Aaron C Rayburn: Some groves I've been visiting for about 20 years now. Today a cloud dropped down and joined us for a short walk through some really old Sitka Spruce family friends. Stay mossy.
Aaron C Rayburn: Time warp today. No one is here, no one. Just us and the mist, a distant northern cousin of @karlthefog
Aaron C Rayburn: Cold in Portland, warm at the beach. Nukka dawg diggin it. Back to the old childhood beach haunts
Aaron C Rayburn: Red dog and a camera are basically with me all the time. What else could a boy want? Digging this coastal mist, and the weight of the wind out here.
Aaron C Rayburn: Getting my #thisplace on up at Neakhanie today, can't wait to settle in for a long cozy blustery work weekend
Aaron C Rayburn: Cold gold
Aaron C Rayburn: Morning with my totems, Nch'i-Wana and Wy'East, who is 60 miles upriver fluffing his white cape.
Aaron C Rayburn: I hope you all are discovering old family treasures today. This was waiting for me when I walked in my Aunties house. Hello senior portrait 1999.
Aaron C Rayburn: Looking down into the sky at sunrise this morning. Yes, I'm still tired.
Aaron C Rayburn: Morning conversations with Wy'East, Nch'i-Wana, and the sunrise. Followed by a hello to one @mfhbrown who showed me a simultaneous sunset from Bologna via Google Hangout. Whoa. Approved.
Aaron C Rayburn: An embarrassment of riches on the Nch'i-Wana this evening. She opted for a refreshing dip before dinner. Being on this island in the Columbia is a heavy, spiritual way to be in the world. Surrounded by old, old, old waterways.
Aaron C Rayburn: Hello Wy'East, missed ya
Aaron C Rayburn: Late nights and early mornings. I may need to sleep for a year to recover from this round of work. Good morning from OZ.
Aaron C Rayburn: A culmination of some of the most rewarding work of my career is happening tonight. Large scale light installations, branding in cut marble, two short films, custom type for the city of Nashville and big hopes for an arts program in 2014. Best client of m
Aaron C Rayburn: Long shadows over Yellowstone this evening. Lovely night for a cruise over the heartland. Big full moon rising over Montana
Aaron C Rayburn: Morning along the Nch'i-Wana in Hood River County this morning. Had way too much fun last night, moving slow today.
Aaron C Rayburn: When you have clients further east from where you are, you see a lot of sunrises
Aaron C Rayburn: Incredible way to start a long working weekend with the river that runs through my heart and @stepoffmyfudge
Aaron C Rayburn: I've been waiting for this old friend to completely turn yellow, but his in between phase is still worth staring up into on my walk home from work every day. Soon he'll be bright as the sun, even at night.
Aaron C Rayburn: Can't wait to share the piece that @ryanjohnbush and I filmed a few weeks ago entirely in Oregon for @tannergoods and @dannerboots , releasing tomorrow!
Aaron C Rayburn: Good morning Oregon. This used to be my childhood playground. If come here and write in my dumb journal, try to swim in the too cold water, and watch my sister @fairest_of_them_all_ get stung by jellyfish. It was good. Always strange to linger here, like
Aaron C Rayburn: Majesty out here tonight. It's cold as warm at the same time.
Aaron C Rayburn: Good to be home with the creatures I love, amazing day to embrace autumn along the Pacific Ocean. Hello home. You're lovely.
Aaron C Rayburn: Cold, rain, wind, more flooding. Feels like home!
Aaron C Rayburn: Flooded city today. Waited all day for sun, got a peek on the way back from Lido. Being stranded on a flooded marble island feels odd.
Aaron C Rayburn: Lulled to sleep in my room by the bells of Chiesa di Santa Maria della Salute, and water lapping against the sea wall. Hello Venezia, my head is still in the mountains though.
Aaron C Rayburn: Guess what, my legs still hurt.
Aaron C Rayburn: Just a peek at the beginning of Rosengarten, so named for the pink hue of the coral cliffs. These embattlements guard gateways to even more spectacular formations that I just don't have time to see. Teasing me to not come home, to climb back up into that