In August, I returned to Iceland for the third time, part of a larger travel adventure that included the Faroe Islands and Copenhagen. I had hoped to see the Fagradalsfjall volcano erupting but had to settle for a barren lava field. Still, no trip to Iceland goes unrewarded and I got many great photographs of my favorite locations.
The Faroe Islands were spectacular and I was able to visit 7 of the 18 islands in a rented camper van with pop-up roof. I was graced with unusually good weather and pressed my drone into constant service, the only way to capture the full grandeur of the islands.
The final leg of my journey was spent in Copenhagen where I met up with my soccer team from the US to compete in an international tournament. The perfect end to a wonderful vacation.
With Covid risk continuing to decline, I started to do more short-range car travel including trips to New York, Connecticut (to watch the US Women’s Soccer Team play Mexico), and New Jersey (to watch Nico’s New England Amputee Soccer Team play New York).
On the Fourth of July, I visited Fort Independence on Castle Island to watch the USS Constitution, the world’s oldest floating ship, as members of the crew performed a 21-gun salute to celebrate the holiday.
By June, the threat of Covid was ebbing and both Jeanine and I had received two doses of the vaccine. We traveled to Minnesota to see my mother, brother, and his family. The visit was all too short but immensely enjoyable. Later in the month, we celebrated with Kyle who purchase his first home in Medford, MA. The real estate market since the onset of Covid has been nothing short of insane. Kyle spent months of diligent research, countless home visits, and several unsuccessful bids before landing a gem.
Matt Baird has volunteered with Open Table since he was in high school demonstrating much greater responsibility and caring than most teenagers earning him the respect and admiration of the entire staff. When he was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, members of the Open Table staff and volunteers were there for him. When asked by the Make-A-Wish foundation what wish they could fulfill for him, he asked for a donation to Open Table. Rarely does one encounter such selflessness and generosity in a person so young and with his own challenges to overcome. This morning, Jeanine accepted his donation in a small ceremony at the Open Table pantry which she asked me to photograph. The money received will be used to buy an additional freezer which will be playfully named in his honor, the Matt “Brrrd” Freezer.
May is an excellent time of year for birding. Many species migrate back from their winter homes, it is warm enough to enjoy being outdoors, and trees have not yet leafed out making it much easier to spot and photograph subjects. I was fortunate to discover an owl’s nest which I visited often over the course of the month and got to watch as a pair of owlets grew up and eventually fledged. Equally exciting was learning about a bald eagle nest located less than a mile from our new house. It fills me with great joy that these majestic once-endangered birds have made such a strong recovery. A powerful reminder of our ability as humans to harm our natural world as well as our capacity to help it heal.
May was also the month in which Nicolai graduated with a Master’s Degree in Education and he now teaches history at the Concord Middle School.
During April, outdoor socializing became the norm to reduce the risk of Covid transmission. Our fire pit, fashioned from a large copper cauldron once used by the Roselyn Bakery of Indianapolis to make caramel corn, was pressed into service on a routine basis. We welcomed Jeanine’s sister Lauren and her husband Bob to our new home, I hosted my soccer team for one of our post-match parties, and the kids joined us for dinner on most Sunday nights.
As if to make up for the harsh storms of February, March ushered in an early spring. The kids visited us most Sundays for a family dinner and helped out when it came time to burn off all the dead limbs that had accumulated in the yard.
Nicolai began organizing an amputee soccer team for the New England region and also competed in his first 5K road race.
February brought massive amounts of snow and I spent a lot of time indoors working on different design concepts for the new house. Each iteration produced a more refined layout and improved model fidelity.
At Digital Alloys, my development team made a monumental breakthrough by printing a thin wall metal part with a 45-degree unsupported overhang. After years of investigation and experimentation, this milestone proved that our proprietary process could be made to work and was the cause for unbridled celebration at the company.
I have decided to devote the next 12 blog entries to a Year in Review series with photos from each month of 2021. In January, Jeanine and I had moved into our new house on the Sudbury River and I was busy preparing it for renovation. Pictured here is the former artist studio stripped down to the framing. I did all of this work before later deciding that it would make the most sense to completely demolish the house and start fresh. In total, I gutted 2/3 of the house before reaching that conclusion.
I hired Maya and her boyfriend to help with filling one of several dumpsters needed to haul away the debris. I think it is safe to say that we packed those dumpsters as efficiently as humanly possible.
Having started consulting work with Amide Technologies this week, I wanted to finish setting up a proper video studio from which I can conduct remote video conference meetings. It will do double duty as my photo studio, the essential difference being whether I use continuous or strobe lighting. I installed a system for supporting standard paper backdrops (107″ in width) from the ceiling. It allows me to easily switch between up to three different color backdrops by rolling them up or down using the plastic chains on the right side. I loaded it with neutral grey and white for the moment. The temporary desk is set at the correct height so that when placed on top, my laptop’s built-in camera is at eye level and the panel light above it is positioned correctly. I know this is overkill for Zoom meetings, but my background in video production makes me sensitive to doing this in an optimal fashion. The uniform backdrop improves isolation when using a virtual background (my favorite is the office I had while living in Indianapolis).
Pictured here with her escort and grandson Rory, my 93-year-old mother was recognized by the Tango Society of Minnesota as a “Tango Treasure” at their year-end gala held at the recently renovated Granada Theater. She has been ballroom dancing since her early twenties. It is how she met my father who was putting himself through college as a ballroom dance instructor at the time. Among the 140 attendees, she was there to dance and had no idea she would be honored in this way. She is an inspiration to our entire family and an example of how pursuing your passion keeps you young at heart.
Jeanine spent the weekend on Martha’s Vineyard with her good friends Irene and Carolyn. Pictured here with the former in front of a one-of-a-kind lobster trap Christmas tree replete with buoys as ornaments. I spent the time alone getting organized for my new work assignment and completing the setup of my new shop.
There is no doubt that Jeanine is the master cook in this family. My contribution in the kitchen is generally relegated to peeling, slicing, and chopping tasks for which I seem adequately proficient. Today, I was promoted to caramelizer and charged with bringing this mixture of water and sugar to the perfect color and texture before introducing cubed chicken and bok choy to complete a recipe for Vietnamese Caramelized Chicken. The head chef seemed pleased with my work.
I spent time curating my collection of photos today with the goal of getting the total to under 100,000. If I spent only 1 second viewing each image, it would take more than a day just to look at them all, hence the ongoing effort to purge. While doing so, I came across the photo of Maya above taken in early 2008. Below is a photo of the same child nearly 14 years later. Despite the amount of work to catalog and index the collection, it is all worthwhile when I find memories like this. I wonder if Maya has any recollection of her early climbing exploits.
This website is dedicated to sharing, with family and friends, the day-to-day adventures of the Calabria family.