Locomotoring

Spending our time untethering the mind, getting the fidgets out, exploring the in-between ideas, and learning kintsugi.

Playing with old and new school photo editing

leave a comment »

Above is generative art from midjourney starting with a picture of black sands beach from lost coast to the prompt, “California poppies on beach”.

Just finished an introductory course on photo-editing. The primary content of the course work was gaining familiarity with Adobe Lightroom. But like all good courses we meandered, we spent time thinking through the ethics of photo editing and dove into generative AI as well. Perhaps my eye opening moment, and an untethering moment, was learning about Ansel Adams’ darkroom magic. I had thought that there was one perfect photo (what the eye saw or wanted to see) but what I learned during the class was that the possibilities of photo-editing are endless. Perfection is sought in the moment. It is quite liberating to not have to bear the load of a single perfection. A good photo edit is what feels good today.

Here is one from Ojai, where Lightroom masks (object, sky, color) are used to preserve the colors of t-shirt and hat, reduce haze of the blue sky and blur the grass.

Written by locomotoring

March 3, 2023 at 7:07 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

Black History Month, Celebrating with a special hike

leave a comment »

Our unusual weather pattern continues, this time it is snow!

This week we had strong winds, rain and snow resulting trees and branches falling, and power outages yet again. Yes you heard that right, snow! Since our hiking boots have been holding up, we decided to explore another park during the lull between the storm. Last weekend of February, with just a few days to pay tribute to Black History Month, we chose Sam McDonald Park. Our chosen hike was the Heritage Grove Loop – spanning heritage grove trail and towne fire trail – from main parking lot to trail marker 25 to 30 to 26 to 20 and back to the mail parking lot. It is a 4 mile hike but we went off the trail – from trail marker 26, we went off towards 6 and then backed up. We ended up walking a little more than 5 miles and 65 stairs.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

February 27, 2023 at 4:51 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged with ,

Spending Mardi Gras time with pots and pans

with one comment

It is Mardi Gras. Last trip to NOLA was right after 2020 Mardi Gras and right before the pandemic made its presence felt. We couldn’t go to NOLA this year, but we decide to bring a few of our favorite things home.

Like me, you probably make jambalaya and gumbo at home and it never tastes anything like it does in Louisiana. These are everyday dishes, and when they don’t turn out right, you gotta ask yourself why. The reason is simple and a bit sad. No one here in Bay Area makes tasso and andouille like they do back there. So, this February, we decide to set aside the anxiety that comes from counting our carbon footprint and order in some. We followed the online ordering recommendations from Serious Eats article “Missing Louisiana: 8 Ways I Bring the Bayou State Home” and ordered in Tasso, andouille, and boudin from Best Stop in Scott.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

February 22, 2023 at 9:40 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

Coal Creek OSP, Feb 2023

leave a comment »

Our plum tree is starting to bloom!

In the winter months, after the rains, it is nice to go see the seasonal waterfalls in our forests. We went on a 4 mile hike through Coal Creek Open Space Preserve. Our hike started on Alpine road trailhead, and we climbed the bypass trail, the Crazy Pete’s trail and climbed down via the Coal trail back to the trailhead. The milkmaids were in bloom. From parts of Alpine, we could see the Corte Madera Creek which was also flowing enthusiastically. The trail intersects with coal creek on Crazy Pete’s road where there was a seasonal waterfall. I recorded the sounds, both upstream and downstream of the bridge and it was distinctly different. How obvious, but how so wonderful. There were a number of bikers and the trails were muddy. All in all, it was a welcome getaway.

The waterfall creates a small pool on one side…
… before rushing down the hill.
Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

February 22, 2023 at 1:41 am

Episode 4, In absence of silence

leave a comment »

Episode 4 of our podcast, Archy and I, is now out. It is titled “Search for quiet“.

This is a photo from a trip to Death Valley in 2009.

