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Collages prepared by Jim McPherson for the 1000-Daze mini-trilogy

"The Death's Head Hellion" and "Contagion Collectors", the first two PHANTACEA Mythos mini-novels extracted from "The 1000 Days of Disbelief", are now available for ordering direct from the publisher

And while you're at it, spend some time checking out www.phantacea.com for the latest news, book excerpts and web-features regarding all of Jim McPherson's PHANTACEA Mythos print publications

Collages prepared as potential cover for PHANTACEA mini-novels by Jim McPherson, 2010

Late Winter 2011

An orchid and the extremity of a banana plant, as shot at El Explorador, above Boquete, Panama, in 2009 by Jim McPherson

Jim McPherson's pre-2010 Travels Site

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©Jim McPherson (www.phantacea.com) 2011

 

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    2000
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    2003
  • Tholoi

The main menu provides lynx to all the pages on this website. Then again so does this tab set up.

Logo reads a Travels in my Pants Photo Essay

Just hit the blue highlights whenever you see one and go where it takes you

There are now three entries re my trip to Costa Rica and Panama in January/February of 2009.

An unidentified bird spotted behind Playa Blanca in Santa Clara, Panama

The first is entitled "Sloshing around with Sloths". I called the second "Domingo Demencia -- A Bi-Tropical Disorder" mostly because I couldn't decide which sounded better.

The third, which I didn't get around to mounting until the Spring of 2011, inaugurates the Oddities Page. Have to admit Bucketheads is mostly images, with very little text, but some would assert that's the way a travels site should be.

I took everything you see at El Explorador, an extremely neat garden high up in the hills (more like mountains) overlooking Boquette. It's where I shot the viper in a bottle.

In Quest of Crumblies

Contains (edited) emails sent, and stacks of shots taken, while in Villahermosa, Palenque, Chiapas, and the Yucatan Peninsula, mid-January to early February 2010.

Double click on the shots in the graphics table and, more often than not, you'll get a larger shot of same (or close to it).

Webpage now lives here

There are also two photo essays re my trips to Brazil in 2006 & 2007

A cute cayman hanging out in the Panatanal, 2007

The "No Cane Trip" is the funnier of the two but there's plenty of unsolicited observations and photos in the much longer "Brazil's Burning" essay

In 2005 I went to India for the first and thus far only time. The trip also resulted in two Travels in My Pants photo essays.

An Indian idol depicted with its foot in its mouth

The shorter of two starts with a plea: "Peas for Knees Please". The longer one includes the wry as well as rather obvious observation that in India, patience is NOT a virtue, it's a necessity.

Both essays have their humorous moments. Both also contain rants re the plague of priests that seems to afflict that vast, but caste-ridden and hence, um, exceedingly diverse, subcontinent.

Two trips to Turkey, one in 1996 and the other in 2003, have resulted in three photo essays.

Dwellings cut into one of the famous fairy chimneys in Cappadocia, Turkey

The only one for 2003 is a sad saga of my seemingly never ending battle with bad knees. Called "The Necessity of Knees", it does have a remarkably happy ending, at least it does for that trip.

The "Rockhead" essay is a definite curiosity but "The Phantom Train", well, that's what got me onto this whole timps kick (pun intended) in the first place.

You'll have heard of the al-Aqsa Intifida. I was in Egypt when it began in September of 2000. That's just one of stories I recount in my two photo essays on that trip

Donkey Jim is in this picture, which is of a bunch of gringos on donkeys on their way back from the Valley of the Kings in Egypt, 2000

Among the better ones are "Godly Caterwauling" and, especially, "Beware of Aussies being Breezy"

Although written shortly after surviving it, for many years thereafter I hesitated about putting "El Retorno del Maximon" online for fear of, um, re-attracting his attention.

A mask featuring Maximon, the modern Mayan deity of success, among many other things

Maximon ('ma-shee-mon') is the modern Mayan embodiment of success, among many other things (including Evil Delight). He also seemingly tagged along with the tour group I was on in January/February 2003.

The form he took? An Italian ice cream salesman by the rather too blatant name of Massimo.

Tholoi is the plural for tholos. I understand it's a Greek word for beehive.

A tholos spotted in Malta in 1997

The first time I heard it was in Delphi, Greece, in 1995. There the guide we were with described them as Guest Houses for the Gods.

I've never forgotten that description and have been taking shots of them ever since. (Some are here, with another installment in the works for the next update.)

Haven't managed to shoot a god yet, though.


A pair of collages prepared by Jim McPherson

Buckethead Jim's

Travels Website

Being an unscheduled, yet ongoing, series of photo essays written, photographed, scanned in and/or otherwise prepared by Jim McPherson as an addendum to PHANTACEA on the Web, which has been online since 1996, and www.phantacea.com, which made its online debut in the Summer of 2008

| today's travel essay | greetings and welcoming comments | notes on graphics | top of page | bottom of page lynx |
Shots taken at El Explorador by Jim McPherson, 2009

Travelogues Online


A couple of non-bucketheads spotted at El Explorador, overlooking Boquete, Panama, as taken by Jim McPherson 2009



Photographs taken by Jim McPherson on his travels, as well as collages usually composed at least in part with these photos, can also be found on websites devoted to Phantacea Publications and Jim McPherson's PHANTACEA Mythos

Click here for lynx to their welcoming pages


Web Publisher's Greetings

Happy buckethead spotted at El Explorador, Boquete, Panama, as shot by Jim McPherson, 2009

Welcome or welcome back, as the case may be

Bucketheads beware: You may find some of what follows amusing

Then again you might even if you're only a honorary buckethead like me

Lumberjack buckethead spotted at El Explorador, Boquete, Panama, as shot by Jim McPherson, 2009

| What and Why | Newt Notes | For the Future |


No, except temporarily Donkey Jim has not suddenly become Buckethead Jim. And, yes, this remains Jim McPherson's Travels site. So no, I haven't got around to moving it to a sub-directory of www.phantacea.com as yet, but that's mostly because I'm already running out of space on that server.

Collage prepared by Jim McPherson, Halloween 2009Have to say that, after I mount the latest graphics for this installment (a good-sized sample of which can be found on this very welcoming page as well), I'll be a whole lot closer to running out of space on this server, too.

As for server three, as per here, pH-Webworld has had its hardly limitless expansiveness clipped back a number of times by now.

(Which accounts for why the other two are getting so packed. Some of what goes away there comes back here — or that other there. That and the fact that I keep adding to them, it should go without saying.)

As to where the previous update went, that'd be here. For the completists amongst you, a list of lynx to all the Welcoming Pages thus far presented is here.

Donkey Jim is so past tense, as in so Egyptian 2000. Besides, I've only declared myself an honorary buckethead for this Travels update. Last time up I was, after all, Pumpkinhead Jim.

(Which, I've just realized, I neglected to mention in this space back then. Ah well, like I've said many times before, I'm not losing my memory, it's full. Maybe that applies to my mind as well.)

- Top of Page - Essay Contents - Start Section Again - Onwards - Go straight to Notes on Graphics Section -

It's been nearly a year since I updated this site. If you're counting, that's four seasons and two mini-novels on the shelves — ones to go along with the two mosaic novels no doubt already on your shelf. (And, if they're not, here's how to correct that unfortunate omission.)"Buckethead spotted at El Explorador, Boquete, Panama, as shot by Jim McPherson, 2009"

Over the years I've collected many, many more pictures of my travels than I have stories to go with them.

It's not so much that I have dull trips as I like to keep the Good Ship Me on a steady keel. After all, I only get the one ship and it won't do me any good if it goes down due to sloppy sailing, let alone anything else.

So it is that I collect my own shelves worth of albums containing pictures I took and postcards I bought while elsewhere.

