Saturday, February 20, 2021

Would a Street Photographer Go to Chernobyl ?

 


On Valentine’s Day, I received feedback about my last posting on January 25th where I was using a rocking chair covered in snow on our balcony to discuss some of the comforts even harsh times can bring to us (https://vahezen.blogspot.com/2021/01/show-some-mercy-to-this-chair-which-has.html).

The feedback started with “hm, street photographer is flirting with rocking chair with veil of snow…”

The point is very well taken and it reflects the reality we all face around the globe, namely that people are not in the streets as much, and surely there are no mass events which provide a street photographer with the opportunity to observe and capture human behavior.

Yes, I do miss carrying a couple of old mechanical cameras with me and going out looking for a human story. I have done that around the world for half a century but in the past year I rarely take any camera with me since I know the streets will be empty.

While it chagrins me as a photographer, the past year has be delightful for my dog as he comes with me at every outing and has a great time meeting dogs who, just like mine, seem to be dragging their human counterparts behind them, on a leash!

But when I am driving I have my 1960s leather camera carry bag with me where a 1972 Soviet Salyut-S medium format camera and a 1953 Canon L3 35mm rangefinder camera are at the ready in case the stars come together for a frame or two.

So, after reading the comment on February 14th, I pulled out a few photos that are taken in the streets but not always of people. Indeed, they are photojournalistic and represent the past year. Specifically they demonstrate that when people vacate the city streets, wild animals come down and roam these streets day and night. Here are examples:

Peccaries at sunset: Around here they are called “wild pigs” but they are not boar. Originally from Latin Americas, peccaries indeed look and get as large as wild pigs. Most importantly they travel in groups and families, and the males can be very aggressive in protecting the group. They have long, spear like canine teeth hence are called javelin/javelina in Latin Americas.

The photo on the top of this page is of javelina crossing our neighborhood street after sunset.

 

Bobcat kittens next to our house: Native of North America, the bobcat (Lynx rufus) is a medium size predator that lives in warmer climates. It is not dangerous to humans but to all other animals of its size or smaller. It is also a very reserved, solitary and nocturnal hunter, but in the past year we have seen a number of predator mammals roam our empty streets. Here are bobcat kittens, delightful as any cat can be. But in a few months they will be looking for small dogs for dinner!



 Mountain lion (Cougar): Now we are talking about big cats! Indeed, an adult cougar can weigh more than 100 kg and attack humans and large animals like deer and elk.  We rarely see or hear about their nocturnal passages from our neighborhoods, but a couple of weeks ago the ground snow left the carte de visite behind our house…  The paw tracks are as large as my hands.


In the SouthWest  and NorthWest U.S, mountain lions pose a real danger to hikers and mountain bikers. Here is a sign from Arizona making that point:

 


Coyote: Of course these are the representatives of the SouthWest desert fauna. They are tricksters, smart, survive practically any environmental change and are accustomed to humans. But they are also very destructive to agricultural stock, dogs and cats, but rarely to humans. One can see coyotes everyday in cities and open desert spaces, but in the past year they grew totally unafraid of humans.

On Christmas day 2020, this one came to take a nap next to our car in the driveway….



 So, what is a street photographer to do when there are no humans in the streets? Of course I am optimistic that there will be open air concerts soon; that folks will ride their bike to shop at open stores; and, that the only four legged mammals we will see in the streets after sunset will be a dog we know or a cat we have seen before.

But till then, here is a perfect image of how few are benefiting from empty streets early in the morning!


And the cropped section shows the delightful resemblance between her body posture and that of the "pedestrian crossing" sign -- during a pandemic pedestrians can cross all streets, at any time!

 


February 20, 2021

© Vahé A. Kazandjian, 2021

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