Meals for a Wedding Photographer

Wedding meals

I don’t think I’ve ever seen a wedding photographer eat during a wedding. And if they do, I always imagined them trolling the reception hall for leftover bits of food during non-essential (and perhaps darkened) times — for instance, while the slideshow is playing. Now there’s a blog by an anonymous wedding photographer showcasing the meals that he (she?) gets fed while on the job. It’s probably the same meal eaten by the guests at the wedding; there’s no indication, however, that much of it is ever consumed.

Typhoon Morakot devastation

Typhoon Morakot

In 1999, a 7.3 magnitude earthquake rocked Taiwan, devastating its central region. And a few years later, while teaching English in Tainan, I had the chance to visit the rebuilding in Taichung and see firsthand the earthquake’s destruction. During that time, I experienced several minor earthquakes and typhoons of my own, leaving me to wonder how my ancestors ever survived living on an island in the natural disaster-prone East Asian waters.

As I get older and news of disasters pile up, this is something I think about more.

Typhoon Morakat swept the island on Sunday, causing mudslides in Kaohsiung, crashing a helicopter, and killing 62 people. There are hundreds still missing. The typhoon then roared into China, displacing 1.4 million people in the southeast region.

The Boston Globe has documented this devastation in arresting collection of photos. I haven’t yet called my parents to ask about the status of my relatives in southern Taiwan, but I think that’s the next phone call I’m going to make.

Project 365.4

Project 365.4

The towns along the Hudson Valley contain a series of dichotomies — from an old-fashioned Main Street to the highway, from 10-stall farmers markets to national-chain restaurants, from large chain hotels to quaint bed and breakfasts. As we drove around, I was struck by the beauty of these small town traffic lights strung up across the intersection.