8 & 9 - Nevermore
Tuesday, December 09, 2025
 | | Niña above and Niño below |
Anniversaries are terrible
when they involve the death of a loved one.
After a bit more than a
month, when I met my Rosemary, we were married on February 8 1968 in Coyoacán, Mexico.
Rosemary died on December 9, 2020. Those dates have been in my soul and it
would have been impossible for me to forget them and not to write about them
today.
While “nunca más” is a
translation of nevermore, the use of that word by Edgar Alan Poe makes the word in English
that much more damning for me. I live in a jar full of memories that can never
be experienced in reality again. Going up and down the stairs of my Kits house
and seeing all those family photographs and more in my bedroom, living room and
dining room is an exquisite but sad experience.
I have no idea how my
daughters are remembering today. I look at Niño and Niña, two cats Rosemary and
I rescued from the SPCA 7 years ago, and I realize that she loved and petted
both of them when they were on our bed with us. They constantly remind me of her absent presence.
While I have written about
this incident before, I cannot but repeat it. We were in the living room waiting
for the funeral people to show up. Rosemary was upstairs on our bed. I thought,
“Alex you are a photographer. You have to take that photograph.” I went up and
there was my dead wife with Niña asleep on her chest. I took that photograph.
Nobody in my family will ever see it. That photograph will be in my memory
until oblivion takes it away.
Pedro Meyer - An Active Photographer at 91
 | Pedro Meyer - December 1, 2025
|
A Book End In Mexico City When I told my journalist
friend Maurice Bridge of the project that was going to take me to Mexico City
on the first of December he told me, “Alex this will make a good bookend for
your career.” I laughed and replied, “This means I can return from Mexico City
and die.” He laughed, too. It immediately occurred to me that there is no
expression in Spanish for that bookend.
Since I returned at 4:30
in the morning on December 6 I have been in a combination of shell shock about
the enormity of Mexico City now and at the same time I have felt lackadaisical about
doing anything except lying on my bed with my cats Niño and Niña.
To my horror I forgot to
take out the 100 ISO film from my bag when I arrived at the Mexico City
airport. I was there to photograph 91 year-old Mexican photographer Pedro Meyer
who is almost blind (became so 2 years ago). He is able to discern movement and
colours. Meyer told me not to worry about the film. He was right. I took four
exposures with my film camera and some with my Fuji X-E3. About the film camera
I will write below.
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In 1962 I was living in
Mexico City and told myself that I could not be a photographer with only my
1958 purchased in Austin, Texas (B&H NY mail) an East German , Dresden made
Pentacon-F SLR. I went to Foto Rudiger on Avenida Venustiano Carranza and found
a used black Asahi Pentax S-3 with a 55mm F-2 lens. I decided this was the camera
that I would use to take portraits (with a portable studio lighting system that
would include a softbox). All my cameras are operational thanks to the fact
that Horst Wenzel would repair them here in Vancouver. A couple of weeks before
he died last year the shutter button of the Pentax fell out. He repaired it.
I have written before in
many of my blogs how my cameras represent to me versions of King Arthur’s Sword
Excalibur. With the Pentax I knew I could do no wrong. A Sword Excalibur and a Dog
Meyer warned me that he
would take my photograph. He used a digital (very expensive) Leica. He sent me
a portrait via WhatsApp. My niece Mari Teli, (who drove me around in Mexico
City and in her hometown of Cuernavaca), told me that the trees behind me were
not there. I asked Meyer. His answer was, “Those
trees are based on 17 million Canadian trees.” You see, and this is
important, this 91 year-old photographer used Artificial Intelligence.
 | | Photograph by Pedro Meyer - De3cember 1, 2025 | Most of my contemporaries
in Vancouver really no longer take photographs. For me Meyer is an inspiration
to keep going at it. And if I manage to be 91 someday I hope I have his enthusiasm.
1957 - Seconds Later - 1957
Monday, December 08, 2025
 | | Steve Sanford - Dec 5, 2025 - Mexico City | Nueva Rosita - Steve Frazier Sanford
In my recent trip to
Mexico City I met up with a man I had last seen in 1957 when both of us were
15. Because we did not communicate until we met (a brief WhatsApp before to
arrange our meeting) it seemed like all those years (68) had not happened.
Paradoxically we both felt that we had seen each other seconds before in 1957.
I believe that this
century has a few advantages over the last one. One big one is to locate people
(Google) and then to communicate with them (Messenger, WhatsApp).
In 1957 my mother was
teaching high school (8th grade, 7th and 6th)
in a one room schoolhouse in Nueva Rosita, Coahuila in northern Mexico. She was
teaching there because her students were the children of the engineers, etc, of
American Smelting and Refining Company.
The 8th grade
class was made up by 6 boys. I was one of them and of course my mother was our
teacher.
 | | Steve Frazier- far right - 1957, Nueva Rosita, Coahuila. Mexico |
A few weeks ago I looked for
those 5 boys. I already knew that 4 of them were gone. Steve Frazier has a
sister, Cornelia Muzquiz who lives in Eagle Pass. Texas. I connected with her
through Messenger and she gave me the contacts for her brother who now used his
mother’s maiden name of Sanford.
 | | Alex on left, Steve on far right | We spent several hours in
Mexico City using the word buddy lots. Steve talks perfect Spanish and his
English is full-Texan.
