View allAll Photos Tagged JetLag
品川の日の出 - Shinagawa Sunrise
Shinagawa Prince Hotel Annex,
Tokyo
Japan
2016/10/27
One of the distinct advantages of jet lag is waking up at 4:30am in time to catch the sunrise reflecting off the Tokyo cityscape.
#Jetlag #Sky #Sunrise #Dawn #Metropolis #Cityscape #Shinagawa #Tokyo #Japan #時差ぼけ #空 #日の出 #夜明け #朝 #品川 #東京 #日本 #SonyA7R2 #A7R2 #SonyA7RII #A7RII #SonyAlpha #SonyPhotography #SonyImages #135mm #f/2 #CanonEFlens #Metabones #Lightroom6.5 #LR6 #NigalRaymond #ナイジャルレイモンド #www.nigal-raymond.com
I think the jetlag hit me hardest on day 4 of my trip. I wasn't in a very good mood when I took a morning train from Nagasaki to Fukuoka. And my mood wasn't improved when I took 45 minutes to find my hotel. I even once walked right past the hotel without noticing it.
After I finally was able to drop my luggage at the hotel, I decided to visit the Fukuoka tower. The tower looks a bit like a normal skyscraper, but actually it only has five floors, and it is mostly empty inside.
The views from the tower were nice, but the reflections made it impossible to take good photos.
having a little trouble getting her to sleep in her crib again...so here goes a few nights of co-sleeping.
The University of Liverpool put us up in a gorgeously modern hotel rebuilt from an old carriage factory. After the long trip, this bed looked so good I wondered if it was a mirage, like one of those fountains travelers see in the desert.
Images from Ultra Brasil 2017
October 13 & 14 2017
Sambódromo, Rio de Janeiro
Client: Ultra Music Festival
© 2017 www.rudgr.com
Check out my book on 20 years of dance music photography!
Jetlag got the better of me big style today. So here are my feet at the foot of the bed before I go to sleep at a very reasonable hour of the evening....
Part of the challenge to take a photo a day in 2009.
Not to be used in any way without prior written permission
All photographs © Alexandra Bone
© Alexandra Bone 2009
I hope the story I'm trying to tell and how it fits the #JetLag theme comes across here because I would feel like it would lose something if I had to explain it.
Thursday
June 23, 2011
Finally made it home this morning. Didn't sleep much last night. Too much caffeine. And I knew I needed to get up real early. Not so good at sleeping in those situations. I woke up about every half hour, and by 4am I couldn't go back to sleep. We got down to the lobby at 5:15, checked out and got on our shuttle back to the airport. Got through everything without too many complications, got our first Starbucks in a month (pretty disappointing after three weeks of Italian cappuccinos and pastries...) and waited for our flight. When we finally got to Denver, Audrey, Gene and I were met at the airport by Sam and Sarah. We all rode home together, telling stories of our trip on the drive. Audrey dropped me off with all my luggage at home. I got to say hi to the family and relax for a bit before Josh came by. He had flown into Colorado Springs instead of Denver, and gotten in last night (his plane didn’t sit on the ground for four hours - we actually watched it take off next to us...). He wanted to come up and have lunch with everyone, so we all headed out to meet everyone again for a meal at Cafe Mexicali. Free refills and ice! :) Thank goodness for Mexican food too. One of the things I definitely learned to appreciate about the U.S. while I was gone is the variety of food we have easily accessible. I love having so many different genres - not just “American” hamburgers, hot dogs and fried chicken for every meal... The rest of the day was pretty uneventful. I made myself stay up til 9:30 or ten to keep from messing up my sleep schedule too much more, but I think that layover did me in. Missing Italy, but glad to be home.
There are advantages to body clock malfunction, like the overwhelming desire to take a 30 second exposure panorama of the view from Evie & Andy's flat at 3:30am!
Don't worry; I've caught up with the extra sleep since then ;-)
Project Cinko Time - Image 259/365
There's absolutely no denying that jetlag can be a complete pain in the you know what, but sometimes it can be a blessing in disguise.
Take this evening as an example, me trying to get all kinds of reports etc done for work and Cinko having eaten around thirty bags of skittles during the day was in hyper mode, screaming "bounce, bounce, bounce" as loud as he could will jumping up and down on the bed.
And then the jetlag kicked in, and suddenly it was "bounce, bounce, snore".
Ah, finally I can get on with my work without complete madness surrounding me!
From the Uglydoll blog at blog.adventuresinuglyworld.com/
And on Twitter at - @uglyadventures
On Google at - plus.google.com/110890957394686361214/post
Images from Ultra Brasil 2017
October 13 & 14 2017
Sambódromo, Rio de Janeiro
Client: Ultra Music Festival
© 2017 www.rudgr.com
Check out my book on 20 years of dance music photography!
Walking in the pretty little renaissance garden, the Prinsentuin (1626) of the Prinsenhof, in central Groningen yesterday to disintegrate my jetlag, I saw this wonderfully Brilliant Campion, Burning Love, Brandende Liefde just beginning to bloom. A whole family of Firebrand Jewels - if Lychnis chalcedonica might be translated a bit freely, perhaps - lit up the edges squaring off the large hedgical intitials A(lbertine Agnes, 1634-1696) and W(illem Frederik, 1613-1664, of Nassau-Dietz, Stadtholder of Frisia, Groningen and Drenthe, who once lived here part of the year).
Our Lychnis and its close relations Fulgens, Coronata, Cognata hail from European and Asiatic Russia, from Mongolia, northern China, Korea and Japan. (In fact, more or less the shallow swath of my plane from Seoul to Amsterdam the other day.)
Carl Peter Thunberg (1743-1828), a brilliant student of Carolus Linnaeus, often called after his preceptor the 'Japanese Linnaeus', says that our Chalcedonica is frequently grown in Japanese gardens. The medical doctor and naturalist Philip Franz von Siebold (1795-1866), a real 'Japan-hand', tried making money by importing Lychnis to Europe. David Mabberley has written brilliantly (1999) and with much enthusiasm about this history. My Korean flora by Kim Tae Jeong doesn't mention Chalcedonica but only Cognata, Fulgens and Wifordii. Still it wouldn't surprise me if our particular Chalcedonica can be found in Korea as well.
Lundi 16 Février – La France signe un contrat historique, la vente de « quelques » avions Rafale à l’Egypte…Y’a ceux qui sont contents, Y’a ceux qui sont pas contents…Et y’a les autres.
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Taken during a jetlag induced early start to Saturday morning on the 26th April 2014, an early stop off an hour before sunrise on the hills of Sausolito overlooking the Golden Gate Bridge and San Francisco, with the changing colours in the sky as the transition from night to day rolled along, with the sun finally breaching the hills in the distance and flooding the bay area with colour.
First evening back in England and I fought the jetlag to watch the Champions League final. Being a Spurs fan I wanted Bayern Munich (Brian as my son calls them), so that Chelsea wouldn't gazump our Champion's League spot for 12-13. Well life takes its own turns, and when Schweinsteiger missed and Drogba scored, well it was bedtime, goodnight vienna.