Posted on February 12, 2016
“Life imitates art far more than art imitates Life.” – Oscar Wilde
There are not so many good places to wander about with your camera in Qatar. But the Souq Waqif is one of them and is one of MB’s favourite spots in the locality. Lots of interesting subject matter floating around down there, and being a bit of a tourist haunt, nobody takes much notice of camera geeks doing camera stuff.
Just before Christmas, MB was wandering around the Souq and one of the Souq artists caught his eye. Or rather, 2 of his sketches caught MB’s eye. Interesting that both are of young girls and both come from different fields of ‘Art’, namely Photography & Painting. MB notes that many in the ‘Art’ world do not consider ‘Photography’ part of the world of ‘Art’. But that’s a discussion and debate for another day.
The sketch top right is a representation of one of the most famous photographs in the history of photography, called – Afghan Girl. It appeared as a cover photo of National Geographic magazine in June 1985. The photo was shot in a Pakistani refugee camp one year earlier, and the photographer never took note of the girl’s name at the time. Her green eyes and the intensity of her stare were striking, and the sketch, with respect, does not do justice to the original. The photo, by Nat Geo photographer Steve McCurry, was shot with a Nikon film camera, and is often compared to De Vinci’s painting ‘Mona Lisa’.
McCurry tracked his subject down in 2002, in a remote village in Afghanistan. The subject of the shot (Sharbat Gula, of Pashtun ethnicity) was unaware of the fame of the photo, albeit she remembered the photo being taken, as it was one of only three times in her life that anyone had taken a photo of her. The search for her became a TV documentary and also featured in Nat Geo magazine in April 2002.
The sketch to the left of ‘Afghan Girl’ is a sketch of one of the most famous paintings in the world, called – ‘Girl With a Pearl Earring’, by famous 17th-century Dutch artist Johannes Vermeer. It sits in a museum in the Hague since 1902.

Another deadly shot by MB!
Posted on February 5, 2016
MB’s home locality has experienced some 6,000 years of constant human habitation. The local website has much related information http://loughgur.com/
The Grange Stone Circle was built circa 2,500 BC.

Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Culture, postaday, Time, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on January 29, 2016
Vibrant. In B&W.
The bridge at Bruff village. Shot by MB during Christmas break back home.

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Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: bridge, Photography, postaday, River, Vibrant, Water, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on January 23, 2016
Barrowmen wait for work at the Souq Waqif, Doha, Qatar

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Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Optimistic, postaday, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on January 16, 2016
At a recent football match in Doha, Qatar.

Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Alphabet, postaday, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on January 8, 2016
This week, share a photo of something marked by its weight — or its air of weightlessness.
Always interesting to watch swans taking flight. Their bulk means they can not get airborne as quickly as smaller birds and they must use their legs to kick the water to generate additional speed for the launch. Caught this shot on the lake back home last week just after this guy had successfully taken off.

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Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: less, postaday, Weekly Photo Challenge, Weight
Posted on January 7, 2016
Lough Gur, in South West Ireland, was once a lake that fully circled the hill of Knockadoon, home to one of the four provincial entrances to Tír Na Nóg, the land of everlasting youth (subject of previous HX blog posts).
During the great Irish famine (1844 to 1849), as it was known, British Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel introduced public work schemes to create employment & income that might alleviate the consequences of the potato crop failure, on which millions of people depended. It employed some 150,000 people at peak. One such scheme was the excavation of a trench to lower the level of the Lough Gur lake.
Consequently, the lake became hoseshoe-shaped around the hill, no longer a complete circle. Another consequence of the reduced lake level was that many thousands of archeological artifacts were discovered on the newly exposed shoreline. They were found primarily at a distance where one might have thrown them from the former (higher) shoreline, leading archeologists to conclude that that lake received offerings from the local peoples during some of its 5,500 year history of local human habitation. Locals loaded the artifacts onto horse and carts and they were sold to traders in nearby Limerick city. Many of the items ended up in museums in Britain and in Ireland.
Photo taken during MBs Christmas trip home of two weeks back:

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Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Circle, Culture, Ireland, Lough Gur, postaday, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on December 26, 2015
Being in the NOW
MB is home for the holiday. Conditions are a little on the damp side. But village and countryside are looking well, and everyone seems to be well & truly in the ‘now’!

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Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Now, postaday, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on December 11, 2015
Posted on December 5, 2015
A peregrine falcon at the Falcon Souq, Doha, Qatar. The fastest bird on the planet.

Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Aviary, Birds, Birds of Prey, Eye Spy, Falconry, Feathers, Peregrine Falcon, Photography, postaday, Raptors, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge, Wildlife
Posted on December 4, 2015
Attended a football match this afternoon in Doha, Qatar. 7D in hand.
Caught this one.

Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Al Sadd Sports Club, Culture, Eye Spy, Football, Photography, postaday, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge, Xavi Hernandex
Posted on November 27, 2015
One day you’re single. Next day you’re not!
Friends of MB get married at ‘Our Lady of the Rosary’ Catholic Church in Doha, Qatar. June 2015.

Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Church, Love, marriage, Photography, postaday, religion, Service, Transition, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on November 20, 2015
3 Camels munch some evening food. Dubai. February 2009.