Of the portrait that I
took of him I can only say I lucked out.
A Lovely Rose Wishes Me a Safe Trip
Sunday, November 30, 2025
 | | Rosa 'A Shropshire Lad' 30 November 2025 |
Today is what I would call
a travel limbo. I am leaving at 7 in the
morning tomorrow for Mexico City (CDMX). This means that I will not get a good
night’s sleep. Without my Rosemary to help me pack and organize the trip I lie
in bed trying to think what I may have forgotten to put in my suitcase.
My two daughters are going
to come for late lunch as well as my nephew Tom Tom (not a mistake as he is
known for that double name) Wolf who is coming from San francisco to be one of
the speakers for The Prosper Symposium on Drug Prevention tomorrow. Tom Tom
travels all over the world, including Washington DC, to give advice that he
learned when he was a terrible alchoholic and drug addict. He does point out to
me (and he should know) that Vancouver has the worst fentanyl problem in North
America.
At around 4 I will have
the sad duty of taking Niño and Niña to the Feline Hilton on West Boulevard in
Kerrisdale. Because I will be returning on a Saturday late that will mean that
I will spend tonight and my coming back Saturday without their cuddly company.
I do not have an Uber
application so I will call my usual Black Top cabs to pick me up to take me to
the airport.
I have been emptying all
my garbage. Tomorrow will be the pick up. The house is clean. What have I
possibly missed?
Not missed was looking for
some sort of open rose bud with my best rose at this late time in fall called
Rosa ‘Shropshire Lad’. I wa rewarded and
as usual this rose has lovely new red leaves.
I will bid my two cats
goodbye but somehow this rose has done the same and perhaps has even wished me
a safe journey and a good time.
A Book End In Mexico City
Saturday, November 29, 2025
 | | Pedro Meyer |
A week ago I told my
journalist friend Maurice Bridge of my project that will take me to Mexico City
in the beginning of December. He said, “Alex this will be a good bookend for
your career.” I immediately answered back
with a grin, “This means I can return to Vancouver and die!” He laughed.
Because I speak English
and Spanish I often think of these expressions and how the concept of a bookend
does not exist in Spanish. It is impossible to say quickly without an
explanation in Spanish the translation of a “show and tell”.
Why am I going to Mexico?
Just because my Rosemary
died five years ago does not mean that I have to wait to die. I actively pursue
when possible both my analog and digital photography. I have amassed over 5000
plant scans and I have now written 6730 blogs.
I am going to Mexico to
photograph a well-known Mexican photographer, Pedro Meyer, who is 90 and has
been blind for two years. It was about 15 years ago that while reading the
on-line Washington Post I noticed a link called ZoneZero. To my surprise it was
an astounding and advanced for the age digital photographic web page. I
connected with the man in charge, Pedro Meyer and we became friends. I wrote an
essay which is still up about asymmetry. It involves my photography of a woman
who was born minus and arm and with a leg that was longer than the other. The
essay is both in Spanish and in English.
My Essay in ZoneZero About two weeks ago I
wondered what may have happened to Meyer. In Google I found that he has a very
strong presence and that he even publishes books and has conferences. Using
that wonderful 21st century device called WhatsApp I had a long chat. His
marbles are intact. When I write to him he has an assistant called Ximena who
reads what I send him. I asked Meyer what he would do if our tables were
turned. He told me he would come to Vancouver to photograph me. I asked him if
I should photograph him looking at me with eyes open, with eyes closed or in
profile. He told me to do all three and advised me that he was going to take my
portrait. He does discern a bit of light, but no more.
In 1962 when I was living
in Mexico City I told myself that I could not be a photographer with only one
camera, an early single lens reflex, an East German made in Dresden Pentacon-F
that I had purchased in 1958 in Austin, Texas via NY. I went to a German-named
store, Foto Lipkau and found that all they sold were expensive Leicas. I then
visited a store, not far; on Avenida Venustiano Carranza called Foto Rudiger
and spotted an all-black used Asahi Pentax S-3. It was the right choice as its
55mm F-2 lens was compatible with the screw mount of my Pentacon-F. I think it is appropriate
that I photograph Meyer with this camera and with 100ISO b+w film. Of course I
will take my digital Fuji X-E3 (and just in case the Fuji X-E1). With me in my
luggage will be my portable Metz studio light (110-220) and a small softbox. I
will limit myself to using the 55mm Pentax lens. I wonder how Meyer will shoot
me and I am looking forward to the experience.
I have a niece, who lives
in Cuernavaca in the state of Morelos, who will pick me up at the airport and
drive me to the lovely Coyoacán neighbourhood. There is a special significance
to me there as on 8 November 1968, at a judge’s office in the main square I
married my Rosemary Elizabeth Healey.
Just because I am 83 does
not mean that I have to quit dreaming of new projects.
While I smiled at the idea
of this becoming a bookend to my career I plan to keep at it while my good
health persists.
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