The world feels noisier and not simply from the decibels generated by human activity. It is the frenetic pace of modern life. I often think of what Dr. Martin Luther King wrote from Alabama jail in April of 1963 in the context of injustice – “We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.” His thoughts also feel apt in the context of the anxiety I feel at times being part of this human network. Escaping to Death Valley is an excellent option, but that offers temporary respite. Lately, I have been searching for everyday quiet. This episode is about how that search looks like, right now.

The extra good thing in this episode is the podcast, “The Wild” by Chris Morgan. Our search for quiet is inspired by these two episodes, “The hunt to find just one square inch of silence” and “The quietest place on earth“, both aired in 2019.

Written by locomotoring

February 20, 2023 at 2:27 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged with

Slow recovery from the recent flooding

leave a comment »

It is customary to celebrate month of Paush (mid-December to mid-January, 10th month of Hindu calendar) with variations of Pithe (rice crepes stuffed with sweet coconut). Like many celebrations, it is linked to harvest. The freshly harvested paddy along with date-palm syrup (nolen gur) are at foundation of pithe. We celebrated a little later this year while we recovered from the flooding.

Not that Pithe needs updating but it continues to get updated even in Bengal. Our experiments whipped up a kaya (coconut jam) smeared rice crepe with maple syrup roasted grated fresh coconut. The rice crepe is made with rice flour, coconut milk, and egg. We had coconut sugar at home and could have used that to sweeten the grated coconut but we chose maple syrup instead. The maple syrup replaced nolen gur, both are saps that can subsequently be hardened into sugar. Neither of the syrups is a replacement for other, but they are sprit sisters. Black seeds of cardamom perfumed the rice crepe batter as well as coconut stuffing. We had learned about kaya watching Ms. Beryl Shereshewsky try a singaporian toast. Our grated coconut filling was sweetened with maple syrup alone and not too much at that, so the kaya helped balance out the sweetness while enhancing the coconut flavor even further.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

February 12, 2023 at 7:18 am

Posted in Uncategorized

A cooking adventure this Lunar New Year

leave a comment »

A recent shipment from an online Asian grocery story. The jackfruit chips have already been explored and have been given A+ rating. We have a wonderful “east meets further east” idea for the Coconut Kaya, hold on to your hats for a few more weeks!

This Lunar New Year, we wanted to bring some Cantonese cuisine home. Many years ago, we were in Hong Kong and the memories of a breakfast congee is one we fondly recall often. We made plans to make turnip cakes (Lo Bak Go) and sticky rice lotus leaf wraps (Lo Ma Gai). Traditionally they are dim sum dish, but for novices like us, they were to be proper meals, one lunch and another dinner. It was all a little last minute and last minute plans to tend to go awry.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

January 27, 2023 at 7:17 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged with

Palo Alto Baylands, Jan 2023

leave a comment »

Benches every quarter mile and plenty bird watching opportunity at this time of the year

This is a six mile hike starting at Palo Alto Baylands Nature Preserve Trailhead. We walked to South Adobe Creek Loop Trailhead on to Adobe Creek Trail, past the bowl, almost all the way to North Adobe Creek Loop Trailhead and back. We did take a minor detour through the Byxbee Park art installations, the pole field and wind wave. The park is beautiful and located on a sanitary landfill. Apparently, due to the nature of the land and sensitive habitat, there are no impermeable surfaces and all paths are of crushed oyster shells. There are no trees whose roots might pierce the clay cap. There is no irrigation so only native grasses are used! This Bay trail offers a longer walk, a lot more people as well as bird species compared to Bair Island.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

January 10, 2023 at 7:25 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged with ,

Episode 3, Listening to the stars

leave a comment »

Episode 3 of our podcast, Archy and I, is now out. It is titled “No two blackholes sound alike“.

Night sky in Joshua Tree National Park, Same time last year, we were in Joshua Tree National Park. Having spent much of our lives in well lit cities and suburbs, any opportunity to watch the stars is precious.

This episode is an ode to the universe and the amazing human species that lives on this “mote of dust” that we call home. Universe is brilliant, whether we live or die. But the fact that we can explore the universe makes us ultra special. This episode has been swirling in our head for nearly a lifetime, but was made possible during the pandemic years.

