Bosporus Sightseeing Cruise, Istanbul 2013

Posted in Architecture, History, Tourism on November 6th, 2023 by judy

In this post I’m going to show some photographs of Istanbul related to the Bosporus: a Bosporus cruise and sights along the Bosporus. And next comes Ukraine! We just added a few days in Istanbul before our Ukraine Viking cruise.

Dolmabahce Mosque
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The Trees of Topkapi Palace, 2013

Posted in Nature, Tourism on November 6th, 2023 by judy

We toured Topkapi Palace on our 2013 visit to Istanbul. Since it was very crowded and I did not feel like standing in line to go into a museum, I stayed outside and photographed whatever I found. Part of what I found was very interesting trees, especially their bark.

I will start with the famous hollow tree. I read that a fungus attacked but not kill some of the trees, and some became hollow. (I think the black interior of the hollow tree was applied by man, not nature.)

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Topkapi Palace, Istanbul 2013

Posted in Architecture, History, Tourism, Urban on November 5th, 2023 by judy

The Topkapi Palace is now a museum but in the 15th and 16th centuries it served as the main residence and administrative headquarters of the Ottoman sultans. I must say our visit was not as pleasant as it could have been. First it was raining, and second it was so crowded there were very long lines to get into any of the buildings. So we mostly wandered the grounds, which were beautiful. It is also huge and we did not have a guidebook.

Gate of Salutation
Church of Hagia Irene
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Shopping and dining in Istanbul, 2013

Posted in Uncategorized on November 5th, 2023 by judy

Istanbul residents must love to eat, because there is food everywhere: restaurants, take-out, and street stands. Then there is food to buy to prepare at home, which is always beautifully displayed. Teas you have never heard of, spices everywhere… Then there is tourist shopping. All of us have to buy something, even if it is not a handmade Turkish carpet.

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Blue Mosque and Hagia Sophia, Istanbul 2013

Posted in Tourism on November 4th, 2023 by judy

On our way to our cruise in Ukraine, we spent a couple of nights in Istanbul, Turkey. We stayed in the Conrad Hotel in Besiktas, close to downtown Istanbul.

Blue Mosque (Sultan Ahmed Mosque)
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Acoma Pueblo

Posted in Backroads, History, New Mexico, Tourism on November 2nd, 2023 by judy

We toured Acoma Pueblo with Bob and Zeina Cook in late October 2018. Also known as Sky City, it is situated on a 367-foot high mesa in New Mexico. You check in for a tour at the Sky City Cultural Center and ride to the top of the mesa on a road that was blasted into the rock face in the 1950s. The original footpaths can be used for your return trip if you choose. (Click on any photo for a larger view.)

Below left is the view of the mesa from the road to the mesa. On the right is a view from the mesa.

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Old Feed Mill

Posted in Architecture, Backroads, Hill Country, History, Old and rusty, Texas, Tourism on October 29th, 2023 by judy

I discovered the old feed mill in Johnson City, Texas, in 2008. It had been converted into a complex of businesses that were no longer in operation and it was already in disrepair. I took it upon myself to attempt to photograph it. Recently I came back to these photos and realized there seems to be very few photos of it on the internet, so I decided to process my photos for a story. The complex has now been turned into the Science Mill and it is from their site that I got its history.

This photo is the widest view of the complex that I have, so I decided to start with it. As you can see, someone went to a huge amount of work decorating the buildings. Stay tuned for many photos of the complex I took in 2008, 2009 and one last shot of what the street side looked like in 2018. The Science Mill was established in 2012.

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Taos Pueblo

Posted in Architecture, Backroads, History, New Mexico on October 28th, 2023 by judy

Taos Pueblo is a National Historic Landmark and a World Heritage Site. According to the Taos Pueblo website “the multi-storied adobe buildings have been continuously inhabited for over 1000 years.” You can read an interesting introduction to the site on the nps.gov Taos Pueblo website.

Although it was closed to the public for a while during the covid pandemic, it is now open again. These photographs were taken in June 2009. Click on any photo for a larger view.

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Taos, New Mexico

Posted in Backroads, New Mexico, Tourism on October 26th, 2023 by judy

The Taos area is very interesting, but the Taos Plaza itself is, for me, a one-time visit place. It is an artsy community, so if you want to look at or purchase local art, and view New Mexico art in galleries, you will find it interesting. Articles about Taos after saying art, museums, shops, restaurants send you out of the square to what I agree are interesting places: the Taos Pueblo, Rancho de Taos Plaza, and the Rio Grande Gorge Bridge. I’ve already done a post for Rancho de Taos and I will prepare one (or more) on the Taos Pueblo.

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Ranchos de Taos Plaza

Posted in Backroads, New Mexico, Tourism on October 25th, 2023 by judy

This is not the town of Taos itself, but an area outside of town called Ranchos de Taos. The Ranchos de Taos Plaza is easily accessible and I think very interesting. The centerpiece is San Francisco de Assisi Mission Church. The original mission church was begun in 1772 and the current building was completed in 1815. It is a National Historic Landmark.

In 1840 Matt Field 1 wrote of Ranchos de Taos during his travels through New Mexico: “This town called the ranch lies at the base of a gigantic mountain and is watered by a swift stream that rushes from the ravine… It contains about 300 houses, and those are built completely together, forming a wall, enclosing a large square, in the center of which stands a church.”

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