Tag: travel
Big Top and Caravans
Early Car Camper
Another great find on Pinterest:
Vardo News, Russian Style
вардо, that’s Russian for Vardo; and it certainly looks more interesting in Cyrillic. Searching some Russian pages for vardo information yielded a wealth of photos and some interesting information about Traveler culture in Eastern Europe. There’s as much fascination with the Traveler lifestyle in the largest country on Earth as there is on this side of the globe as we are more alike than we are different, despite what politicians might say.
The enchantment that some of us have for life on the road spans the world. Our ancestors were all nomads but some seek the comforts of permanent roots.
It’s only in our recent past to settle for a permanent dwelling when the Earth is our canvas on which we write our lives largely and bold. Most of us in the “New World” certainly wouldn’t be here at all had our ancestors been stay-at-homes or successful and steadfast. I think we have it in our genes to look for greener pastures.
That’s why so many of us (1 in 300 according to U.S. statistical data) at some point in our lives choose an itinerant life against the image portrayed as “typical” and settled.
This feeling is certainly not exceptional, from Reading Wagon to Winnebago, it’s relatively easy to make one’s home on the road.
Maybe not as spacious as a spec home in Los Angeles but when the outdoors is your home then the real luxury can be limited in square footage.
And, of course, there is the romance of the Road. Think of Steinbeck, Kerouac, McCarthy, or Tolkien; the great adventure stories of the Road that never ends. We need nothing but our rolling universe and the few things we bring along.
For western Europeans, there is a special romance with the horse, wagon, and music that makes this lifestyle especially enticing to some, leading to the immense sales of caravans that will rarely see actual use but represent a freedom most of us may never get to know.

So if it’s in you, you are not alone in looking for some adventure on the open road that is your life.
Ostrich Egg Globe ca. 1500
From Discover Magazine online…
Engraved Ostrich Egg Globe is Oldest to Depict the New World
The first known globe to include the New World was recently found at a London map fair—an impressive 500 year survival for it being engraved into ostrich eggs.
According to analysis by an independent Belgian scholar, Stefaan Missinne, the globe not only predates the previous record holder—a globe made of copper alloy between 1504 and 1506, now on display at the New York Public Library—but the evidence suggests it was actually the model used to cast that previous record holder.
The two globes are identical down to their smallest details, from the wave patterns on the ocean to the disproportionate size of continents. The handwriting is the same, and even the typos match up: “HISPANIS” instead of HISPANIA and “LIBIA INTEROIR” in place of LIBIA INTERIOR.
A Rare Find
The grapefruit-sized globe was spotted at the London map fair in 2012 by an anonymous globe and map collector. By that point it had already passed through two dealers’ hands since being purchased from an unnamed but apparently important European collection. Due to these layers of mystery, globe expert Stefaan Missinne was called in to figure out if the globe was legitimate, and if so, when and where it originated.
The globe’s northern and southern hemispheres each came from the round bottom half of an ostrich egg. To figure out its age, Missinne sent the globe to a radiologist who used CT scans to measure the bone density loss in the shell. By comparing the density to that of modern ostrich eggs, and eggs of known ages in museum collections, Missinne calculated the rate an ostrich egg loses bone density: about 10 percent each century. This means the ostrich egg globe would have been engraved around the year 1500, consistent with the idea of it being the cast for the copper globe. And since copper can be melted but egg cannot, the egg would have had to come first.
Ahead of Its Time
Whoever made the globe had access to the latest information about explorers from all the European countries vying for world domination. Many explorers were just returning from their journeys that profoundly changed the way people saw and understood the world. The shape of the Asian peninsula, for example, reflects the explorations of Italian Henricus Martellus, and the two tiny islands of North America were those happened upon by Christopher Columbus. Other details reflect the then-recent exploratory accounts of Marco Polo, the Corte-Reals, Cabral, and Amerigo Vespucci, who coined the name New World, or “MVNDVS NOVVS” as it is labeled on the globe.
Missinne suspects the globe was engraved by an Italian hand, as he describes in the cartography journal Portolan today. The scholar points specifically to Florence which, in 1500, was the richest city in Europe and a renowned map-making hub. Feuding families in positions of power funded exotic artistic and cultural projects, so an ostrich egg globe of the newly discovered lands would have been right up their alley.
The Drama is in the Details
Another creative force in Florence at the time was Leonardo Da Vinci. The lack of New World references in Da Vinci’s writings, and the artist’s inexperience with engraving, suggest to Missinne that Da Vinci could not have been the globemaker himself. Still, the great thinker’s influence is apparent. The transfer of the map from paper to globe appears to have been done via Da Vinci’s unique method for transferring a 2-dimensional drawing to a 3-dimensional sphere by slicing it into triangles.
Apart from the new lands depicted on the globe, the waters tell their fair share of stories, too. In the Indian Ocean, for example, a sole ship is shown tossed on the waves, its origin and destination unknown. And off the coast of Southeast Asia, the Latin legend warns of a legendary monster: “HIC SVNT DRACONES” it says; Here there are dragons.
Vardo in Normandy
Pulled by oxen:
It certainly leaves me wanting to know more… any info, anyone?
Edwardian Camp Equipment
From The Army and Navy Co-operative Society Store, London 1907









Waiting for the plumbers gave me a few minutes to put up this post. This is a lot more than a bunch of nifty images (but it is that as well). There are some excellent items here that should give some inspiration for fabricating some classic and classy gear. From an era before the activity of “camping” was fulling segregated from “regular living”.
Much more of this to come…
Vespa Touring

Found on MODamorphosis on TUMBLR. An ambitious set-up for sure.
More about Roberto and his amazing travels can be found here at the Scooterist or just click an image below.
Southwest Washington
Our second week on the Portland area was primarily spent north of the Columbia River in Washington State. Battle Ground, Vancouver, and a trip to Mount St Helen’s. Although it was hot and dry most of the time, it was a relief after spending months in the Southwest on archaeological excavations.
These photos are not the best, but do capture some of the beauty of the area around Mount St Helen’s.
The dirty snow on the mountain in the distance.
It was a hot and windy day for the ridge-line trail but still a great little trek.
The mountain, as seen from the northwest. The enormous crater is from the most recent eruption.
Wildflowers are reclaiming the ashy landscape.
A new lake was formed from the eruption. A beautiful place to spend an afternoon.
Geology, geomorphology, and biological reclamation in action everywhere you look.
Touring the Oregon Coast
It was great to escape the heat, dust, and chaos that is my normal life these days. Oregon was everything I hoped for and more. The Pacific air brought back many good memories and made me yearn again to live near this amazing coast.
The weather was perfect, the water was cold, and the seafood abundant.
My blood is too thick for the southern plains and this trip was an excellent respite from the drying winds of the Llano Estacado.
We spent three days just walking on the beaches and retreating to the woods to camp with little concern for the outside world. The rest of the time we ventured around northwest Oregon and southwest Washington and just generally loafing about.
Debris from Japan was apparent on the shore and hinted at a tragic but interesting story.
It was great to travel with friends who know the region and could steer us in the right direction to get the most out of our short visit.
Twenty years ago I was certain that I would spend my life in the Pacific Northwest. Events transpired, or failed to, to allow this to happen and I have been drifting in the west for a long time now. Every time I see and smell the Pacific, I’m ready to settle down and grow some moss.
It is certainly a rugged beauty but in a bountiful land.
I will definitely be back. Hopefully without too much delay.