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Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Camels, Culture, Desert, Photography, postaday, Trio, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on November 13, 2015
Take a good look at the below photo.
On first impression, it looks like a photo of two of MBs shirts hanging on a door. But looks can be deceiving, as General Custer shouted to his troops when he realised there were far more Indians to deal with than he previously thought. In truth, said photo represents one of the greatest victories in the history of humankind. No kidding.
The related story involves the victory of a single Irishman over the country (almost a continent) of India. The incident in question took place in the city of Doha, Qatar in first week November 2015. The fact that the incredible victory did not make international headlines is solely due to the fact that the victorious Irishman is brimful of humility and compassion. He does not like to flaunt his victory in the faces of the vanquished.
The Irishman in question is well known to you all, for he is none other than your favorite blogger MB!

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A month or two back MB got a notion to throw some business the way of a backstreet tailoring establishment quite close to his abode in Doha, Qatar. A deal was struck between MB and the tailor for just under USD 300 for a 3-piece suit of jacket, waistcoat and trousers. MB was measured upside down and inside out. The entire staff, who to a man hailed from the southern state of Kerla in their homeland, assured MB that all would be well.
And so it turned out to be. When almost complete, MB called in for a final fitting. Some minor adjustments were carried out and a few days later MB collected his suit. All good.
The tailor then suggested to MB that no hand-made suit is complete without a hand-made shirt or two to go with it. Some nice fabrics were unrolled for MBs inspection and after agreeing a price of USD 20 per piece MB ordered two shirts. The shirts were collected some days later and despite one or two small moans from MB, the shirts were, generally speaking, quite ok. So MB got talked into ordering two more. And that’s when the fun, and the international incident, started.
Having previously taken all MBs athletic measurements, and already having produced two shirts that fitted MB quite well, MB reasonably expected that two more shirts would be easy money for the tailor. Copy the previous cut, stitch it up, take MBs cash and hand over the shirts.
MB duly arrived at the shop, and despite not expecting any excitement, MB is in the Middle East for far too long not to expect the unexpected. He therefore took the two shirts into the cramped fitting room, as the Indian staff assured him that there was absolutely no need to do so, being exact copies of the previous order, and proceeded to try them on.
WTF shouted MB. These shirts seem to have been made for a mini MB. An MB about half the size of the MB who was at that moment struggling to close any of the buttons on either of the shirts. Following some brute force MB managed to close three or four buttons on one of them, but there was an imminent threat of button-pop, as MBs bulk (MB had previously, for many years, considered that he actually did not have any ‘bulk’) strained buttons and fabric, to or beyond, its limit. MBs shoulders were also putting enormous pressure on the shoulder section of not one, but both shirts. At that moment in time, MB thought to himself that he looked very like the Incredible Hulk, from that old TV series, just before his shirt rips apart and goes flying through the air.
MB departed the fitting room wearing one of the shirts which more resembled a tight fitting wetsuit than a hand-made shirt, or any shirt for that matter. “WTF” said MB to all the assembled Indians, and to the few Indian & Arab customers who happened to be in the shop at the time. The tailor didn’t bat an eyelid and his usual smile never left his face as he confidently approached MB. Grabbing the bottom edge of the shirt, the tailor gave a gentle pull in a downwards direction, as it such a maneuver would miraculously increase the shirt size by the required 75%. Failure. “Very sorry Sir for our mistake”, said the tailor to MB, “we will make new”. MB has had too many dealings with Indian rascals in his years in the Middle East and he knew full well that “we will make new” meant only if we absolutely must after trying every trick in the book to avoid doing so. So MB laid down the law even before the “we will make new” commenced. “My friend” said MB, “there is not enough surplus materials in the seems to restitch this shirt to make it fit. So please ensure that you do actually “make new”. “Of course Sir” replied the tailor to placate MB and get him out of the shop as quickly as possible, lest he lose all his paying customers who were listening intently to the whole encounter.
A few days later MB arrived back to collect the “we will make new”. MBs suspicions arose immediately he was handed the “make new”. They looked suspiciously like the “make old”. And so it turned out to be. A little restitching here and there, and some other applied tricks of the needle had failed to find the necessary 75%. Another large failure was the inevitable outcome. MB again emerged into the middle of the shop in his ‘Incredible Hulk’ outfit and launched into an Irish tirade against the entire Subcontinent. “Sorry Sir, Sorry Sir, Sorry Sir” said the apologetic tailor, in front of yet more open-eyed customers.
MB called in again on following week. This time, thankfully, there was no drama. The tailor actually did “make new” and handed MB two of the finest shirts that MB is ever likely to wear. MB did, of course, try them on before he departed. But all was well. MB paid the balance due on both shirts, accepted the many humble apologies of the tailor for all the drama of the previous visits. “No matter” said the victorious MB, “only the end result is important, and thank you for two great shirts”.
Both men smiled, happy in the knowledge that this particular passage of their lives would now move behind them and both could move on.
The end!
Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Hand made, Is mine, postaday, Shirt, Talor, Victory, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on November 6, 2015
Made in an intricate shape or decorated with complex patterns. elaborate, decorated, embellished, adorned, ornamented, fancy, fussy, ostentatious.
MB is back in his favourite Grange Stone Circle in HX again. It’s Summer solstice morning, 21st June 2015, circa 5am, and the sun is not yet risen. MB is wandering around the circle taking shots of anything interesting that catches his eye in the pre-dawn light. Some visitors have left fruit on some of the stones during the night, as offering to the rising sun. One person has left an ornate (slightly) mini-sun.
MB gives you the mini-sun:
Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Alternative, Culture, Grange Stone Circle, Ireland, neolithic, Ornate, Photography, postaday, Solstice, Stone Age, sun, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge
It's a mad HX world!
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