2005 was an interesting year. Great times, great friends, great moments. This photo set documents a number of the random encounters that I had over the course of the year. You have the odd, the beautiful, and the downright amusing. Check it out...
A participant on the discussion forums asked about a particular vending machine that I'd talked about in the past. When I went up to visit JMU on February 18, I got a chance to film this particular machine in operation.
On February 23, I visited Charlottesville to do some transit photography. But first, I went to the Comfort Inn to visit Teri, a friend and former coworker from Wal-Mart. She had a message for Katie, another friend and coworker of mine.
Later that day, a fire truck enters the University of Virginia campus with its lights flashing and siren wailing. No one could figure out what they were there for, though...
This is how my desk looked for most of 2005. I had two monitors, with one up and one down. Near the end of the year, I got a new flat panel monitor, and the lower monitor became the upper monitor.
One of the most annoying toys to ever grace the face of the earth: singing Boohbah dolls. I can still imitate their little song...
On Katie and I's April 7 trip, I do one of my trademark off-the-cuff interviews with Katie in the midst of downtown Lynchburg.
I discuss what the day's been like so far.
Katie poses with Steve, our old boss, in the Lynchburg Wal-Mart.
Katie and I later discovered "Potty Elmo", who sings a song about going to the bathroom to the tune of "Pop Goes the Weasel", and ending with a flush sound.
I had my own name for the toy: "Elmo takes a s---." (Get my drift?)
At Perrywinkle Toys at Valley View Mall in Roanoke, Katie and I each took a spin with a hula hoop. Trust me - neither one of us has a future that involves hula hoops.
I take a moment to kick the little metal man tying his shoe in the butt at Valley View Mall.
Katie poses for the camera at the Roanoke Star.
Before the A16 protest, Sis and I stopped at the Wal-Mart in Manassas. While there, I was quite surprised to find out that I could get myself a store manager for only $8.76.
(Yes, I realize that the price refers to the poinsettias in the background, but I couldn't resist.)
At Nordstrom, this mannequin nearly bares it all. Reminds me of Davinia Taylor in that issue of Front magazine that I was featured in.
On April 25, on a trip to Staunton Mall, I noticed the car of a fellow Homestar Runner fan, seeing this bumper sticker for Limozeen.
This gentleman is a greeter at the Wal-Mart in Manassas. By the end of the year, he had amassed a collection of more than 400 pins, which he wears on his vest.
At the Old Town Transit Shop, where a friend of mine works, which I visited on April 27, they have a foam rubber Metro train that somehow got broken in two. My friend said it was their "accident train". Making a bit of a joke about the November 3, 2004 accident at Woodley Park-Zoo, I put the two pieces in this position. I said that if it were really an accident train, it would look more like this, with a train having telescoped.
Mom, Dad, and Sis got new camera phones on April 29, and in testing out the camera on the phone, we trained the camera on Greta and took a test photo. Greta is such a wonderful photo subject. Never disagrees when we come up to her to take her picture.
As the evening goes on, and train headways get longer, one can be waiting for the train for a while. In this case on the evening of May 11, I was sitting on the floor at Pentagon City, set the camera to long-exposure, set it on the floor, and took a photo. This is what I got. Not too shabby, getting a look at the different shoes on the platform.
The combination here just makes me wonder a bit. Namely, why would a person want a television and lantern combination? I know I would not want to lug the TV part around when using the device as a lantern, and one can't watch the TV and use the lantern together without shining the light in one's face...
Sometimes when I go to Washington, random people ask me to take their picture on the street. What do we do? We take the picture. It's a whole lot easier than arguing with them. In this case on May 25, a gentleman posed for a photo outside the Shaw-Howard University station.
"Please NO DOGS. Potty train them in YOUR yard."
Driving through a neighborhood in Waynesboro on June 27, I discovered this sign next to the curb. Seems that someone's had enough with animals doing their business on their yard...
Looking at this photo on the Purina Cat Chow bag, it makes one wonder. It makes me wonder if she's really a cat person, or if she actually hates cats in real life...
Here's an unusual sight... a Gillig Phantom up on blocks in the parking lot of the Wal-Mart in Manassas on July 20.
Later on that day, I rode Breda 3155 from Pentagon City to Huntington, which had one headlight out at that time. I wasn't logging my trains regularly at that time (that started with my August 3 trip), so this is how I noted the number of this unusual car. Key it into the cell phone, and then take a photo of the phone showing the number.
On a trip on July 28, while stopping in Harrisonburg, I discovered that the gate lodge at the former Howard Johnson's (now Rockingham Hall) had very recently been demolished. The remainder of the complex, consisting of the guest rooms of the former motor lodge, was refurbished for its second stint as a dorm. The former restaurant had been demolished in mid-June 2004.
On August 3 (my black-and-white day), I took a rare color photo to show that this particular concrete table had finally deteriorated to the point of being unsafe. A shame, too - that table was a favorite of mine.
On my black-and-white day, I also tried to get into it with some movies. This is a black-and-white movie of a CAF train leaving the Shaw-Howard University station on the Green Line...
Wish I'd taken this in color, but this was taken just before the big Scout Jamboree of 2005. As a result, Pentagon City Mall was crawling with people in Boy Scout uniforms.
This photo was taken August 9 from Twenty Minute Cliff on the Blue Ridge Parkway with my cell phone. Not too shabby. I like the way the clouds are low, amongst the mountains.
On August 12, Sis strikes a pose while working Layaway.
Even though we knew what they meant to say (related to buying a second pair of glasses), this sign still struck me as funny on my August 17 DC trip. Buy one eye, and get another one free!
At the Loews L'Enfant Plaza Hotel, we find a "local" variant of the Cerberus Pyrotronics MS-51 pull station. In Washington, since alarm systems are prohibited by law from transmitting alarms to authorities automatically, you see a lot of pull stations with this wording.
The Schumin Web - Life and Times - Year In Review - Menu