Nothing special, just what I thought was a wonderful snap of a building in an industrial park in Opfikon, in the Canton of Zürich, in Switzerland:
Author: kenritley
Swiss countryside
You don’t see this everyday
In fact, I don’t think I have ever seen anything even remotely close to this:
Sadly, I was in a hurry to catch a train, but there are many questions I’d like to ask. Number one among those: how important is it to keep the stick vertical? I assume a tube with such a high aspect ratio between its length and diameter is in great danger of bending.
Update on September 6: He was out there again today, so I stopped to talk with him and he showed me the device. He also demonstrated it will NOT bend! It‘s made out of an extremely heavy, extremely thick PVC plastic, and it‘s attached to a compressor that pumps water to the top.
Fire in Alsace
The Bull in Bulle
When you step out of the train station in the village of Bulle in the region of Gruyère in the canton of Fribourg in the French speaking Romandie part of Switzerland, this is what you see:
Winterthur sunrise
Bamberg Water – Dam I forgot!
Not damn, but dam. I took this snap while visiting the Franconian village of Bamberg, in Germany:
And it reminded me I left the village before exploring what this really was.
The Rhine-Danube canal flows through the city of Bamberg, and the Rhine-Danube canal has plenty of locks. But this is not one of them, and I am not sure why they need to regulate the flow of the river here. It doesn’t look like the water is used for any purposes, such as an historic mill or modern power generation.
It’s on my to-do list to come back one day and figure this out!
Thun
Isola dei Pescatori
Newest addition
The little banjo below on the left is my newest acquisition!
My Deering Calico (on the right) is a professional level instrument, but it‘s loud and weighs in at around 5 kg. In fact, most non-experts are always surprised at the weight, but a banjo like this sports a so-called tone ring – a huge doughnut piece of bell metal that weighs several kgs and that gives the banjo its unique banjo twang.
My new Deering Artisan (on the left) lacks the tone ring and a few other components, so it weighs in at just less than 1 kg.
The main reason for the acquisition is two-fold: For a long time I have wanted a little travel banjo that I could take with me more easily. And this style of banjo is used for a very unique – but extremely challenging – style of banjo music known as clawhammer or frailing, and I thought it was finally time for me to learn!
The amazing Marvin-the-Martian garbage receptacles of France
Continuing the series, this is Marvin the Martian:
Children today might not recognize him as easily as I do, having grown up watching Looney-Tunes cartoons on television. He dates back to 1948.
And Marvin-the-Martian is what I always think about when I see these garbage receptacles at the rest areas of the autoroutes in France:
Lugano
The incredible wind turbines of Bourgogne
I captured this breathtaking snap of wind turbines nestled deep within the Bourgogne countryside of France. It is a bit misleading, because when you get up close you realize how truly large and monstrous these wind turbines are:
If you’ve been to France, then you know how it is. There are literally thousands of wind turbines all over the country. I could not find the data for 2019, but in 2015 France had a total of 5’956 turbines.
Breathtaking Goldau in Arth
A lot of people I know call it Arth-Goldau, but I think technically that’s the name of the railway station! The village in this snap below is Goldau, and it is pretty much smack dab in the center of a region called Arth.
Regardless or irregardless, it’s the Swiss countryside at its summertime best!
North shore of Lake Constance
Lake Constance – or the Bodensee, in German – is really a lopsided place. It separates Germany (in the north) from Switzerland (in the south). Because Germany generally lacks big lakes, the North Shore of the Bodensee has become a quite affluent area for Germans. But because Switzerland generally has spectacular lakes (and the Bodensee is not one of them), the South Shore of the Bodensee is not only undeveloped but in fact real estate here is comparatively inexpensive for Switzerland. Here is a view of the north coast:
Udaipur Yak
A very special oblique, unique fountain of motion in Winterthur
For this next attraction you have to go deep into Winterthur – very deep indeed, to a part of Winterthur that I think few tourists have ever seen or likely ever will.
With the Swiss being very proud – and rightfully so – of their thousands upon thousands of fountains that provide fresh spring drinking water, it is surprising you don’t see more things like this:
There is a small wheel that is turned by the water, causing the little metal blacksmith to bend back and forth and – believe it or not – hit his hammer on an anvil, giving a nice little chime.
