Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Nature: Green Lake



Tragöß is a municipality in the district of Bruck an der Mur in Styria, Austria. It is home to Green Lake (Grüner See), which dries out almost completely in the fall. In the spring the lake is filled with snow melt runoff. This gives the lake crystal clear water, the existing rocks and meadow give the lake its green color.

Throughout the frozen winter months the area is almost completely dry and is used as a county park. It is a particular favorite site for hikers.

But as soon as the temperatures begin to rise in spring, the ice and snow on the mountaintops begins to melt and runs down into the basin of land below.

The park fills up with ice-cold crystal clear water, which gets its distinctive green coloring from the grass and foliage beneath.

The water levels rise from about one or two meters deep in the winter to as much as 10 meters in the late spring and early summer.

The waters are at their highest in June when it becomes a mecca for divers keen to explore the rare phenomenon, before the waters recede at the end of July.

Pause the playlist in my right margin to enjoy the music with this video of Green Lake.

via Stumble Upon, Wikipedia, YouTube and dailyuk.

Monday, September 20, 2010

North Coast Sunday



Many people take a full week (or two) vacation once per year. We schedule our time off so we can have multiple 3-day weekends, and frequent day trips.



Escaping the city for an afternoon at the Oregon Coast is always a good choice.



There's a fantastic fresh, local, organic cafe in Canon Beach that serves up comfort food done right. We adore their pulled pork po'boy and homemade slaw. Cozy booths fashioned from upcycled shabby chic 1930s bed frames, and a playlist of Motown and classic Jazz standards doesn't hurt either.



Canon Beach is truly a town for tourists. Plenty of boutiques, galleries and cafes. Two old-time candy/ice cream parlors and a packed-out family-run grocery store (read: not a chain) are also good features.





We often drive a bit south and end up on the beaches of Arcadia and Hug Point. Less people, more intriguing rocks and tide pools full of sea critters.





There's a few neat inlets and sea caves to explore; carved by the ocean over thousands of years.



One day we won't return to the city. "Going home" will mean to our beach home, and we look forward and build our plans for that goal with every visit to the place that rests our souls.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

V is for Vacation



We've got a plan, a reservation, and in a few weeks we're heading for Oyster Bay--aka Bremerton, Washington. No more virtual vacations, folks, this is gonna be the real deal. What's cooler--we're trying a different approach, skipping the pricey, impersonal hotel route, and going with a home stay.



See, I'm one of those people who actually looks at, and occasionally clicks on, the ads on Facebook. This time I discovered a very nifty *new* service called airbnb. What, you ask, is an airbnb? From the website:

Airbnb is a marketplace where you can list & book anything from a couch to a castle by the night. With a reach of over 4000 cities in 131 countries, Airbnb is a global movement empowering everyday people to travel.

We're staying in a bungalow on the water. We have the entire lower level of the house, the garden, two kayaks, daily breakfast, jet tub, laundry, movie and book library and free wireless. Just up the road are restaurants, cafes, yoga, antique shops and the ferry to downtown Seattle. All that and the beauty of Puget Sound for about half the cost of a regular, mid-price chain hotel room. No kidding.


The folks we're staying with sound neat. He is the founder of a software company, an outdoors organization, and an avid mountain climber. She is a photographer and fiber artist who takes budding photographers on local photo walks. If we want to learn how to bake sourdough bread, that's an option as well.


Getting away is always good and we're overdue for an adventure. I'll let you know how the airbnb service pans out, and if it's as good as I suspect it might be we may just have found our new way to travel.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

R is for Road Trip



Suitcase in hand
In yet another new city.
She places it on the ground,
Across from a metal container
Steps on top of it.
And starts to sing.

This is how she keeps going.
Travel she must.

Verse from Vivacious Photography
Travel art and gear via Etsy


click grid to enlarge and go shopping!

