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Michael D Housewright
  • Housewrighter
  • Imagery
  • Video Production
  • About Michael
  • Contact
  • Housewrighter Musings

Hipstography and Hong Kong - They Love Me

Hong Kong Cash

I was recently published in a very cool online magazine for Hipstamatic photographers called Hipstography. This gallery of 18 of my native Hipstamatic images from my journey to Hong Kong was a real honor. To date, this has been my most successful photography trip and I look forward to returning there soon. I encourage you all to check out Hipstography and give a shout out to its fabulous author, Eric Rozen (the blog is in English and French) While I have been noticeably absent from my blogging duties I have been quite fortunate with my photos lately as I will share in subsequent posts.

I appreciate very much all the support from fellow bloggers over the past 2 years and my art is starting to gain traction thanks largely to your encouragement and readership. Stay tuned :-)

tags: Adventure, Blog, Blogging, Eric Rozen, Hipstamatic, Hipstography, Hong Kong, Images, Michael Housewright, Travel, The Blissful Adventurer
Wednesday 08.28.13
Posted by Michael Housewright
 

Twenty Five 25 Word Travel Essays

Maroon Bells, CO

Twenty Five 25 Word Travel Essays is a quick link to the very cool-

TRAVELING ALONE: 25 Very Very Short Stories  (click this link to read)

I am # 25 and I encourage you to read them all before you get to mine. Also, please subscribe to the wonderful Your Life is a Trip experiential travel blog. I am a regular contributor.

Cheers,

Michael

tags: Blog, Blogging, Images, Italian, Italy, Stories, Your life is a trip, Travel Alone, Michael Housewright
Tuesday 04.23.13
Posted by Michael Housewright
 

Italy Rules - Expanded

Spaghetti with Clams - Le Marche

What a wonderful and sometimes intense set of responses from my previous post - The Italy Rules. I want to take a little time today to expand and expound on some of my thoughts and provide further insight into traveling in Italy.

1. Italy Guides - Here is my short list of who I would travel with and why in Italy.

  • The Rome Digest - This new and wonderful consortium of talented Rome guides includes my dear friend Katie Parla, who is my champion of all things Roman (pork, gelato, beer, wine, art, history, and life) If you are going to spend time in Rome, and you should, let the Rome digest draw a map for you

  • Venice - Row Venice Nan McIlroy is one of the most knowledgeable people in Italy regarding living life, eating well, and getting out on the water. Don't pay 200 euro for a snooze on a gondola. Pay less and get out there and learn to do it yourself. Easily one of the greatest experiences I have ever had in Italy

  • Tuscany - Judy Francini will cook with you and teach you what it means to truly experience life in Tuscany. Reach out to her. She has been cooking successfully for her Italian husband for years. She will teach you how to impress anyone.

  • Puglia - this is a bit biased but I can vouch for the unbeatable quality of Southern Visions Travel. Antonello Losito leads this superior company leading the most authentic excursions into Italy's tastiest region. From 1 day to 1 month, these guys are amazing

  • Le Marche - Mariano Pallottini - the best guides are sometimes not guides. For this truly under-the-radar region no one can show visitors the ropes like Mariano. Please tell him I sent you.

  • Travel for Teens - If you would like to send your son or daughter on one of the most amazing experiences to be had. I strongly suggest using Travel for Teens. Managed and operated by a group of passionate, intelligent, and experienced men and women, TFT is the leader in volunteer and cultural travel in Italy for students. Ask for Ned or Nick and your young adult will be blown away

  • For other Italian regions I have friends of friends and would be happy to do some research for you

2. Fashion - Italians for the most part are some of the finest dressers in the world. My initial post was not meant to imply they were not good as a whole. However, shitty fashion is a worldwide epidemic. I am guilty of lazy fashion choices more frequently than I care to admit. When Italians dress badly, they do it in typically grandiose furor. There is a store in Monopoli, Puglia called "Banana Store." I assume this is some sort of knockoff of Banana Republic as the clothes tend towards the tighter side, made for people with fine and youthful figures. However, the patterns are simply gaudy and the colors never really seen outside of an old Vegas casino. The parade of muffin-top women parading about in Banana Store attire, 2-3 sizes too small is rough on the eyes. I am confident that while conservative and boring in dress, those of us not up to the task of Valentino, Armani, Dolce and G, etc. can rest easy so long as the Banana Store is in business (and the many stores just like them in the bedroom communities up and down the boot).

