Special Delivery! Moo Cards
December 30, 2010
Hello USPS man, thanks for the BIG box from moo.com today! I’ve used them before for business cards and the results were outstanding, not to mention even greater customer service. The big idea with moo cards is you’re able to get up to 50 different cards in one order rather than 1 single card duplicated 500-1000 times. That’s their claim to fame, but they also have other cool little goodies to go along with their cards.

Do you realize how hard it was for me to take a picture of my box of goodies???.. instead of ripping open the package as soon as it was delivered to the door?

Merry late Christmas to me! Moo does a great job with their packaging. So neat I almost don’t want to mess it up. HA

Sprawled out on the floor, each card is different! The back (white information card in the middle) is the only thing that stays the same. Such a clever concept.


From left to right: Regular business cards, mini moo cards with holders, and stickers!… yes I went a little overboard I know.

I LOVE the stickers. I already branded my new Lenovo laptop, and Abby got one too… she wasn’t too thrilled. But then I petted her and all was forgiven.
Arizona Road Trip + Base Jumping
August 12, 2010
Last weekend I spontaneously drove across the Mojave desert with Bogart the foster dog to visit my Aunt and Uncle in Phoenix. Nothing too extraordinary. Growing up in the South where trees and grass dominate the landscape like love letters to Justin Bieber’s mailbox, it still fascinates me to drive through the desert. I usually drive at night to avoid the notorious LA traffic. But this time I drove there and back during daylight, with my camera and a 50mm lens.

Bogart was a great co-driver. He pointed out all the squirrels.

Just so California could remind every driver on the I-10 that they care about the environment, they set up 3,100 turbines near Palm Springs. An amazing spectacle, and would be interested in knowing how many rear-ending-rubber-necking car accidents happen because of them.


5:00 AM next morning I head out with my adrenaline junkie buddy Matt Frohlich from South Carolina (who goes to helicopter school in Phoenix) to base jump off of Superstition Mountain. Me? I was just along for the ride for a good hike and take some pictures

We park and start the 2hr hike to the top of Superstitious (the jumping point framed in the background).

An Arizona sunrise is about as good as it gets.

For a brief moment I felt like I was delivering some ring to some volcano.

Once the sun rises the rock looks even more menacing.

Rule #1 when going anywhere in Arizona: Bring plenty of H2O.

Matt looking EXTREMELY nervous to be doing his 800-some-odd jump off a big rock.

Rule #2 when going base jumping: Bring a friend. Rule #1? Open your chute.

Finally reaching the top, Scott and Matt do a wind check to see if it’s safe to jump.

Yep, it’s safe. Tie your shoes tight and get ready. Rule #24 of Base Jumping: Strap a video camera to your helmet so you can impress the ladies on youtube.

One last survey before descending over 1000 feet in a little over 1 minute… hopefully not any less than that.
Matt’s recorded jump. Listen at around 00:10, the sound of the chute opening sounds like a shotgun. That’s me at 0:14 watching from the tip top lol. They got to the bottom of the mountain in 1 minute. It took me 45x that to get back down

For Matt, base jumping is more safe than driving down a highway, so I wasn’t very worried about picking up any body parts. In fact later in the day we did an impromptu photoshoot near Camelback Mountain of another base jump. Look for the edited shot very soon. After the shoot, and jump, I had just enough time to snap off an incredible sunset over downtown Phoenix. One day I’ll sky dive… and dare I say, one day have enough confidence to jump off 1000′ tall rocks? That’s a damn good way to get over my fear of heights.