First we see a blackhole and then we hear one. And it takes hard work of thousands of amazing scientists to see and hear something that we have theorized mathematically for almost a century. Isn’t that the most wonderful thing! In the coming years, we will see and hear a lot more blackholes. No two of them will be alike. I expect that the frequency of their discoveries will be a bit like the discovery timeline of exoplanets – first there was one, and soon there were many and last year, we surpassed seeing 5000. It is a bit like walking. Once you learn how to walk, you don’t stop, do you? And in the case of blackholes, there are 40 quintillion of them, that is 40 billion billion, waiting to be seen and heard.

The extra good thing in this episode is not one but two items, one is the Universe of Sound project for visually impaired and the second is System Sounds, a sci-art outreach project that translates the rhythm and harmony of the cosmos into music and sound. The common theme between the two is a human, Matt Russo, an astrophysicist and a musician.

Written by locomotoring

January 4, 2023 at 11:39 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged with

Starting 2023 with a hike

leave a comment »

A lovely cluster of manzanitas

The year started with a glorious day, it was clear blue sky between the passage of two atmospheric rivers. We went for a short 2 mile hike with a friend on Skyline Ridge trail near Teague Hill. This section of Skyline appears to have a higher than normal density of manzanitas.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

January 3, 2023 at 12:29 am

Posted in Bay Area, California, USA

Tagged with

2022, the year we took on our first 52 hikes challenge!

with one comment

The dogwood bloomed for over a month this year, 3 times its baseline!

After two years of being home bound, we started going out this year. Inertia had kicked in, so it took a lot more effort to get out. And we have a big reason to celebrate. We had decided to hike more frequently this year with a goal to hike new trails and explore new parks. Part way through the year, we realized that we could take on the 52 hikes challenge. And we did!

Highlights of our 52 hikes challenge: 

- Median number of hikes in any month: 3

- Maximum number of hikes in any month: 10 (in Dec)

- Total miles: >200 

- Median number of miles per hike: 4

- Median number of stairs per hike: 30

- Park visited most often: Edgewood (8 times!)

- Number of unique parks visited: >30
Rancho Canada del Oro was perfection itself.

While much has stayed the same – we started a few new habits, and improved upon some old ones. We adapted locomotoring tagline as it turned 16 this year. We added an audio blog (“Archy and I“) that explores and celebrates sounds. We hope that 2023 allows us to live with greater appreciation for good things in an increasingly complex world.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

December 31, 2022 at 7:58 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Bair Island in rain and shine, Dec 2022

leave a comment »

Bair Island on a sunny winter day
Bair Island on a rainy day
Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

December 28, 2022 at 10:32 am

Posted in Bay Area, California, USA

Tagged with

Immersed in blue on Ravenswood Trail, Dec 2022

leave a comment »

Marshes next to the Dumbarton Bridge in Don Edwards SF Bay National Wildlife Refuge

I bet it happens to you often enough that you see something for years, but you don’t really see it. The Don Edwards San Francisco National Wildlife Refuge protects the bay marshes, it has a number of trails and locations including Bair Island and Alviso. The trail we have been seeing for two decades is the Ravenswood Point by Dumbarton Bridge near Menlo Park. We finally walked this 3.3 mile trail. It was a morning hike, the sky was clear, the winds were low and the Bay tranquil. The sound from Dumbarton Bridge carries as there are no trees to absorb the sound. The noise isn’t enough to distract, but this trail isn’t a quiet spot. The noise doesn’t seem to distract the birds. By the time you get to the north most point of the trail, the cars sound more like ocean waves. We found someone fishing there. The trail is wide, well maintained, flat and easy to walk on. There were footprints of birds, humans, dogs, bikes and vehicles.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

December 25, 2022 at 8:40 pm

Water Dog Lake Open Space, Dec 2022

leave a comment »

The Water Dog Lake Open Space sits between San Carlos and Belmont and provides expansive views of San Mateo county.