[caption id="attachment_2138" align="alignnone" width="400"] The Castle of my Dreams[/caption]

3. Italian Driving - While the idea of driving in Italy scares the hell out of many American visitors, driving in Italy is actually about 20% less likely to result in a fatality than driving in the USA. Italians have very strict rules of the road for highway driving. There is absolutely no passing on the right and tractor trailers must drive only in the right lane and only at a lower speed than auto traffic (which is posted clearly on the back of the truck). While parking rules, signal regulations, and almost any rule inside a city zone are frequently fudged, the rules for the highway are followed in most cases and make for a much more predictable driving experience. I really enjoy driving in Italy and feel safer than I do driving in a place like Houston, for example. Italian bus drivers are simply extraordinary drivers. Watching them drive, gesture, smoke, chat, and flirt all without breaking a sweat taking a Pullman down a narrow alley or into the bowels of a vineyard is simply art.

4. Hope - Italy is in very desperate financial straits at the moment (like 20 years ago) and there is a grim light being cast upon the country in regards to its future. Many young people are jobless and without prospects for a decent wage. Government inefficiencies, crime, and corruption siphon enormous amounts of the country's GDP. Life goes on, and sometimes beautifully, in spite of this austere hell. My comments about this are not intended to suggest this is due to a lack of creativity in the Italian people. However, I will say it is up to the citizens of this important country to right the ship. Defeat is an ugly thing to witness when it comes at the hands of giving up. I believe in the Italians I know and love. I believe in the resiliency of this very talented people. I am an advocate for Italy when it seems there are few natives who are. Beat me up for my opinions on fashion, food, and driving, but do not accuse me of diminishing the chances of Italy because I describe life as chaotic. The Universe was born from chaos and so was the Renaissance. I return to Italy over and over not because I need a food fix, or a chance to play in the fields of folly and fantasy. I return to Italy year-after-year to experience living in a primordial space. I come to Italy to argue without offense, to dine with challenging people, and to grow as a person. I see the world more freshly every time I go and I have never lost my fervor for the peninsula in 20+ years of travel.

5. More Two Week Itineraries - This is where I am going to have some fun. Take a look at these if you want to explore some trips in the way of The Blissful Adventurer.

  • Piedmont/Liguria - surprisingly this tremendously rich and hard-working region is not always on the traveler radar. Stay in the towns near Alba and explore Italy's finest red wines in Barolo and Barbaresco. These guys eat unpasteurized cheese any time of day. They have amazing local cows whose grass-fed meat is a dream served raw, and the prices to stay in amazing places like Villa Tiboldi are wonderfully cheap. If one must see the Cinque Terre (thanks again Rick Steves) then why not hike through there, then finish with pure luxury in Piedmont.

  • Sicily - 2 weeks is such a brief time to experience the island which a friend once referred to as a "continent". Food: unreal, Wine: near the top on the planet these days. Weather: nearly tropical at times, People: alive and getting more alive with the growth of the economy (many would argue it is not growing but I believe it is really getting better). Land in Palermo and do the west. Go up to the Aeolian islands and sail out to active volcanoes. Make your way East and drink up the fine wines near Menfi or drink in the Tunisian culture in Mazara del Vallo. See the ruins of Selinunte and Agrigento before setting fire to it all on the slopes of Mt Etna. This is one of the greatest places on the planet to experience life.

  • Sardinia - another island where 2 weeks is hardly enough. The bets pork I have ever eaten was here. The most dramatic contrast in life and landscape exists from the interior mountains to the sea only 1 hour away. Buy a knife, drink wines from vines older than the state of Alaska, and dip it all up with crispy flat-bread and the charming sounds of the local dialects. Sardinia is an Italy few see beyond the glitzy port towns. Get inside the island and you get inside another century. Take a boat there. Flying is boring and being on the open Mediterranean is a real high. Cagliari, Orgosolo, Orosei, Alghero, and Sassari offer the visitor a different view of the world in each stop.