Red kite over the rotary rake
Continuing the series, here a huge red kite is looking for a quick snack high over a farmer turning his cut grass with a rotary rake:
Winterthur panaroma
The colors of Jaisalmer
Just a snap that I thought was pretty, with ladies dying the long fabric that the men of Rajasthan wrap into large turbans:
I’ve seen sights like this all over Rajasthan, and what I always find amazing is that neither the streets nor the ladies clothes are covered with red dye, so they must carry out this work with an abundance of talent.
Journey to the Center of Lugano
One of my all time favorite movies is the 1959 Journey to the Center of the Earth, starring Pat Boone and James Mason, based on the book by Jules Vernes:
My recent Journey to the Center of Lugano could not be compared to this at all!
Lugano is a wonderful city on a pretty lake in the Italian speaking part of Switzerland known as Ticino.
When you come to Lugano by train, you’ll either alight (if you are British) or get off (if you are American) at this incredible train station:
Then you’ll immediately walk outside, at which time, upon realizing that you, in actual fact, are hundreds of meters high above the city, you will either say “My word!” (if you are British) or “My goodness!” (if you are American):
At this point it will dawn on you: you are way up here, and the city is way down there. Arithmetically, you have to add the two ways, and that is a loooong way!
So to get ready for this loooong way, in time you’ll either gird your loins (if you are British) or get ready (if you are American) and start the long, long trek down into the city.
Well, that’s what I used to do, many many times – until I made a stunning discovery! Even though I am an American, I am a loin girder, and to properly gird my loins for the long, long journey down I decided to walk back into the train station to buy a bottle of acqua in bottiglia.
And you can imagine my surprise when I saw this stunning sight!
Yes, it’s a contraption! But not just any contraption, this is a people-mover of sort of contraption that shuttles people up and down the mountain!
It was a beautiful day, I felt fit and strong, I needed a good walk – but I decided to throw caution to the wind and try out this contraption. What use is a contraption that nobody uses!
Well, here is a shot of what it looked like as this fully automated contraption was lowered down the mountain on railroad tracks but tied to a huge cable underneath:
Now, I have been on contraptions like this all across Switzerland, so I was ready – I was prepared – I knew exactly what to expect. A very important principle in experiemental physics is this: opportunity favors the prepared mind.
So I had my little point-and-shoot camera out, and I was ready for what I knew what would come next!
But in case you don’t know, in fact these contraptions have two cars that are each at opposite ends of a very long cable, so that as your car is lowered down, another car is raised up:
The rest, as they say, is history. Despite being am American loin girder I did not alight at the bottom but rather got out and continued on my way.
Here’s a nice shot of what the shoreline of Lugano more or less looks like:
And when I was there the city was filled with shiny metallic works of art, such as this one below that, at first glance, looks like a hole in the fabric of space and time:
Châteauneuf-en-Auxois Flowers – 5
Continuing the series, here are more flowers I spotted while walking around the medieval village of Châteauneuf-en-Auxois deep within in the Burgundy country of France.
When I see a sight like this – something very pretty adorning what was once a military fortification, it always drives me crazy! I incessantly wonder when and how something militaristic was transformed into something nice, and whether the transformation came suddenly or rather just little by little. A good example is my blog post entitled From war to peace.
Doubs Cows
Garbage in Lugano
Continuing the series, here are some stunning waste receptacles that I spotted in the southern Swiss city of Lugano,
One of the first reactions I have is buck the trend. There is a trend in the world today – and for some time – to replace well-built, long-lasting products with cheap and disposable ones. You see this trend in almost every aspect of life. So when you see this new trend to replace short-lived garbage receptacles with better built and more longer lasting fixtures, it is a step in the right direction!
Châteauneuf-en-Auxois Flowers – 4
Continuing the series, here are more flowers I spotted while walking around the medieval village of Châteauneuf-en-Auxois deep within in the Burgundy country of France.
I took this snap early in the morning, literally laying on my stomach on the ground. I probably would not have tried that later in the day with more people around, or they might mistake me for a real photographer!

































