Author: eklastic

Zu alt, um nur zu spielen. Zu jung, um ohne Wunsch zu sein.

Decorated Roundabouts

When we moved to Saudi Arabia in 1998 I was struck by the amount of roundabouts in the cities there. Of course, we had roundabouts in Germany but they were utilitarian, barren traffic circles. In Saudi, and particularly in Jeddah, they were showcases of … well, art I guess (realising that art is in the eye of the beholder). Sometimes HUGE pieces of art. Have a look on the search engine of your choice and you’ll know what I mean. And it makes sense in a city of more than 4 millions with many illiterates to have these monuments. Instead of telling somebody to turn left on Falasteen Street, you’d rather send them to go to the “spaghetti and meatballs” and then go past the “flying carpet” until you see the “Dali camel” (PS: The camel isn’t really by Dali but it was certainly inspired by him.)

Around the time we moved back to Germany, the idea of roundabouts had caught on in Germany and they seemed to propagate. Most of them are simply softly elevated bumps, often covered with flowers and/or stones. But some seem to have taken ideas from Jeddah. albeit on a smaller scale.

Here are just a few examples.

St Martin of Laudenbach
the scythes of Böblingen
the rusty owl of Viernheim

the frog orchestra of Laudenbach

Photographing Public Art Challenge

Fairground Trios

The shooting gallery at this otherwise very German funfair was decorated with not one but three US American flags. I’ve recently seen quite a number of documentaries on gun violence in the US. But it’s a funfair so I don’t even want to go there.

We decided to throw balls in baskets and at tins instead. Sadly, I mostly missed.

There are always vendours at the fair and this bag with three cats kept staring at me, staring at me, staring at me.

And one of the fun rides was decorated with a famous trio: George, John and Paul. — ?

Thursday Trios

He Could Shoot Faster than His Own Shadow

“Gulch” must have been one of the first words I learned in English (I probably pronounced it “goolsh” and had no idea what it meant). It came up quite often as a place name in one of my favourite cartoons.

Lucky Luke

The Daltons – the arch enemies of Lucky Luke – tried their luck in Killer Gulch, in Paradise Gulch, in Bottleneck Gulch, in Tortilla Gulch, and others.

If I remember correctly, Lucky Luke has grown up in Nothing Gulch.

The Ragtag Daily Prompt: Gulch

Flying with the Bees

The fairground came to Michelstadt in the Odenwald. The event is known as the “bees’ market” and it ends with a bee exhibition and the auctioning off bee colonies and beekeeper paraphernalia.- The fairground attractions are usually garish in colour, bright and shiny but this rather old-fashioned swing-carousel is doing it in pastels.

Cee’s Midweek Madness: June Pale Colour

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Wow, Indeed!

“There’s one thing you can say for air pollution, you get utterly amazing sunrises.”

Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman – Good Omens

And I guess that goes for sunsets, too.

This is for Paula’s new challenge: Words of Wisdom. Find a quote and illustrate it with a fitting photo. Why not join her?