The Era after Social Distancing - Los Angeles Travel Photographer

On June 15, 2021, California reopened. Just like that, a floodgate is all of sudden lifted. And I find myself remaining here, trying to rehearse what I used to be so good at doing back when there was no pandemic, mandatory masks or social-distancing yet.

Iโ€™m about living life to the fullest and taking things to the farthest. While some are
debating whether itโ€™s time to shake hands, Iโ€™m ready to hug and, this time around, hug with a tight squeeze. I was once defined by someone as a โ€œhugging personโ€ and I canโ€™t allow myself to fail on that image. :p

(Polar)-Bear-Hug-Alaska-Copyright-Jean-Huang-Photography.jpg

(Polar)-Bear-Hug-Alaska-Copyright-Jean-Huang-Photography.jpg

Wait, what if Iโ€™m met with an equally passionate person? Normally, I donโ€™t worry. But hey, itโ€™s been over a year and we are all rustic on controlling the extent of passion being exhibited.

Over-Zealous-(Polar)-Bear-Hug-Alaska-Copyright-Jean-Huang-Photography.jpg

Over-Zealous-(Polar)-Bear-Hug-Alaska-Copyright-Jean-Huang-Photography.jpg

Hmmm, I can somehow picture it not ending pretty. Best to take baby steps in the beginning. After all, wrestling in mud is not the point of getting together, at least not yet.

(Polar)-Bear-Hug-Going-South-Alaska-Copyright-Jean-Huang-Photography.jpg

(Polar)-Bear-Hug-Going-South-Alaska-Copyright-Jean-Huang-Photography.jpg

Whatโ€™s in your mind when the โ€œfloodgateโ€ is open?

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Oops, I Did It Again, in Alaska - Los Angeles Fine Art Photographer

It was an ordinary morning. We got up to head further south. But when we reached the Seaward Highway, I had to jump out the car.

Fog-Reflections-Alaska-USA-Copyright-Jean-Huang-Photography.jpg

Fog-Reflections-Alaska-USA-Copyright-Jean-Huang-Photography.jpg

For someone who doesnโ€™t like doing the same things over and over again, fog is my favorite creative companion, other than my ever-present Assistante.

After an hour and a half on the same stretch of the highway, I realized
oops, I did it again. And, the theme somehow became something like this:

Fog-and-Mountain-Reflections-Alaska-USA-Copyright-Jean-Huang-Photography.jpg

Fog-and-Mountain-Reflections-Alaska-USA-Copyright-Jean-Huang-Photography.jpg

Oops, I did it againโ€ฆ I played with my heart and got lost in the gameโ€ฆ :D

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Buono, Favignana, Italy - Los Angeles Travel Photographer

He said his English is not very good. I was nervous the whole time he was talking.

He told us in his English, next to who appeared to be his wife, that he once had a crush on his English teacher in his youth. He was among the friendly senior citizens that we ran into exploring this beautiful island thatโ€™s 11 miles off the west coast of Sicily.

Fortunately, we later saw him again on a different stretch of the beach, in one piece, with his supposed wife. Buono!

Taking-in-the-View-Favignana-Italy-Copyright-Jean-Huang-Photography.jpg

Iโ€™m a firm believer that one of the best ways to learn a foreign language is to immerse yourself in the environment that the language is spoken in. For someone thatโ€™s passionate about food, I built my whole (meager) Italian vocabulary almost 100% near or around food. :-)

The word โ€œmangiareโ€ (โ€œeatโ€ in Italian) could be the first Italian word that I learned (of course, other than โ€œ
buon giornoโ€). In fact, I heard it so many times that I knew how to pronounce it before I even understood the meaning. Do you think people of Italia are just as passionate about food if not more?

So, the story of โ€œbuonoโ€ goes like this:

On the island of Favignano, Italy, a gelato store somehow became our first stop off the port. Just like the fisherman that walked in before us, still in his water-proof outfit.

He must have seen the way that our eyes were devouring the massive load of gelati, enclosed by a brioche that couldnโ€™t quite close. โ€œBuono!โ€ he turned around, with index finger pressed against his cheek, swiveling (see
an illustration of the gesture here). That, my friends, was all it takes to jump in with our own brioche con gelato. And this may have been how I learned to associate the word โ€œbuonoโ€ with yummy food (it could also be this incident in Bagheria off of Palermo, Sicily).

Brioche-con-Gelato-Favignana-Italy-Copyright-Jean-Huang-Photography.jpg

Surrounded by the Tyrrhenian Sea, Favignana is guaranteed to provide some nice vista of the ocean. As youโ€™ve heard me said time and again that โ€œPeople are Landscapeโ€, I wouldnโ€™t be doing my job if I didnโ€™t include people in my vista.

As we looped our way back to the port, it was livened up by all kinds of people - people buying fish, people lounging around (coffee) bar, and people in trouble. There, I witnessed how everybody dropped what they had on their hands and worked together for a happy ending. Call me old fashion. But I think that is molto buono (VERY good in English)!

Lending-a-Helping-Hand-Favignana-Italy-Copyright-Jean-Huang-Photography-(1).jpg

P.S. Bonus material since Iโ€™m being chatty today:

Do you still remember Cetara on the Amalfi Coast of Italy, the town that catches anchovy and turn them into delicacy, i.e.,
Colatura di Alici di Cetara? The ancient tradition of fishing with menaide that was once used by Cetara is still carried on by fishermen of Sicily. The small opening of the mesh (on average 12 mm) allowed the small anchovies to pass while the larger ones remained entangled. The two ends of this tool were passed through hollow two-barrel cables that functioned as floats. The anchovies caught in the mesh are recovered by hand one by one. The video in the provided link (starting around 5:00 timeline) explains it well.

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