony Hanmer
Monday, November 22, 2010
Saturday, November 20, 2010
A Friend's Wedding, Etseri, November 2010
Wedding feast, now, in our village. Top, Lali & I happened to be sitting opposite 3 lovely old ladies; the middle one is the widow of Mikeil Khergiani, fabled Svan mountaineer, who died at his favourite occupation in Italy in the late 1960s, and to our left is his sister. Middle - the happy couple arriving at his house for the feast. Bottom, their table in the marquee, at which about 250 people were guests.
Labels:
Caucasus,
etseri,
Republic of Georgia,
Svaneti,
wedding
Thursday, November 18, 2010
A Friend's Wedding, Mestia, November 2010
Ramaz G, former mayor of the village where we've bought a house in Svaneti, and his lovely bride in an ancient, 2-story Orthodox church in Mestia. Top, being led around the altar 3 times by the priest. I didn't use flash as it's fatal to frescoes; hence the slow shutter speeds and motion blur, which is all my style in such situations anyway. Crowns are held over the couple's heads by their best man and maid of honour - this is what, above Ramaz's head, is catching the ray of light.
Middle, the church itself. Bottom, the ray of light again, and smoke from delicious incense still made to the Old Testament Jewish recipe.
Middle, the church itself. Bottom, the ray of light again, and smoke from delicious incense still made to the Old Testament Jewish recipe.
Labels:
Caucasus,
Mestia,
Orthodox Church,
Republic of Georgia,
Svaneti,
wedding
Monday, November 15, 2010
Panorama: Central Ushguli, February 2009
You visit a location once (in landscape photography) for the place itself, and then may times for the lighting.
(By the way, left-click once on any of these photos to see it larger.)
(By the way, left-click once on any of these photos to see it larger.)
Labels:
Caucasus,
reflection,
Svaneti,
Ushguli
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Panorama: Upper Ushguli, February 2009
Another stitched panorama - I took so many sets of these from different locations, now it's time to reap the rewards at last. The small house just left of centre is where I spent 2 winters while teaching English in this fabulous location.
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Panorama: Upper Ushguli, Dawn, February 2009
It was plenty cold enough as I took the frames which, assembled, became this panorama; but the lighting of the long sunrise rays made it all worthwhile. Mts. Lamaria at right and Shkhara background centre.
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Panorama: Above Mulakhi, December 2008
This one's got Ushba's twin peaks at left of centre, in the distance, and more to the right of that (near centre), the long village of Mulakhi.
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Panorama: Lower Ushguli, December 2008
Another stitched panorama, featuring the lower 2 hamlets of Ushguli, also from December 2008, before we had much snow. (Later in the year there was enough, lasting long enough, to make the village sick of it, as they usually are by the time of mid-April.) Right in the middle is a church with fresco fragments on its outer wall.
Friday, November 5, 2010
Panorama: Above Ushguli, December 2008
I've begun stitching together panoramas from old sets of photos, some digital originals, others scans from film. This is from digital frames, above Ushguli, with Mt. Shkhara in the distant left-of-centre background - Georgia's tallest mountain.
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