Just a little documentation perhaps useful only to give some sense of the place. The house, a rickety old affair that showed up in a history book (that I later discovered in a local used book store) as the oldest frame house in the Canyon, extended some three stories-worth down the side of a very steep cliff which had become overgrown with all manner of vines and bushes and small wildlife. (And I recall a mutant orange-lemon tree that had incredibly bitter fruit.) Sometimes when the haze would abate, you could get a peek of the ocean through the bushes. One of the photos, taken from the inside through a living room window, shows the rooftop of a neighbor’s house as well as the more or less flat roof of our garage (about four levels down and accessible only from a lower street) where bike repair, furniture refinishing and sunbathing took place. Plant growth was not just limited to the outside; we packed the interior with spider and other plants to keep the air as pure as possible, although Santa Monica air was among the cleanest of the L.A. area.
Author: leh
Another 1975 Multi-Day Bicycle Trip
These were probably taken somewhere between Santa Barbara and Santa Maria. During the few months that my brother and niece shared my Santa Monica Canyon house, I perhaps attained my greatest level of physical fitness before or since with miles and miles of daily riding (though only a fraction of what Dennis undertook). Dennis frequently stopped on these trips to repair his tires; he ran sew-ups while my bike was shod with lower-performing but more durable clinchers.
Hajib, Svenska-Style
Now I’m not particularly fashion-conscious or fashion-caring, but I did find this piece from Aljazeera to be rather interesting.
And on a related note, again from Sweden …
(Could this be a direction for Velouria?)
Gabrielle, Cat Photographer (1975)
Most of these were taken in the jungle-like back yard of the Santa Monica Canyon house, just above the beach. Two are probably in Malibu. The cat was named Nexus.
Santa Monica Canyon Living – Summer 1975
During the summer of young niece Gabrielle’s visit, much of the evening entertainment consisted of live group readings (everyone would take a turn) and listening to music. Guests seemed to drop by regularly. And sometimes we went to the San Fernando Valley to watch velodrome racing, to supplement the late afternoon impromptu pickup racing brother Dennis engaged in, riding up Pacific Coast Highway with his exotic featherweight bicycle. This followed his work by day of building and repairing bicycles (and working construction) when he was not writing.
rDay Two-Hundred-Twelve
Spent most of the day working out in my head the solutions to four new development projects that emerged this week. The rest of my body accompanied Kim to the medical clinic, where I read issues of Time magazine, stared out the windows and saw one of the most decrepit but running (and starting and apparently running well) Ford pickups I have seen for awhile. And walked down to the former workplace to give off a little consulting.
Caught In The Act
Kim documents the attempted strangulation of The Charlie-Dog …
Just kidding. Charlie probably has a brighter future than I do …
Summer 1975: Bicycles and Gabrielle
Memorable from that period were some of bicycle treks — shown here are two photos of an early morning departure for a run from Venice to Laguna Beach (60 miles each way) with Dennis and Mike (aka Rojo) and a couple of scenes from the sojourn from Venice to Solvang (about 125 miles each way), where I experienced the most excruciating relentless uphill stretches ever in the mountains out of Santa Barbara. (Even bicycle racer/mechanic “iron man” Dennis suffered a blister or two.) And the best memory highlighting that summer was a visit of a few weeks by niece Gabrielle, all the way from New York City. (The white-haired gentleman, whose name I forget, was her maternal grandfather.)
rDay Two-Hundred-Ten
Miscellany, just experimenting with the Canon … four new development projects are emerging or have emerged this week, so not much time available behind the camera …
rDay Two-Hundred-Nine: John and Mary and Teddy
As I was returning home from a stroll across campus, I strike up a new acquaintance with John and Mary and Teddy. John tells me that he was in the Class of ’45 with Sybil, and guess who his dentist was! He is/was a photographer who tells of being called upon to take “funeral pictures”, where the deceased was propped up to be part of a group family photograph. And he apparently documented activities at EOU and in local manufacturing businesses. He told me of his Pentax and Nikon cameras (digital and film) and his medium-format Crown Graphic. Kim and I have seen this couple frequently on our dog walks, and now we have some backstory.