100 Days In Glacier

In 2001, a friend of mine and his father set out on a camping trip in Glacier National Park. It was a 14 mile hike from the trailhead to the campsite, and along the way, they met some doctors that were on the same journey. My friend sped up towards the end of the hike to see where they'd be sleeping, and while he was ahead, his father had a heart attack. The doctors found his father, did some life saving doctor things and had him airlifted out of the park to a hospital. There also happened to be a long distance runner already at the campsite who, the following morning after the helicopter came, ran down the 14 mile trail and the extra several miles to my friend's car, and drove it back to the trailhead to save time for the rest of the group. It's a hell of a story that I haven't been able to stop thinking about all weekend. My friend's father was at the party where the story was told and still keeps in touch and visits the doctors that saved his life. Great ending.The above picture is from Glacier Park Magazine's 100 Days In Glacier feature that celebrates the park's 100th birthday in 2010. More after the jump.

Mikael Kennedy

I've been emailing with Mikael Kennedy back and forth for the past several months, and although the two of us live less than a mile from one another, we have yet to meet. Busy lives I suppose, although Mikael's involves a bit more traveling, something that I've been trying hard to keep up with.Peter Hay Halpert has posted a large online gallery of Mikael's polaroids for your viewing pleasure, so go on over and be sure to take a look. No word on the show dates, but let's hope it's up sometime at the beginning of the new year, so the two of us can finally say hello.

Documerica: David Hiser

On December 2, 1971, its first anniversary, the EPA inititated Project Documerica to document the successes and failures of the EPA in battling environmental degradation. “EPA has a clear mandate to arrest pollution and to help improve the American environment,” said William D. Ruckelshaus, head of the EPA, in a 1971 press release. “We are working toward a new environmental ethic in this decade which will bring profound change in how we live, and in how we provide for future generations. It is important that we document that change so future generations will understand our successes and our failures.” (via)The pictures above are David Hiser's contribution to Documerica, a series of photos of America's southwest desert. See more after the jump.documerica31documerica73814165901_aafa637de2_o-1documerica9cowfiredocumerica10

Burrowing Owl

Smithsonian National Zoo Flickr:

The Smithsonian’s National Zoo welcomed two burrowing owl chicks Aug. 2—the first hatching of this species at the Zoo in 30 years. The chicks’ parents, a 5-year-old male and 4-year-old female, have been at the Zoo since June 2006.The last time burrowing owls successfully bred at the National Zoo was in the late 1970s. A recent population-management plan recommended breeding the Zoo’s current adult pair. The chicks are with their parents in the Zoo’s Bird House. Currently, there is semi-transparent filter paper covering their exhibit, providing the chicks with privacy. As they become more comfortable with their new surroundings, the paper will slowly be removed.

Look: Burrowing Owl as an adult

Woodstock

Smithsonian Magazine has a small article about the photograph that graces the cover of Woodstock:

Early Sunday morning, Uzzle, happily stuck at Woodstock, left his makeshift tent with two Leicas strapped round his neck. "Gracie Slick of Jefferson Airplane was singing, bringing up the dawn," he remembers. "And just magically this couple stood up and hugged." They kissed, smiled at each other, and the woman leaned her head on the man's shoulder. "I just had time to get off a few frames of black and white and a few of color, then the light was over and the mood was over," Uzzle says of what would become his best-known photograph. His subjects never noticed.

Youtube: Jefferson Airplane - Won't You Try