Saturday, December 20, 2008

Tomorrow We Leave

Evening before last Carolyn and I had dinner in Harvard Square with my god daughter, Marianne Cook. Marianne is a remarkable young woman, self-assured and highly accomplished for one so young. Upon graduating from Harvard in 2002, she went to Oman for a year to work as a counselor in a school for English-speaking children. We had a leisurely dinner, looked through her Oman scrapbook and a yearbook of the school where she worked, and got to meet her boyfriend, Matt.

We leave tomorrow! Our flight, on KLM (Royal Dutch Airline), is scheduled to depart at 7:15 PM, barring snow delays. We are ready to go; we could leave today if we had to. Carolyn's sister, Diana, is taking us to Alewife Station, at the end of the Red Line of the Boston Subway system. From there it's an easy ride with only one change, to the new Silver Line, which will deposit us right at the entrance of our airline terminal. We fly from Boston to Amsterdam, Amsterdam to Kuwait City, and Kuwait City to Muscat, the capitol of Oman. We are well prepared for our eighteen hours of traveling with books and iPods and comfortable clothing. rpk

Sunday, December 14, 2008

One week to go!

Just one more week and we'll be on our way to Oman.

The temperature at this time of year ranges from 60 to 72 degrees, a welcome break from the doldrums of a New England winter. Christmas seems strangely remote, but we'll have lots to share when we return. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year! cck

Friday, December 12, 2008

How We'll Get The Photos You Want To See

Those of you who are experienced photographers may find this post a bore, but I'm writing it for all our amateur and non-photographer friends, with hopes that they might find it useful. Also, to be completely honest, it is an exercise in learning to add photographs to text.

We are well equipped with camera gear for this trip. Carolyn will be taking her trusty Canon A710 IS, a compact, flexible point and shoot that she has been using for a couple of years, with excellent results. We're taking Carolyn's sister, Diana's laptop with us (thanks Diana and Mark!), and will use whatever internet connections we can find to upload our posts.

I will be taking my Nikon D40X, the smallest DSLR body Nikon makes. During the trip I'll shoot RAW plus jpeg, saving the RAW files to process at home, and using the jpegs for posting images to the blog from Oman. I chose this "amateur" camera body because it has all the features I'll ever need, plus the smaller weight and size that makes it a lot easier to lug around. I almost never get a bad exposure from this camera - or for that matter, any of my digital cameras - and on those rare occasions when I do get a bad exposure, I can see it immediately, and do it over. With film, I had to wait until the film was processed, usually not until after I'd returned home. Boy, do I ever love this digital age!

The only lens I am taking for the D40X is my Nikon 18-200mm VR (35mm equivalent 27-300mm). This one of Nikon's best lenses, with a range from serious wide angle to fairly long telephoto, with Vibration Reduction thrown in. With no changing lenses, it's sort of like having an extremely high quality (if not very compact) point-and-shoot. The lens itself, while quite compact, particularly for it's range, did tend to overwhelm the tiny D40X body until I got used to the combo, and now it feels absolutely natural in my hands.

When not carrying the Nikon, I will use my Panasonic LX3. Boy, do I love this camera! With a 24-60 (35mm equivalent) f2-2.8mm Leitz Summicron lens, RAW capability, and almost panorama format capability, it is one of the best serious point-and-shoot cameras on the market. It is small and lightweight - almost tiny - and I can carry it in an inconspicuous purse-like shoulder bag. I just recently upgraded to this camera from it's predecessor, the LX2 (which I will have along as a back-up). Here's what I said about the LX2 on my web site; it all applies equally and more to the LX3:

"In June 2007 I began using a Panasonic Lumix LX2 digital camera. Without going into a sales pitch (which I would be happy to do at a moment's notice), let me just say that it fits my hand - and my eye - like it was made for them. I love the 16:9 - almost panoramic - aspect ratio. My wife says I'm like a kid with a new bike. This informal portfolio, which I update regularly, is a measure of my satisfaction with this little jewel of a camera." (See the portfolio, Taking The Long View, on my web site, rpkphoto.smugmug.com).

Along with these cameras we will be taking SD and SDHC cards totaling nearly 50 GB, a card reader for uploading to the laptop, extra rechargeable and disposable batteries and chargers, a polarizing filter for the Nikon, a monopod that will also serve as a walking stick, and my trusty Nikon SB800 flash.

We hope that you will like the photographs that we'll be taking. rpk

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Carolyn's Post

Just ten days and we're up and away! I thought it might be helpful to post a map of Oman (as you can see, it's at the very end of the Persian Gulf). Click on the map to see it larger.

I've been having fun reading several books about the Middle East - most recently Three Cups of Tea by Greg Mortenson, which is currently on the New York Times best seller's list. Its a wonderful story, and amazing what this one man has accomplished bringing education, especially for girls, to remote areas of Pakistan.

We will be staying in our host's farmhouse just outside the capital city of Muscat as a home base, with side trips to the surrounding area and then farther afield to Sur and Salalah. cck

Welcome To Our Blog

Ten days to go. Both Carolyn and I have lists, and lists of lists of everything that must be done, or acquired, or cleaned, or packed before we go. Inoculations: check. Camera gear and plenty of SD cards: check. Passports (we even got new leather passport covers for the trip): check. We still have to email everyone who's interested, giving them the address of the blog.

This blog is a brand new experiment and experience for us, so there well may be any number of false starts and mistakes as we go along (perhaps you can treat them as small bonuses). We just hope that we can do a good enough job that you can all share a little bit in our once-in-a-lifetime adventure. Carolyn will be signing her entries "cck" and I'll be signing "rpk" at the end of mine. rpk