Friday, March 26, 2010

Travel: Gig Harbor











I dream of traveling, I plan road trips, I have wanderlust. It's a form of stress-reduction. Scenic photography combined with researching these places that I have not been. I even enjoy the process of looking up flights, comparing train schedules to car rentals, and reading reviews to find just the right lodging. My mom used to tell me that I was left by the gypsies in a basket on her doorstep.

The images in this post feature the charming town of Gig Harbor, Washington. Only 150 driving miles from Portland, something tells me we might be visiting soon.

Happy Weekend...and, if you're traveling, even more so!

Please click images for sources.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Flickr Fave: New York City, USA

My friend, Marty, is headed to The Big Apple tomorrow--here's hoping she has a fantastic trip! No, I've haven't been yet. Yes, it's on my list. People to see, places to go, things to do.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Hiking at Wahkeena Falls











We went for a hike last Sunday, in the Columbia River Gorge. We cruised the Old River Highway, and the images in this post feature Wahkeenah Falls and the viewpoint at the Vista House. These inspiring natural gems are less than an hour from home--we are so blessed!

We're making plans for more hiking for the spring and summer in and around Portland and Oregon. Tell me about your favorite places to get into nature...

Images by Tina Pfeiffer - Apt 3 Photography, 2010.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Apt 3 Photography




When gas was cheap - Central Oregon, 2009


Backlot Tour - Universal Studios, 2008


Vista Ridge Tunnel - Portland, Oregon, 2008


Boiler Bay - Central Oregon Coast, 2008

Sleepy - Oregon Zoo, 2008

If you've been reading awhile, you may remember this post about my husband, Chris, and his interest in photography. He has just began a correspondence course through the New York Institute of Photography with the end goal of changing his career path.
In that past post I promised to showcase more of his work on occasion. The bad news is that I've been rather lax in making that a reality. The good news is that he recently jumped in the cyber waters and has created his own blog to share his photography!
As any wife would, I'm putting in a shameless plug to all of you to follow his new adventure. His style is more photos, less text so you're sure to enjoy a regular visit to Apt 3 Photography.

Please consider subscribing and sharing comments--encouragement and constructive criticism are both very much appreciated.

All images in this post by Chris Pfeiffer aka Apt 3 Photography, copyright 2006-2010 ~ all rights reserved.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Travel: Astoria, Oregon








Photos by Tina, Pfeiffer Photos © 2010 ~ all rights reserved.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Travel: Teardrop Trailers



A Teardrop is a compact travel trailer consisting of a sleeping cabin and a kitchen compartment. The Camp-Inn is styled after teardrop travel trailers from the 1930's and 1940's. A Teardrop gets its name from its unique streamlined shape. Teardrops were popular in the 1930-40’s and have recently been regaining popularity.


Their streamlined shape, small size and low weight allowed for easy pulling by the, under100 horsepower, engines of the 1930-40's. Teardrop trailers reduce gas mileage and you don't need a truck or large SUV. Teardrops are pulled easily by a mid size family car or smaller SUV's. The Camp-Inn trailer weighs as little as 850 lb. and as little as 130 lb. tongue weight.

Although Teardrops are small, there's have more than enough room for 2-3 people. The Camp-Inn sleeping cabin holds a Queen size bed (on 500/550/560 models), and room for storing gear. The sleeping cabin is hard sided and topped without a need for set up or tear-down. The sleeping cabin can double as storage/cargo space during travel.

The kitchen area is accessible from the outside rear of the trailer. The kitchen compartment, has ample storage space for a cooler, dry-goods, portable stove, cooking and eating equipment and utensils. The Camp-Inn kitchen has 5 feet of counter top and lots of storage. The kitchen can be used with minimal setup. It even works well for a quick meal at a roadside rest area.

It comes fully loaded (mattress, linens, pots, utensils, and more), so you do a lot less packing. Rentals are just $175 for two nights―a fraction of an RV’s rental cost.

You can pick up or some companies will deliver to local parks.

Insider tip: Extras like espresso makers and solar shower fixtures are available for $5 to $10 each.
Can I tell you how much I am LOVING this idea? Makes me want to start planning road trips for summer and fall right here in the middle of winter!

Info via Tiny Camper, and Sunset, image #1 via Sunset {by Jack Journey}, additional images via Google.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Neat Things: Globes



Globes definitely qualify as a neat thing! I just listed a vintage beauty in my Etsy shop last night {see photo above, click it to visit the shop}. In researching the age of my globe, I learned a bunch of interesting info on the company it was manufactured by, and thought to myself, "Self, this info would make a rather nifty blog post." I hope you think so, too.



When Luther Replogle quit his job during the Great Depression to make and sell globes, critics thought he’d mapped out a surefire route to failure. But Replogle had more than a novel idea; he had faith in his product.

“Luther came up with the credo that there should be a globe in every home,” says Dan Dillon, 53, co-president of Replogle Globes, the world’s largest globe manufacturer, in Broadview, Ill. (pop. 8,264).



In the late 1920s, Replogle was a salesman for a Chicago company that sold supplies, including globes, to schools. Replogle was convinced that information-hungry Americans would eagerly buy globes for their homes so they could pinpoint places that were in the news.

During the nation’s bleakest economic time, he quit his job, borrowed $500 from friends and family, and founded Replogle Globes in 1930. His wife, Elizabeth, and one employee made the cardboard and plaster globes in their basement and Replogle sold them from his Model T Ford. For three years, sales barely kept food on the table, but Replogle never lost faith in the power of globes to educate and inspire. In 1933, he got his break when he designed an 8-inch souvenir globe for the World’s Fair in Chicago. During the fair, Replogle sold more than 100,000 globes for $1.75 each—and put Replogle Globes on the map.



About the same time, President Franklin D. Roosevelt started his “fireside chats,” a series of radio talks in which he often began his remarks about foreign affairs by telling listeners, “Now, get out your globe.”

Today, 150 Replogle employees manufacture more than 100 models of globes, from 4.3-inch diameter orbs that sell for $9.99 to 32-inch handcrafted, illuminated masterpieces that retail for $8,500. The company sells more than a million globes printed in 20 languages each year, and people still get out their globes to track world events.



You can read more about the Replogle company here and here.

All globe items featured in this post were discovered on Etsy--click the photos for more info and to shop!

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Travel: West Coast Autumn




This post is dedicated to my brother--a very get-way-outdoors-into-nature kind of guy who just happens to be turning 39 today. Happy Birthday, Phil! :)

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Travel List: Napali Coast ~ Kauai, Hawaii


On the North Shore of Kauai, the incredible Napali Coast overlooks panoramic views of the vast Pacific Ocean. Along this spectacular coastline, you can walk amongst velvet green cliffs towering into the sky and cascading waterfalls plummeting into deep, narrow valleys.



The only land access to this enchanted place is via the Kalalau Trail, an 11-mile trail that crosses five different valleys and ends at secluded Kalalau Beach. The hike into Kalalau is often challenging, and sometimes even dangerous, with narrow sections and heavy rainfall that can make the topsoil muddy.


Many hikers choose to break the trail up into two days, setting up camp at the beach of Hanakapiai, then heading to Kalalau the next morning. Camping permits are required from the State Parks office in Lihue. A trail guide is recommended and hiking during the winter months is discouraged.


Even non-hikers can enjoy the amazing scenery. Zodiac boat tours and kayaking trips can give you access to awe-inspiring views of the Napali Coast, while helicopter tours can show you scenic Napali areas that aren't accessible by land or water.


QUICK FACTS
Name:
Napali Coast

What is it:
Iconic mountainous shoreline on Kauai's north shore

What to do:
Guided hikes, boat rides, air tours, take incredible photos of the Napali Coast

What to bring:
Hiking shoes, sunscreen, insect repellent, rain poncho, camera, food and plenty of water, when camping please consult with a hiking guide

Directions:
Take Kuhio Highway (Route 56) and head to Haena State Park at the northwest end. The drive is 1-1/2 hours from Lihue Airport.

Info via. Images via Flickr.