Silvery, Green Alaskan Light
Alaskan plein air #7/14
6" x 8" oil on canvas on board
$100.00 + $10. s/hIn case you're wondering about those shrimp pots from the last post, twice we went shrimping and had great dinners! It was quite a bit of work!
1. First we filled bait boxes. Then, took the pots from the stack, flipped them over, put the bait in, and tied the nets shut.
2. Next, we threw them down from the roof to the main level, then attached them to a line and threw them in! (Although I think that this photo is actually pulling them out.) We then motored back to our anchorage and waited 24 hours.
3. Using a hoist made it all easier.
4. Each pot was lifted to the roof. The
shrimp were then dumped into this big pot.
5. The head of each shrimp was broken
off and thrown back in for someone
else's dinner!
6. Getting dinner ready! These shrimp were
soaked in salty water for 24 hours to make them
less rubbery and tastier.
7. Then all the pots were stacked so we'd
be ready several days later to do this again!
I'm sure some of you are familiar with all of this. But, catching fresh shrimp is not something we do in Colorado! I truly felt like I was on the TV show "The Deadliest Catch"! We just didn't have any rough water!
I'm not sure why #2 is so erratic. It looks perfect when I look at it in my posting set-up, there aren't any strange word spaces and there's not much room between #2 and 3. Any thoughts on this? Oh well, it's always something.
14 comments:
Combiner, la pêche, la peinture, le plaisir des papilles en un c'est absolument génial... Tout me paraît réussi! Une toile peinte avec votre immense talent... Bravo!
Et le reste, grâce à vos belles photos parle...
Gros bisous et félicitations pour cette jolie publication.
You've perfectly captured the sense of coldness in Alaskan waters here, Pam. So beautiful! As to the shrimp, I don't eat them at all (I don't like seafood) but it sure was interesting to read!
It looks like such a great adventure - shrimping in Alaska and plein air painting! I'll bet the shrimp tasted delicious!
Loved how you treated the water on this landscape. Shrimping does seem like a lot of work, how did you cook it?
Thanks for the details and the paintings on this incredible sounding trip of yours!
Merci beaucoup Martine!
Thank you Sherry, I doubt that the waters in Alaska ever get warm!
Janelle, Thank you. Yes. It truly was a great adventure!
Thank you Amy. We had the shrimp several times, several ways: grilled in butter and garlic, fried, omelette, and kebabs.
Anne, You are so welcome. It was an incredible trip!
Pam, painting and eating , two of my favorite activities! Love seeing your travelog, artlog, and foodlog, all at once. Your painting is beautiful, and captures the mood of the landscape!
The water looks beautiful and icy cold! And the shrimping sounds very hard. Guess everyone worked up quite an appetite.
Nancy, Yes! Thank you! Painting and eating go hand in hand!
Thank you Shirley. When you're in the fresh air most of the day, you really do get hungry!
Beautiful work. Your shrimping adventure sounds great
beautiful painting and the travelog is a lot of fun too
Hi, Pam - I am glad I found your blog and was able to see how you captured the silvery Alaskan colors. Such an interesting read - and quite an adventure!
Suzanne, Thank you. The whole trip was an adventure!
Thank you Celeste. I figured that since I;m painting on a trip, might as well include it all!
Thank you Susan. So glad that you stopped by!
Love those blue mountains
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