Then I got a digital camera and took even more pictures than I used to when I'm away. I consider many of them nifty or neat, deserving of wider dissemination.

(I'd say wider public exposure but, as per here, I got in trouble for calling my travels site jmcptimps and wouldn't want to re-attract attention from the same, um, critics.)

I tried using Flicker but didn't feel like scanning in albums of prints or boxes of slides. Neither did I feel like knocking down the file sizes for all the digital shots I wanted to mount over there.

The result is still here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/phantajim/ and, yes, I ran out of free space there almost immediately.

Cartoon mentioning a buckethead, scanned in from a local newspater  bucketheadThen I saw this cartoon (double-click to enlarge) in a local newspaper.

I immediately realized I had to unleash my own inner buckethead. Rather, put more accurately, I had to release a stack of shots I took above Boquete, Panama, when I passed through there in 2009.

Except of course they're not all of bucketheads. Some, like the raggedy guy further down this panel, would appear to be coconut-heads. Kiosk for El Explorador garden above Boquete, Panama, as shot by Jim McPherson in 2009(I've a growing collection of just that on my wall of masks — which is not to suggest they grow there, just go there to roost after I've bought them wherever and brought them home.)

I took these pictures in a quirky (to say the least) private garden called El Explorador (double-click for a spectacular view from it). Private as it is, it's nevertheless open to the public for the outrageously exorbitant fee of under $5.00 USD.

For whatever reason the owners and the gardeners who do the actual work have, in their irresistibly named 'Faerie Mine', turned all kinds of junk – shoes, bottles, TVs, watering cans and, yes, buckets – into planters. And not just planters either. If the Scarecrow of Oz died and went to, he might end up here.

As odd as they are, they're hardly the only odd shots I've collected over the years. And that made think of setting up a webpage, one that will dedicated to just that — oddities. Or, as I'm tempted to dub it, fay-saying in the sometime spirit of the PHANTACEA Mythos: 'Peculiarities Preserved for Preposterous Posterity'.

As for what else I'll slip onto the new webpage, hey, only time will tell. A dino-zone featuring the likes of cat-curious is one idea. (It'd be an addition to the collection of styrofoam Saurs I put on Flicker last year but I've been doing dinos since grade school so plenty to mine.)

A new home for the House Head Museum is another idea. Indeed, though I've threatened it before without issue, that will probably my next Travels assignment.

First off, I have to fly off to amass even more shots, hopefully without tipping, or holing, the aforementioned Good Ship Me.

- Top of Page - Essay Contents - Start Section Again - Onwards - Go straight to Notes on Graphics Section -

So, where am I going next — physically, not web-wise? As noted last time up, Australia remains unchecked in terms of the list of places I really wanted to see while growing up. So I'm happy to say, knock wooden head, that's about to change.

Near-buckethead spotted at El Explorador, Boquete, Panama, as shot by Jim McPherson, 2009Five weeks down under may not seem like much. Not unless you're a calf and it's down udder, in which case you're in cow heaven. (As opposed to cow pie, though you're likely in that too.)

But it is 5 weeks more than I've been before. Besides, inclination, health and finances cohering, I can always go back.

As per usual, down in the graphics table are notes on most of images found on this page. Quite intentionally, some of them provide lynx to other webpages on this website.

Feel free to click merrily away. I've been doing online travelogues since 1996 so there's plenty to read and look at in terms of on-the-spot shots.

And while you're at it, do pop over to www.phantacea.com and/or pH-Webworld for even more free stuff online.

(Stuff that's almost as lavishly illustrated to boot, though I wouldn't recommend kicking your computer. Of course drop-kicking your cell phone, if that's how you get there, wouldn't hurt so much, especially not economically.

(Do ask the buckethead you boot it into to open his or her mouth first, please.)