Our 3 mile neighborhood hike took us to Water Dog Open Space. The park is also known as Hidden Canyon Park. We parked at the Upper Creek Trailhead on Hastings Drive. Our route took us to Finch Trail, Ramber Trail, followed by the Elevator Trail, then Canyon Creek trail back to the trailhead. While the net elevation change could not have been more than 200-300 ft, short stretches of the trail are steep. Rambler skirts the back of San Carlos and Belmont homes and it does feel a little strange walking through someone else back alley. The park appears to be popular with bikers. This park made me feel as if I was elsewhere in California, perhaps because there were no noticeable poison oak.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

December 25, 2022 at 9:47 am

Laurelwood (or is it Sugarloaf) Park, Dec 2022

leave a comment »

At one end of the Sugarloaf-Spur trail

Another short hike with spectacular view through Laurelwood Park in San Mateo. The park seems to be around Sugarloaf mountain, it is more of a small 400 ft tall hill. Some of the trails are very steep or had very steep sections. We couldn’t find a trail map and used Google maps instead. The total hike was about 2 miles. Starting at the San Juan Canyon fire road, we went up the Gravity trail to Sugarloaf-Spur trail, then all the way to the east point of Sugarloaf peak to gaze at the Bay views, then back to Laurelwood Park trail and down the Saddle trail to Salson trail to San Juan Canyon fire road to complete the loop. We met a few dog walkers but otherwise had the park to ourselves on a weekday.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

December 24, 2022 at 9:50 pm

Eaton Park, Dec 2022

leave a comment »

Upper view near Loma Road

Eaton Park in San Carlos is a neighborhood miniature open space (~58 acres) and the Eaton Trail is a cute as a button trail with Bay views, tiny stairs, tiny bridges, and benches galore. We clocked about 2 miles and an estimated elevation change of 200 ft. From Loma Road entrance, to Hawk Hill trail to Eaton trail all the way to Brittan Avenue, up back, to 4 Bridges trail to Vista Trail to Canyon View Trail to Eaton trail back to start. It was a weekday and there wasn’t a crowd.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

December 23, 2022 at 9:05 pm

Trails of Russian Ridge, Dec 2022

leave a comment »

Highest point of mid Santa Cruz mountain. The view includes the big fat Mt Diablo.

Over last weekend, we completed two hikes. The first one started from the charming Mindego Hill trail parking by the Audrey Rust commemorative site. We traversed the relatively flat Ancient Oaks Trail, went down Charquin Trail and then climbed up the steep Mindego Hill Trail. Earlier in the spring, we had hiked along Ancient Oaks trail and it was covered with poppies. Last time, we had been on Mindego Hill trail, it was under fog cover and had very little visibility. The second hike started by the main parking lot and we did an out and back on the Ridge trail.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

December 23, 2022 at 8:09 pm

Posted in Bay Area, California, USA

Tagged with

Locomotoring turns 16!

with one comment

When we started, in 2006, world was inhabited by 7 billion people. We started with the tagline and during the 16 years, it continued to be “Seven continents, seven seas, seven billion people and seven thousand good eats …“. Many people think of the number seven as the lucky number. Did you know that seven is a mathematical Happy Number? In fact, it is the smallest Happy Number after the number 1.

Start with the square of the number:
7**2 = 49

Then take each digit of this number, square them and add them together:
4**2 + 9**2 = 16 + 81 = 97

and repeat:
9**2 + 7**2 = 81 + 49 = 130
1**2 + 3**2 + 0**2 = 1 + 9 = 10
1**2 + 0**2 = 1

The starting number that ends in 1 is a Happy Number. 

4 on the other hand is not a happy number (it is a Sad or an Unhappy number!): 
4**2 = 16
1**2 + 6**2 = 1 + 36 = 37
3**2 + 7**2 = 9 + 49 = 58
5**2+8**2 = 25 + 64 = 89
8**2 + 9**2 = 64 + 81 = 145
1**2 + 4**2 + 5**2 = 1+16 + 25 = 42
4**2 + 2**2 = 16 + 4 = 20
2**2+ 0**2 = 4

and so the process continues in an infinite cycle without ever reaching 1. 

