Showing posts with label Rust. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rust. Show all posts

Thursday, February 16, 2017

I Hear The Train A-Comin'


On my first visit to the US, I was staying with a friend who lived close to the railroad tracks. During the night a train was approaching and honked his horn because of a nearby unsecured grade-level crossing. Man, I never woke up that fast at 3am in the middle of one of my R.E.M. phases. I mean I was standing next to the bed wondering what just happened to me. Growing up, I was used to a mere loud whistle, but that intensity could have woken a dead man!
The next morning over coffee, I asked my friend about the trains and he shrugged his shoulders and said, that he can't hear them anymore when they are driving by at night. Well since then, train horns became part of my life, wherever I lived, I was able to hear "short short long short" outbursts of air. Sometimes from a distance, sometimes closer to the tracks.
Trains fascinated me since my early childhood, when my grandfather took me to watch trains passing the big train bridge leading them into my hometown and the love never subdued. Recently we stumbled upon some special locomotives of a small local railroad, in yellow and blue livery. And that's where I took the picture of the train chimes as they are also called. I loved the minimal approach with the blue sky behind the horns.
And no, I did not know that there are that many different manufacturers of horns and that they all chime for a free-passing in different tones, till I stumbled upon the video below.

Friday, September 16, 2016

Study In Rust III


Diamond shaped detail of a manhole cover. As mentioned in other posts about Rust, there is the decaying beauty in rust, that keeps fascinating me. Part of it has to do with almost indestructible element of metal, that withers away under the weather and showing us some of the most beautiful colors doing so.

Sunday, August 28, 2016

Study In Rust II


I like rust and it's decaying beauty. Often The oxidizing makes for some really beautiful discoloration and delivers an almost abstract sense of morbidity and attractiveness.

This is a detail part of an oil rig. Left and abandoned, weathering away in North Texas.

Friday, August 26, 2016

The Sun Set On The Sunset Motel

Monahans, Texas is the self-proclaimed "Oasis of the West Texas Desert" according to the official website of this small West Texas town, between Odessa and El Paso. Oasis may take it over the top, but due to the oil and gas boom, the town in the middle of nowhere is actually thriving. To rent a home in a trailer park, you will be paying as much as for a closet apartment in New York City. Big hotel chains are moving in, but Roger Miller may be out of fashion: "two hours of pushing broom, buys an eight by 12 four-bit room."
But the boom didn't come early enough, the Sunset Motel is a casualty and only a decaying rusting sign being a reminder that old US Route 80 once ran through the "oasis". By now the stretch through town is called Business Loop I-20 or simply Sealy Avenue. Calling it a loop is kinda funny, as I-20 is looping around Monahans to the south.

By the end of 1992, the motel was still open for business, even Hollywood thought of it as a fine location and used it in the movie "Flesh & Bone" with Dennis Quaid, Meg Ryan, James Caan, and Gwyneth Paltrow. IMDb knows that the hotel was then "owned and operated by Doris Barker. Daughter Jeanie Barker Scott's stepdaughter got a walk-on role when a young actress called in sick."


The most famous son coming out of Monahans is probably singer/songwriter Guy Clark who earlier this year (May 17, 2016) passed away 75 years old. His grandma used to own a motel and his "Desperados Waiting For A Train" is an ode to drifter Jack, who was also his grandma's boyfriend.

I need to go back and stay there for a couple of days and let that West Texas feeling sink in and shot some more - just driving through the oasis didn't cut it.



My photography is available through Dispatch Press Images for publication, or through me for personal use.
Sources: IMDb.com; YouTube, http://www.cityofmonahans.org/, DPI

Updated 12/2020 - replaced two dead video links


Saturday, September 20, 2014

Study In Rust I


I like rust and it's decaying beauty. Often the oxidizing makes for some really beautiful discoloration and delivers an almost abstract sense of morbidity and attractiveness.

This is part of a construction machine, where oil and the weather formed a sublime structure of beauty.



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