Feel free to open your cheque book as well as the website(s). As I've said many times before, the more sales I get the merrier, and more travelled, I become. JMcP

- Top of Page - Essay Contents - Start Section Again - Go straight to Notes on Graphics Section -

 

PHANTACEA Mythos print publications available for ordering from the publisher

Cover for Goddess Gambit, original artwork by Verne Andru, 2011

Final book in 'The Thrice-Cursed Godly Glories' trilogy, published in 2012

Suggested Price $25.00 CDN

Cover for Janna Fangfingers, collage prepared by Jim McPherson, 2011

'The 1000 Days of Disbelief' concludes, published in 2011; e-version published in 2011

Suggested Price $12.00 CDN

Cover for The Death's Head Hellion, collage prepared by Jim McPherson, 2010

'The 1000 Days of Disbelief' commences, published in 2010; e-version published in 2011

Suggested Price $10.00 CDN

Cover for Contagion Collectors, collage prepared by Jim McPherson, 2010

'The 1000 Days of Disbelief' continues, published in 2010; e-version published in 2011

Suggested Price $10.00 CDN

Front Cover for The War of the Apocalyptics, artwork by Ian Bateson, 2009

The first book in the 'Launch 1980' story sequence, published in 2009

Suggested Price $23.00 CDN

Front Cover for Feeling Theocidal, artwork by Verne Andru 2008

Book One in 'The Thrice-Cursed Godly Glories' trilogy, published in 2008; e-version published in 2011

Suggested Price $23.00 CDN

Front Cover for Forever and 40 Days, artwork by Ian Fry and Ian Bateson, circa 1989

The thus far only PHANTACEA Mythos graphic novel, published in 1990

Price $10.00 CDN

Front Cover for Phase One 1, artwork by Ian Bateson, 1985

The last (to date) PHANTACEA Mythos comic book, published in 1986

Price $5.00 CDN

Prices quoted do not include shipping or handling


Certified cheques or money orders only please


Information on PHANTACEA comic books still available on a while-supplies-last basis is here


Order by email

 

 

Design, text, photography and/or image-manipulation by Jim McPherson (www.phantacea.com)


Notes on Graphics

Double click on thumbnail for pop-up window containing a full-size image

An orchid spotted near the Explorador garden above Boquete, Panama, photo by Jim McPherson, 2009

<== An orchid spotted near the Explorador garden above Boquete, Panama, photo by Jim McPherson, 2009

==> The tail of a banana cluster, spotted outside the Explorador garden above Boquete, Panama, photo by Jim McPherson, 2009

This is the bit that never makes to your grocer's shelf. Possibly that's because it looks sort of rude. It no doubt would to that person who objected to me called this website jmcptimps (Travels in my Pants).

The double-click takes you to an overview of the Boquete valley below El Explorador

Return to logo rollover

The tail of a banana cluster, spotted outside the Explorador garden above Boquete, Panama, photo by Jim McPherson, 2009
A collection of bucketheads and related oddities as spotted and shot by Jim McPherson, 2009

<== A collection of bucketheads and related oddities as spotted and shot by Jim McPherson, 2009; this grouping, which I refer to as the lying collective, has a couple of chewy advisories; the easy to read one in yellow tells us that lying isn't good, or words to that effect;

As for the bigger one, I missed photographing some of its indubitably pertinent pith so I can't tell you all it says. For what's worth, however, I believe the last three words ('arrondillen ante dios') mean 'kneel before God'.

==> Dollhouses called La Perfumania, shot at El Explorador Garden in 2009 by Jim McPherson; as can be seen better on the double-click the little bottles and tiny containers held therein all have cutesy smiley faces pasted on them; told you the place was odd;

Return to rollover in contents area

Dollhouses called La Perfumania, shot at El Explorador Garden in 2009 by Jim McPherson
Stumpy, as shot by Jim McPherson at El Explorador in 2009

<== Stumpy, as shot by Jim McPherson at El Explorador in 2009; even though he's a stump, not a Buckethead, Stumpy's one of my favourite oddities;