So much has happened in last 16 years. The Webb telescope happened. The pandemic happened. The m-RNA vaccines and CRISPR gene editing are fast tracking eradication of some seriously nasty diseases. AirBnB changed how we travel. Podcasts and streaming videos gave us many new artists we now adore. Estimated world population hit 8 billion. The smart phones and social networks have made the world a cozier space.

We also grew a little wiser. We have started appreciating untethering, freeing the mind from strings, and boundaries. We have started appreciating the in-between ideas, the ones that are nebulous, and hard to decode. We have started appreciating the stillness, the lack of fidgets, and the silences. We started appreciating the art of kintsugi, the mindful repairs that embrace the damage. We started appreciating time, a dimension that operates non-linearly, and runs away faster than we notice.

We hope our new tagline reflects who we are today. “Spending our time untethering the mind, getting the fidgets out, exploring the in-between ideas, and learning kintsugi.”

Written by locomotoring

December 17, 2022 at 6:03 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Episode 2, Archy presents the melody of human voices

leave a comment »

Episode 2 of our newly minted podcast, Archy and I, is now available. It is titled “Melody is in the ears of the listener“.

DECEMBER 28
Happy Inspirations

"excuse me if my
writing is out of alignment i
fell into a bowl of
egg nog the other
day at the restaurant down
the street which the doctor
says he is glad to
hear you are keeping away
from and when i
emerged i was full of happy
inspirations alas they
vanished ere the break of 
day i am sure they
were the most brilliant and
witty things that ever
emanated from the mind of
man or cockroach or poet ..."

Page 61, The annotated Archy and Mehitabel, 
Don Marquis
Produced by DALL-E to the instruction, “Draw a line drawing, in the style of Gary Larson, where a cockroach is listening to a man playing a piano”.

Earlier this year, we heard the podcast, The 11th. It left an impact. You may remember, Dear Reader, that we took the concept of Exhausting a Place and applied to a photo in the blogpost “An attempt at exhausting a photo“. Another episode that blew our mind was the The Happiness Project, we heard it in March this year. That was the inspiration behind our second episode. We want to experience all conversations like Charles Spearin does in his Happiness Project. There, we said it. Charles says that all of the melodies from this project are the melodies of every day life. To listen to all of the songs from this 2009 album, visit Charles, founding member of Broken Social Scene and Do Make Say Think.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

December 15, 2022 at 6:42 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged with

Episode 1, Introducing my co-host Archy

leave a comment »

Episode one of our new podcast, Archy and I, is now available. It is titled, “Archy, the poet, reincarnate has moved in my ear“.

SEPTEMBER 6
Butting These Keys With My Head

say boss its a good
thing for you
that you don't bay me any wages for
the stuff i write
for you if you did
i would have to have them raised all
these strikes are getting
me feverish and excited one of
my long pieces in your column
often costs me twelve or 
fifteen hours of steady
labor and i am drowsy
all the next day butting these
keys with my head is no snap boss
anything i got for it would
be underpaying me i wish you would
buy a pear and leave it under the
metal typewriter case where the rats
can't get to it

Page 42, The annotated Archy and Mehitabel, 
Don Marquis
Archy moved from a newspaper office in New York City to a suburb in sunny California and has since settled in comfortably … this is their sit-think-reflect-write space. Photo credit: Ms Mikiko Kikuyama

Borrowing a term from Ottolenghi’s Test Kitchen, the extra good thing in this episode in Dr. Susan David. She speaks to grief differently . Here is a link to the Ted talk that made me realize that there are alternate narratives to “glass half full or glass half empty” one.

Written by locomotoring

December 14, 2022 at 9:44 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged with

A new type of journey, one that celebrates sounds

leave a comment »

“Untitled” by Mrs Rajni Ahuja, my other mother. During the pandemic, she took up water coloring on her iPad. She leaves it to our imagination to interpret her art. We have been hiking this year and in this work of art, we experience meditation in the woods.

I am on a new kind of journey, one that celebrates sounds. The medium is podcast. We created a new page on our locomotoring website to share these auditory adventures with you.