  • Puglia/Basilicata - I like to eat well and without blowing my entire bank account. I like to ride bikes through 1000 year old olive groves. I like grilled meats, pizza, and local beers. I like erudite nightlife and funky old towns. Puglia has it all. From the baroque of Lecce to the Sassi of Matera in Basilcata there is more to do and see along these southern regions than any guide-book can express.

These are my Italy rules expanded and I hope you continue to follow my Italian adventures.

tags: Adventure, Blog, Blogging, Humor, Images, Judy Francini, Juliet Housewright, Le Marche, Michael Housewright, Sicily, Row Venice, Rome Digest, Rome, Piedmont, Southern Visions
Wednesday 04.17.13
Posted by Michael Housewright
 

Life Not Always a Beach in San Francisco

Some Days Life is Not a Leisurely Stroll

The San Francisco bay area is considered to be one of the most dynamic, fascinating, and beautiful places to live on the planet. 99 days out of 100 I agree wholeheartedly, and enjoy my walks, drives, thoughts, meals, and discoveries. The one day out of 100 that goes south, usually goes straight to hell.

I live in Mountian View and take the train to my office in San Francisco 3 to 4 days a week. Juliet and I just moved to a brand new apartment with a great view, modern plumbing, and very little space  for a hefty price tag. Since I promised Juliet if we take the smaller apartment she may decorate as she likes, it quickly became apparent there would be no room for my huge photo editing studio and I would have to take on a bigger office in the city. In order to get all my equipment into my new office I had to take the car to work on Tuesday. Tuesday was my 1% day.

I arrived at 404 Bryant street at approximately 9:45 am. The drive had been much smoother than I expected it to be. While I missed being able to zone out and play with Instagram on my phone, like I do when I take the train, I was able to crank some Glen Hansard on my killer Acura audio system that made the time go  quickly. I arrived at the office and pulled into a metered spot just in front of the building. When I turned off the car I noticed a transient standing just outside my driver window pushing a city trash can towards me.

Transient: Can you get out?

Me: Not if you keep pushing the trash can towards my door

The man backed the can up just enough for me to get out and get a close look at him. He stood nearly 6 feet tall, weighed about 165,  and had greasy hair that was likely darker from dirt than its natural clean color would have been. He wore an over-sized brown coat and blue trousers. His white(ish)T- shirt and beat up athletic shoes were covered in street grime. His Caucasian skin was tan, his eyes were dark and hollow, his motion was affected but not stumbling, and he had only the faintest aroma of b.o. He backed up a bit as I got out of my car and when I saw him staring at my custom black Texas license plate, with a prominent white star, I knew he was going to engage me.

Transient: Are you the governor of Texas?

Me: No, no I'm not (trying to quickly walk away)

Transient: This aircraft is not allowed here. You did not get clearance for this landing space

Me: (quick over-the-shoulder glance and check of my phone)

Transient: I'm going to have to inspect this aircraft (whips open the right side of his jacket to reveal a mimed "badge")

Me: stay away from my car

I walked into the office and the office manager was pleased to see me and  show me options for my new "full-time" desk. I took a moment to announce to the office that there were tryouts for "The Walking Dead" taking place in front of the building and that if anyone wanted to audition they better hurry because I was certain a most qualified person was already parading about in character.

The OM and I went out to grab some more of my things when the vagrant began yelling at us.

Transient: You two have no right to this airspace! I will contact Arnold Schwarzenegger and he will TEAR YOU APART!

I ignored the screaming and carried the last two boxes towards the door. I stepped down into the breezeway just in front of my office when the homeless man jumped in behind and screamed again.

Transient: Hey! SOLDIER!

Me: (startled) If you do that again, things will not go so well for you

Transient: (stepping back and rolling up his grimy sleeves) come on, I will take you in. You CANNOT be in California....TEXAS!

Me: please leave me and my car alone.

He walked back up the stairs and I, stupidly, went across the street for a cup of coffee. I was gone all of ten minutes when I came back to find my car surrounded on all sides by overturned trash cans and my rear passenger-side tire was flat.

Me: (to the homeless man) what the fuck did you do? move all this shit!

