The photo was taken on Monday June 12, 2006.
We drove across the Gate and into the Marin Headlands in the last hour
before sunset. From the moment we merged with the swift flow of traffic and
headed north across the Golden Gate Bridge, the views surrounding us were
fantastic and other-worldly. Ocean blown summer fog was racing over the
costal range and into San Francisco Bay. Its effect on the landscape was
pure magic. As we navigated the switchbacks up to Hawk Hill (Battery 129),
we were for one moment, in the fog, then under the fog, in the fog again,
then on top of the fog. The drive went on like this all the way to Black
Sand Beach. A half mile or so later, as we crested the next and final
highest hill (near the World War II bunkers that overlook Bonita Cove and
Point Bonita) and just before the downward approach to the lighthouse turn
off, a vision appeared straight out of a canvas by Caspar David Friedrich.
It was the dark silhouette of a man standing all alone in the fog on top of
this ethereal world. He was watching the sun go down. Because of this thick
fog that was enveloping us, we were able to look directly into the sun,
study it, stare at it, ponder it. It was a timeless moment that stood still
in the delicate white light of the sun. All breathless.
If you are wondering, who Caspar David Friedrich is, to find out, please visit these web sites.
http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/friedrich/
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Museum/4782/cdfpeople.htm
http://www.artchive.com/artchive/F/friedrich.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caspar_David_Friedrich
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Museum/4782/cdfriedrich.htm
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