You may wonder if this journey is yet another outcome of the pandemic? Perhaps it is. Or perhaps it was a long time coming, two dozen years, give or take a few. This year, I rolled up my pajama bottoms and decided to learn the skills of podcasting. I was inspired by my birth mother, Ratnabali. She is a writer and she has been writing audio plays for her local Durga Pujo. More on her latest tour de force play at a later time. Suffice to say that she inspired me. With help of Kelsey, my teacher from the continuing studies program at Stanford, I started exploring. The introduction to the podcast was a class homework and my very first exercise in creating two minutes of audio content. The Creative Commons community helped me build. My significant other, Sachin, had seeded the idea of jugalbandhi between Archy and I. My personal coach, Antonia, gave me the courage to show up to this jugalbandhi. My other mother, Rajni, is contributing to the cover art (she doesn’t know yet, but she will know soon). In summary, it has taken a number of strangers, friends and family to start this journey.

We are not on podcatchers yet – we are merely learning to put one step in front of other before we break into a run. We hope that we will be able to do so before long.

Written by Som

December 14, 2022 at 3:33 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged with

A brief excursion to Chandni Chowk

leave a comment »

A beautiful old door on near Gali Anar

Sunday is quieter at the Chandni Chowk. Mind, quieter is a relative term. It is still the largest market of India. Most shops take the day off. Only the food shops are open. The chor bazaar is open as well. We walked the mile of Chandni Chowk, recently made a pedestrian thoroughfare with allowances for cycle rickshaws. Our destination was Kake di Hatti where we had a sit down meal on Chur chur naan, Amritsari naan and Amritsari chole (chickpea stew). On our way, we sampled fresh baked crispy nankhatai on Parathewali Gali, cauliflower samosa, and bedmi puri with curried chole on the main Chandi Chowk road. Kake the Hatti is located next to the spice market on Khari Baoli road and I found myself looking longingly at massive bags of puffed lotus seeds. Post meal, we hopped on a rickshaw and made our way back to Parathewali Gali and meandered about the narrow alleys.

Narrow is relative too. Sometimes, when you look up, the buildings on two sides touch and you can’t see the sky. It is cool and quiet. The narrow Gali Anar, translated “pomegranate alley”, leading to Haveli Dharampura could not be wider than 3 ft. Some of the old buildings of the haveli complexes were empty, one abandoned courtyard was overrun by young peepul trees. On some of these narrow alleys, you could have stepped into 17th century were it not for the overhead tangle of cables.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by Som

November 29, 2022 at 12:13 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Zoppé Circus in Redwood City

leave a comment »

They are on the library lot this year, a photo from this Thanksgiving weekend

I am really glad that the Zoppé Italian Family Circus has been coming to Redwood City since 2008. It is charming and old school. The photos below are from 2017 when they performed at the Red Morton Community Park.

This and remaining images are from Oct 2017
Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

November 28, 2022 at 1:14 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

Finding new in the familiar, Edgewood, Oct 2022

with one comment

A temporary rock arrangement near trail marker 9, it lasted one weekend, it disappeared as surprisingly as it had appeared

I wouldn’t recognize a Blueschist or Franciscan greenstone or Greywacke or Serpentinite, but Edgewood has them. I can only see colors and shapes in a rock pile. The blues and greens and sparkles of minerals do look beautiful, don’t they?

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

November 7, 2022 at 9:01 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged with ,

Alambique Trail in Wunderlich, Sep 2022

leave a comment »

An old growth redwood along the Alambique trail

The Alambique Trail is a 4.7 mile service road that starts near the main parking lot and climbs 1400 ft to the Skyline Blvd. We had covered the first 0.7 miles of Alambique trail in April. Last weekend, we had traversed 1.7 miles of the upper end of the Alambique. This warm weekend, we were lucky to find a parking spot at this popular Folger stable. We met at least a dozen other diverse groups on the trail, a few solitary runners, groups of octogenarians on a slow and steady climb, a group of girls on horses and a few young families pushing baby prams.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by locomotoring

September 28, 2022 at 7:08 pm

Posted in Bay Area, California, USA

Tagged with