cerealjoe: ([hockey] Coco-rico - on est petit mais o)
I love, love, love discovering new things and today I witnessed a really awesome new sport! Canoe polo! I had never heard of it and it sure looks fun and the wiki description makes it sound rather awesome.

I've walked, cycled, ran along that coast path in Töölö dozens of times and I had always wondered what the goal posts were for by the boathouse. They looked way too high for waterpolo and, to be honest, I wouldn't want to play waterpolo in Töölö bay... they really looked like they were high enough to be used in a basketball game (but on water?) and that just did not make sense. Today I thought I'd go waste a bit of film on the PEN camera, 72 shots is quite a lot!, and I happened to fall on peeps actually using those goals. In my head, at first, it did not compute. They're in kayaks (yes, the sport is "canoe polo" or "kayak polo" and from those two times someone has actually managed to convince me to go kayak a bit, I'm pretty sure they're kayaks) but they have a ball and they manage to throw it rather far away either with their paddles or with their hands and they have protective masks and all. Having watched a bit of it being played and peeps warming up, I really think it should be quite a bit of fun! But there is still the kayak bit, something I rather dislike for some reason... so I won't be trying my hand at it any time soon.

Oh, and I actually had no idea what the sport was called, in my head I was calling it "somewhere between waterpolo and basketball but in canoes/kayaks" but I saw "Кануполо" written on the shirts of the Russian team's coaches. So you know, it was an international thing we had going here in our Töölö bay!




The whole field/set-up:




Team yellow warming up:




I love how you even have a lady keeping score with an old school paper-flipping score board!





cerealjoe: (Default)

Continuing the adventures on Frioul/Caroline.

The boat ride was a very good start, at least for me, to the whole adventure. Part of the fun was that it was windy and the waves crashing on the boat went well up to us on the upper deck. I sat closest to the water and let me tell you that in most amusement parks you don't get as wet on the "water rides". But hey, it was windy and sunny and everything eventually dried and that's what's important. Also, major props to my mum for holding the camera in such a way that the lens did not get wet while we got covered with a wave and I was trying to put on my jacket.

The islands of Frioul are home to many interesting things, many of which are related to the army. There are also some calanques and some beaches worthy of a visit.





And of course from the right places you can see Château d'If (which is rather a disappointment to visit so it's better just to read the books) and Notre Dame de la Garde.

On the boat a lot of people were also talking about visiting Caroline. As it's being repaired it's not a place you can visit every single day. Most people were also talking about "Des racines et des ailes" which had a special show about Marseille and included the hospital. I think a lot of people got curious about this place in ruins which is only now used for one or two music festivals per year. I'm actually one of those people, I hadn't even known that the structure existed before my parents showed me the show.

When we landed, we headed straight to one of the ends of the island that houses Caroline. There is a bird watching spot (right in the middle of a section marked "danger: do not go there" but we were brave and went there), a military retreat (it seems it's rather good to be stationed there) and an abandoned villa type of building (which at one point had stables).


2x2 photos - the villa in question and some more sights )

When we finally made it to Caroline about twenty minutes later, the gates were closing, "pas de visites entre midi et deux" (closed for lunch). We are in France, after all, and we should have known! At least we weren't the only ones who had to go back to the village... one would think that they'd be able to keep it opened during the whole day on the two days per year when common mortals can visit. I will get used to this again one day, I will!

We did not lose hope and promised to come back after lunch.


2x2 photos - Caroline walls and lunch )


After lunch we went back up again and this time visited. I had thought it was a huge structure with a huge Greek temple but actually it's tiny. And the temple is tiny. The history of the hospital is quite interesting. It was built in the 1820s to house sailors/boats/merchandise while they were quarantined before they could head over to the port. It was the time of the yellow fever and the quarantine was important. The hospital was built using what was thought of at the time as the top of the top in terms of medical anti-propagation methods... and most of the things weren't that off. Actually Marseille had a horrible cholera outbreak (iirc) because of a boat that was allowed not to respect the quarantine and the lack of clean water in the city. Of course sooner than later boats got faster and having a four week quarantine period was stupid and therefore the hospital lost its main use. Eventually it was used again by the army and when there was an outbreak in local prisons. It was severely damaged in 1944 and was left for dead for decades. In 1971 the city of Marseille bought the whole thing and restoration works have started.

Here is a video about the restoration works. At the time it was filmed the works only happened in August every year by volunteers, it might have changed since.


5x2 photos - Caroline - everyday life inside the walls )


After visiting the hospital ruins, running into some acquaintances (Marseille is such a small town!) and listening to some stories linked to the place, we headed to the ruins right next door. Those ruins are of a fort and given the important structure, it must have been quite something back in its day. The worst though is that clearly there are parts which have been prepared for tourists and others on which quite a few attempts at restoration have been done.


4x2 photos - insides of military ruins )





I also now know a new word! "Plantes alophytes". That means plants that like salty environments. Merci les îles du Frioul!

And another thing I learnt: those Frioul islands are actually part of the 7th arrondissement of Marseille.
cerealjoe: (et ta soeur? - la question qui tue)

I said I wasn't going to post photos from the new camera up until I was done with the energy storage stuff but eventually I just gave up for today. I have the whole thing outlined and I've already typed up about half... and when I see the quality of the stuff my co-author wrote, I have a feeling that this will never be over because of all the final editing.

In any case, is Gali friends already with the new camera? Yes! Very much so. We're still not on very good terms when it comes to social situations. I'm not familiar enough with the settings when light changes too fast and when people move a lot. I'm learning though. I'll be training hard.

For static situations, it's much easier. I really love the manual focus. Heck, there is even an option for a "auto focus coupled with manual"... I suppose it's good but manual is still the best.



This is probably the second or third photo I took. I must say that it's true that the camera is very easy to use right away, much easier than any DSLR I've seen so far.



With just one turn you can go from having auto shutter and aperture to just auto one of them or to manual both of them. I can't remember what I was testing in the above photo. Perhaps it was just the ISOs.

three more tests )

I'll probably never give up on Panasonic camera because I've used it almost daily for more than two and a half years and I know all its little quirks and where it is best used. This E-P1 one is still going to come pretty handy just because it's so easy to focus and to choose the settings that you want.

Now I just need to practice, practice, practice. I'll have to go do some night shoots this week so I'm ready for Korea and its night life!

March 2017

S M T W T F S
   1 234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 26th, 2025 07:27 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios