Another instalment in the “Roam at Night” Series. Here, it’s not about the subject and composition so much, but rather practicing the technical aspects of night photography. You know, getting the exposure right and the challenges of focusing in those conditions, and keeping noise to a minimum. Later we can...
A message arrives. Come view some trucks it says…we have some old big rigs. That has our attention. Now to make it happen. It’s not anywhere close to us, but as we always manage to do, we’ll find away. It might just take some time. And so the months pass...
A number of factors, nagging injuries being one, have kept us in the city for some time now. Still, we get out and have fun. It really doesn’t take much to amuse us and we find adventure where ever we are. Lately, for the hiking end of things, we’ve been...
The road in is rough, more a cart track than anything. Bouncing along for many kilometres there’s nothing as far as the eye can see. Then come to the edge and look down. Way down. Drop into a valley, the track steep, narrow and precipitous. It’s something very logging road...
Another instalment where Chris & Connie train to be better night photographers and share the results with you. Low light shooting is an area we have much interest in, but struggle with. The big problem, which we’re not the least bit ashamed to admit (outside the fact that meds don’t...
What you see in this post has changed since we documented it last fall. The subject, an old house sealed up for decades, has been cleared of possessions which have been put in safe storage. Next any issues with the building will be tackled, with eventual plans that everything be...
We only need explore our own neighbourhood to find Boler trailers. There’s a couple we know of, one of which even shows up on our very street a couple times each summer. They come to us! And from time to time, while out for a walk, we find new ones....
We didn’t come up with the title of this post, someone at Midfield Park did. We borrowed it. Here, we’ll be peering over a security fence to a look at a huge empty lot, a former “mobile home” community with a population once counted in the hundreds. They’ve all moved...
The small town watering hole, often housed in an old hotel (and not always providing accommodations), a place for locals and passers-through alike to partake in libations and socialize. Near every community across the country, no matter the size, had one. Or so it seemed. But we’re losing them, fast,...
The Team has documented our fair share of churches, every last one of them special and beautiful to us in their own unique way. As subjects go, they’re one of our most favourite and we get giddy photographing and writing about them. The one seen today, even among all the...
We bought the book “Calgary’s Best Walks” by Lori Beattie. Love it. If you’re into urban trekking, it’s a recommended addition to your library too. It’s BIGDoer approved! Like that means something. Chuckle…so, inside the covers are a multitude of possible routes covering all quadrants of the city. For one...
When was the last time you saw an independent computer shop? Bet it’s been a while. There used to be lots of them, busy places all, with seemingly one on every corner, but mostly they’ve gone the way of the dinosaur. It’s one tough racket and even the big chains...
The past four or five years now a group of friends get together and explore. This merry band whose domain is dusty backroads, spend some summer weekend in some corner of Alberta (sometimes venturing into Saskatchewan too) in search of abandoned and forgotten stuff. Lots of cool things are seen...
Screaming down some back road, we come over a rise, and there off in the distance, we see an abandoned farm house. Looks pretty darn interesting. Looking over to Connie…”yeah?” “Oh yeah!” Stopping in a cloud of dust, we fire up the Internet (a vehicle hot spot is such a...
There we were enjoying ourselves, wandering about Nelson BC in the summer of 2016, and we find this. It’s a little fibreglass trailer, something Boler-like for sure, but what make is it? Thought is might be a Beachcomber, but no…a Trillium Jubilee, no again (both are pretty uncommon models). Scan...
Here’s a fine city trek, a loop of sorts taking in the entire length of Edmonton Trail in Calgary’s (shallow) Northeast and on the return leg quieter residential streets off to the east. It’s like going back in time, the closer one gets to downtown, the older things become. There’s...
Sometimes it takes us a while to get to things. Too much to do, not enough time, not nearly enough us. Anyway, here’s one from waaaaay back in late 2016. Yikes! We’re on the road and find ourselves passing through Sylvan Lake Alberta, a modest sized community west of the...
There used to be a vast network of railway owned telegraph lines spanning the country. Where the tracks went, so went the poles and the wires. This early incarnation of the information superhighway stood alongside the rights-of-way and were a familiar scene to people back when. Look at any old...
It’s a lonely forgotten place, this rural property. The ride in takes one down a long dusty backroad, then a muddy cart track all squishy and rutted up, and finally cross country through pasture and field. Regular cars are unlikely to survive the journey. Arrive, stand and look around. In...
Low light photography is a skill we struggle with. Oh, we understand the principals and all, but still have a hard time of it. To combat this we’ve been getting out, in town, and practising. We’re not worried about the composition so much, nor the subject matter, but getting the...
Travelling across the west, as we do, we encounter our share of little fibreglass trailers. We might see them on the highway, in camp grounds we pass, parked here or there, at gas stations…they can turn up anytime, anywhere. Or so it seems. Here’s one, a Trillium, the most common...
It’s old and weather beaten, locked up and unused. This sorry looking building with faded paint is home only to pigeons, their occasional cooing breaking the silence. Sure, there’s the memories of Sunday Service, the weddings the funerals. Happy occasions some, sad and tearful others. All behind it now. Today...
Yes, we’ve been neglecting the then and now posts. We’ve read the many emails asking why. There’s a couple reasons. First, we’re busier than we’ve ever been documenting old historic places and as a result, sadly, other things we do have to take a back seat. We have to go...
Apologies dear friends and loyal readers, we’ve been away for a spell. The society suffered a major computer failure a week ago and spent pretty much the entire time since recovering and cleaning up the resultant mess. It was ugly! Reinstall this, reinstall that, pull from archives, configure, setup and...
Trailer parks have a bad reputation. If we believe the stereotypes they’re home to hardened criminals with extensive rap sheets, drugged out slackers with bizarre haircuts, boozers and other undesirables. lumped together with the working poor and old folks on limited incomes. It’s one ugly, unfriendly place best given a...
Inspiration for this fine inner-city hike comes from the book Calgary’s Best Walks by Lori Beattie. Here we’ll be following Route #12, roughly, taking in a series of parks and hitting the pavement in number of older established neighbourhoods. The going is super easy. You don’t have to follow our...
Well lookie here, right in front us of on the highway and headed in the same direction, a cute little Boler. Another added to the list. That was easy! The location is Yahk British Columbia (“We’ve bin to Yahk ‘n’ back”), right as you enter town after crossing the Moyie....
You’ve probably heard us speak of the film Forgotten Prairie. A number of posts we’ve published over the last few months have touched on it to one degree or another. Now you’ll get to see it. Finally! A production of Rueben Tschetter’s Cache Project, it’s a fine little piece about...
Each and every day it’s within view of tens of thousands of passing motorists but I bet a lot of them pay it no mind. There, along side road set back a bit from the #1A, but easily seen from it, and a mere stone’s thrown from Calgary’s City Limits...
This one’s for the adrenaline junkies. Imagine it – extreme grades, hands-on climbing, narrow ledges, acute exposure, rock falls and danger at every turn. This is where the Reaper hangs when he needs to meet a quota. They call it the Devil’s Drop, in hushed tones. Seasoned mountaineers have to...
1970s & 2024 (reposted). When we shared it earlier, not everyone agreed we were standing on about the same spot and shooting the same angle in our image. Admittedly the connection is not easy to see, so we've helped things along this time. In hindsight we should have done that on the first pass, so please forgive us.
That's (present day) Calgary Place West in both photos and we've included a second comparison in the comments showing the same garage, but from a different angle. So you can see how other buildings also line up.
Amazingly, there were lots of homes in Calgary's downtown west end at the time of the original photo. Old dumpy, run-down homes that is. It was party-central as we recall and if you needed a place to crash, there was always a bed, couch or bathtub at your disposal. Or a place to jam. Everyone had a friend in that part of town it seemed.
The records: we can make out several Beatles albums and one from the Doors.
Photo credit: James Tworow Collection. _______
Exploring history with Chris & Connie from Off the Beaten Path. Thanks, Chris.
Nordegg Alberta on May 12th, 1937 and again on a peaceful foggy morning in late summer of 2024. More below 👇
The mountains are timeless and the old bank is the only thing left in this view, from the days when Nordegg was a busy coal mining centre. The mine closed in the 1950s and the town basically abandoned. Now people come here for outdoor recreation. Shunda and Coliseum Mountains in back (LtoR), and one day we hope to climb both.
Note the for sale signs. Development is coming and this view is going to change dramatically in the years to come.
Bonus photo in the comments of nearby Nordegg Community Church.
Photo credit: UofC Archives, Harold Kidd Collection _______
Exploring history with Chris & Connie from Off the Beaten Path. Thanks, Chris.
The Trolleybuses of Sandon BC (2018) & how they're seen through the eyes of our good friend Byron Robb. More below 👇
These buses all hail from Vancouver BC (which has the last trolley network in Canada) and many came by way of many other Canadian cities. So Calgary, Saskatoon, Regina and Winnipeg, who all ended their electric networks in the 1970s. Vancouver bought them and ran then into the '80s or used them for parts to keep their own fleet in service. The buses date from the late 1940s to early 1950s period and that they were brought here saved them from being scrapped.
Stop by the central library in Calgary to see examples of Byron's cubist works of art on display, including his trolleybus photo seen here.
We are heading back to Sandon B.C. in 2025 if it kills us and we have some unfinished business up in the hills. The past is calling and there's so much up there we want to document before it's gone. ______
Exploring history with Chris & Connie from Off the Beaten Path. Thanks, Chris.
Pic: 2024. Showing at the Corral-4 Drive In (Calgary's east end) on opening day in March of 1980...below 👇
The Changeling and Piranha on one screen, 1941 and National Lampoon’s Animal House on another, Silent Scream + Search and Destroy on a third, and finally The Jerk and More American Graffiti on the last.
The Corral-4 officially opened that spring although they did some test showings the year before. First and lasts: the first and only multi-screen venue in town. The last drive in to open in Calgary and the last to close.
A big fire in 1999 at an oil recycling plant right next door was its undoing, but it does appear business was on the skids anyway. Talk of them closing was documented even before and we suppose this gave them a good excuse.
Some of the land has reverted back to nature and other sections were used for trailer storage for a time. They were all gone on this visit and the only thing left is this lane guide.
Have Corral-4 memories? Share them in the comments.
2023 Kananaskis Alberta. Ours son's doggie Drea and everyone's best friend on the trail. Say the four magic words "go for a walk" and she'll whine at the door and then make a line for the car. She's been atop mountains, done grueling 25km hikes and thrilled to be in the outdoors. A great hiking companion.
2017 Consul Saskatchewan. The End of the Line RV Park ironically reached the end of the line. Read on below 👇
Consul is the very last town for a long time if you're heading down south to the Montana or west into Alberta from the area. Not that many people choose either route and this is perhaps why the business closed. The road sign says next services 110km (Havre Montana) and 114km (Elkwater AB), respectively.
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