I causally noticed a guy was sitting in a nice Lexus sedan talking on the phone and parked just in front of me. (and the action)

Transient: TEXAS is not welcome here. Governor Jerry Brown orders you to leave!

Me: I am calling the cops man, you cannot vandalize my car.

Transient: call anyone you want, CALL! you have no power here (flashing his imaginary badge again) I AM THE LAW

Me: (looking up police number on my iPhone)

Transient: TECHNOLOGY DOWN SOLDIER! (running up to me and shouting in my face)

Me: get away from me!

At that point the guy runs, picks up a soda can from the trash and pours the sugary remnants all over my beautiful black Acura TL. CORRECTION: my wife's beautiful Acura TL, and she does not like me driving it to the city. I had actually never taken the car to the city for work, not once. Now, the one time I do, a mentally disturbed man flattens my tire and pours a sugary, acidic, soda all over it. I am a bit of a hot-head by nature. I had allowed this to go on longer than I ever would if this man had not been insane, but at this point I deemed he was now too volatile, and I had to get rid of him.

Me:  (chasing the guy and screaming like Thor!) Hey MOTHERFUCKER! I will fucking destroy you! I will rip your goddamn throat open and throw your fucking trachea in the road. You fuck! (a tribute to one of my favorite Schwarzenegger rants from the film The Running Man...I though it appropriate)

Transient (running away from me and into the middle of the busy street while once again "putting up his dukes" like a 1930s pugilist) come on TEXAS! wooooaaaah! woaaaah!!

I had assumed my heavy show of bark and implied force would send him running for the hills. As it was. I either had to make good on my claim and beat a mentally ill person to death on the streets of San Francisco in front of my office, or I had to go to plan B.

Luckily for me, the gentleman in the Lexus was actually on the phone to the cops and he shouted over to me that the police were indeed on their way. At this point the homeless man grabbed his shopping cart and began to flee the scene. The cops rolled in, we pointed to the "undercover agent" without a badge, and the officers quickly drug him down and put him in the car.

It turns out that the man had been accosting people all morning along this stretch of Bryant street, and 2 females had been held virtually hostage behind their doors because the man was throwing trash into their breezeways and screaming at them. I honestly felt terrible for the man and went as long as I could trying to ignore him till he forced my hand by maliciously assailing my vehicle. Regardless of the justification I had to become irate with the guy, I still felt like a miserably asshole for threatening the poor bastard.

The police took him in for a 72 hour psych-eval and while I am sure they will find him to be dangerous, they will have little choice but to stuff him full of psych drugs, turn him into a temporarily docile specimen, and then release him into the wild once again to potentially hurt himself or another innocent person.

The state of care for the mentally ill in San Francisco is clearly in grave disrepair. The number of people living in squalor and without any way to protect them, or the public from them, is egregious. I am sure someone can quote me numbers that suggest they receive the best possible care and other impractical nonsense. The fact is this, I am not a small man, and am rather imposing in my demeanor and vocal delivery. If someone is willing to take me on in broad daylight, imagine what they might do to someone less capable of fighting back.

Thank God these days are only 1 in 100.

tags: Adventure, Blogging, Homeless, Michael Housewright, Photography, The Blissful Adventurer, Transients
Thursday 04.04.13
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

San Francisco Dogpatch - A Hipstamatic Tour

Abandoned Warehouse Through A Broken Barrier

San Francisco Dogpatch - A Hipstamatic Tour is a portrait of  a neighborhood right along the bay and down from Potrero Hill. The name is theorized to have been derived from either the proliferation of Dog Fennel that once dominated the area (and still grows in pockets) or packs of wild dogs that used to wait outside the slaughterhouses for scraps. Until recently I had spent little time in this hood say for the occasional Muni ride to a baseball game back in 2005. Now I have a good friend who calls the place home. Dogpatch is a "cool" place to be now with flashy new lofts, great restaurants, and many artisan shops. The beauty here lies in the abandoned warehouses along the water which still dominate the acreage of the area and are some of the most starkly beautiful places I have ever seen.

