Excellent picture Barry!

I have a similar one I took of the Arno river in Florence on my wall.




--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, turquoiseb <no_reply@...> wrote:
>
> So it's Friday, and the End Of The World to boot. Cool.
> 
> So I finished all my work for the week a few minutes ago, and then chose
> to celebrate it by taking a walk around the 'hood I live in, prior to
> celebrating it by going out to dinner with my extended adoptive family.
> 
> And the walk was just smokin', which is why I'm writing about it. 
> Really uplifting and wonderful. Consider this my belated Wussy Wednesday
> submission. Also, just in case the world really does end in a few
> minutes, consider it one of my last comments on it.
> 
> One of the benefits of living in a tight,
> crowded-by-some-people's-standards, inner-city, European 'hood is that
> you get to Walk In History. The house behind ours, situated on the canal
> that used to be just inside the fortified walls of this medieval city,
> was built in 1660. The canal predates it, commerce tending in history to
> predate the lifestyles of those who profited from it.
> 
> The Herengracht is not officially one of the biggest or most significant
> of the waterways in my city, but it has its charms. All of the buildings
> gracing its banks are built using the same Dutch red brick building
> style as the 1660 house, although many were built more recently. And
> they're cool and all. But turn aside from them, walk a few feet to the
> actual canal itself and look around, and what you find yourself in is a
> world of Light On Water.
> 
> The water in the canal is not static. It's not a passive watcher of this
> whole scene. It's more of an active participant, taking the light
> reflected from the street lights and the house lights and the moon and
> the occasional (it's the Netherlands) star, and reflecting them on,
> cooler than they were when they arrived.
> 
> It's almost as if the water in the canal is an artist, taking the
> incoming light and then bouncing it off of its everchanging surface and
> reflecting it onward kinda bent, and thus more interesting. A
> streetlight seen directly is all solid and all...kinda boring. But look
> at the reflection of the streetlight in the Herengracht and you see this
> pulsating, everchanging globule of light, with no fixed boundaries and
> no particular need to adapt itself to them.
> 
> It's a cool effect. I kinda like it.
> 
>  
> [https://fbcdn-sphotos-h-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-snc7/598589_530703030\
> 287168_411824051_n.jpg]
>


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