These first two shots are the interior and exterior of the same abandoned warehouse. The exterior shot shows the myriad of broken windows intermingled with those intact. The fence in the foreground was 8 feet high and covered in razor wire which you may see in more detail if you click for the full-size image. On the far left of this shot and down out of the frame was a small crawl space where I was able to sneak through and find a section of iron grating that had been removed giving me access to the inside with my camera lens. The above interior shot would not have been possible with a DSLR cam as the opening was too small for a lens to have fit. The lighting inside and out on this day was spectacular.

(Both images were shot with iPhone 5 - Hipstamtic Jane Lens and Ina 1982 Film - Processed through Phototoaster and again on Snapseed)

As usual my day of shooting begins with a wonderful breakfast. This orange cake and cappuccino fueled my curiosity and so I decided they should be photographed at the stage which I recognized their greatness.

(Image shot with iPhone 5 - Hipstamatic Foxy Lens and Inas 1982 film - edited on Snapseed)

From the rooftop deck of my friend's brand new apartment I am always drawn to this crane. It is dilapidated, covered in graffiti, and appears too far from the water to have ever been much use. In this image I try to restore its glory and bring it back to a time when it was loading and unloading containers of goods and providing income to a local family. I think I did it proud here shooting from iPhone 5 with Hipstamatic Jane Lens and Ina's 82 Film - processed on snapseed and then once again on Old Photo Pro.

Just around the corner from the crane is the finest butcher in San Francisco, Olivier's Butchery. Olivier hails from France and sources only the finest grass-fed cows from local ranches here in California. He then butchers the animals using traditional French methods to create cuts that are wondrous and lesser known here in the US. I chose the 4th hanging steak from the left in the background. This rare piece cut from the shoulder is known as a Merlan because it has the shape of the fish of the same name. The butcher butterflied the entire piece and scored it crosswise. I cooked it in butter and olive oil for less than 4 minutes total and served with an arugula salad and a nice Chinon wine from France's Loire Valley.

Of course after buying steak (and some cheese) for dinner we were starving and headed over to the brilliant Serpentine for lunch. This restaurant was really the first to have the guts to open in Dogpatch and others have followed their lead. This gorgeous rock cod with crisped skin was served with rapini, broccoli romanesco, and this smear of butternut squash. At $13.95 this is one of the most elegant lunches for the money in SF. (Shot with iPhone 5 Hipstamatic - Jane Lens - and Ina's 82 film - minimal processing on snapseed)

After lunch we dove into the warehouse district on our way to a "park". The building above was clearly still in operation and while the signs make a nice symmetrical touch to my image I think they are a little redundant with the 8 foot fence and topping of razor wire. Every building down here was like Shawshank. (iPhone 5 Hipstamatic with Jane Lens and Pistil Film - Edited on Phototoaster and Snapseed)

The signs pointed to "Warm Water Cove Park" upon arriving the signs suggested a cold water shit hole. A few downtrodden men sat along the water's edge and puffed on reefer. Seagulls made futile fecal dives into the mire only to come up empty and fly in unison the hell out. What the hell is happening here in one of the richest cities on the planet? My images are intended to suggest an era long since past but sadly, these are last week. (iPhone 5 Hipstamatic Jane Lens and Pistil Film - edited on Phototoaster and Snapseed)

I do enjoy the texture from the mud and the channels in the sand from the tide. I did my best here to create stark and interesting images from an environmental fiasco. I would love for these images to be the last of this park in this condition. (iPhone 5 Hipstamatic Wonder Lens and W40 film - edited with snapseed)

Walking back along the grittiest section of 3rd street I encountered a bevy of mobile homes/RVs that were clearly occupied and forever in flux. This was just one of the many signs intended to give the casual viewer a sense of the political frustrations of the local "tenants" (iPhone 5 Hipstamatic Jane Lens Pistil Film edited with phototoaster and snapseed)

This was the final shot I captured of our walk. Sitting on a lonesome corner atop a 5 gallon bucket was this CD compilation. You think Jerry was watching? (iPhone 5 Hipstamatic Jane Lens - Pistil Film - edited in Phototoaster and Snapseed)

More images from Dogpatch from other iPhone apps coming soon.

Cheers,

M

 

tags: Stories, Snapseed, Travel, The Blissful Adventurer, San Francisco, Hipstamatic, Images, Blog, Blogging
Monday 01.14.13
Posted by Sarah Finger
 
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