The Spanish reads 'Bienvenidos, aqui te queremos', which might mean 'Welcome, here's where we want you'; then again it could mean something completely different;

Upon closer double-click inspection, Stumpy might be wearing a shallow bucket on his head, something you might put water in for pets; as for his forehead friend, the fellow grinning off his left temple, I'm not sure if he started out as a coconut-head or not;

==> Pinocchio type shot by Jim McPherson at El Explorador in 2009; the Spanish reads 'Yo no er mentir', which I took to mean 'I never lie'; then again ... please see immediately above;

Return to rollover above the lynx list

Pinnochio type shot by Jim McPherson at El Explorador in 2009
Collage of shots taken in Panama City, February 2009

<== Collage of shots taken in Panama City, February 2009; the original, with commentary, is here;

==> The '4 lips are better than tulips for a Siamese pumpkin' needed an online home; until Pumpkinhead Jim gets around to doing a Vancouver page, this will have to do;

Return to rollover - Return to 'tulips' in welcoming remarks

Collage prepared by Jim McPherson, Halloween 2009
Buckethead spotted at El Explorador, Boquete, Panama, as shot by Jim McPherson, 2009

==> Lumberjack buckethead spotted at El Explorador, Boquete, Panama, as shot by Jim McPherson, 2009; it's bordering on irresistible not to think of this fellow as 'Bucketjack';

<== Happy buckethead spotted at El Explorador, Boquete, Panama, as shot by Jim McPherson, 2009; the Spanish reads 'Accepta que eres feliz', which I took to mean 'Accept that you are happy';

If my translation's correct then it's impossible not to think of the ancient hit by The Who entitled 'Happy Buck';

Return to images

Happy buckethead spotted at El Explorador, Boquete, Panama, as shot by Jim McPherson, 2009
Near-buckethead spotted at El Explorador, Boquete, Panama, as shot by Jim McPherson, 2009

<== A near-buckethead spotted at El Explorador, Boquete, Panama, as shot by Jim McPherson, 2009; I believe this guy's head is a coconut, which would make him akin to Stumpy's forehead friend;

Nice hat, too -- if it had a quill in it I might use him to represent Jordan 'Q for Quill' Tethys, the legendary 30-year man perhaps better known as the Legendarian or, as he prefers, 30-Beers; Jordy's a character in both the recently released PHANTACEA mini-novels pictured at the top of this page;

Return to image

==> Buckethead spotted at El Explorador, Boquete, Panama, as shot by Jim McPherson, 2009; the Spanish reads 'Apendre a flotar en medio de tus problemas y no te dejes hundir'; dictionary in hand I decided it means 'Learn to float amidst your problems, just make sure you don't sink';

Whatever it actually means, I'm sure it's sound advice, especially the 'make sure you don't sink' bit (see the Good Ship Me rationale for having dull trips in the paragraph next door); I'm sure you'll forgive me if I think of its message as 'red lips sink ships';

return to image

Buckethead spotted at El Explorador, Boquete, Panama, as shot by Jim McPherson, 2009;

Previous Welcoming Pages

| Spring 2008 | Summer 2008 (Brazil 06/07 Upgrade) | Autumn 2008 (Maximon 2003, Part 1) | Winter 2008/9 (Rockheads Return) | Autumn 2009 (Bi-Tropical Disorder) | Spring 2010 (In Quest of Crumblies) |

Last updated: Spring 2011

Additional Information re ordering all-prose PHANTACEA Mythos novels, mini-novels and e-books online via credit cards

Logo reads Jim McPherson's PHANTACEA  on the WebDownloadable order form for PHANTACEA Mythos Print Publications available from the publisher via snail mail

Current Web-Publisher's Commentary

Jim McPherson's Worldwide Email Address -- jmcp@phantacea.com

PHANTACEA Features online: The Web Serials


Website last updated: Spring 2012

Written by: Jim McPherson -- jmcp@phantacea.com
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Welcoming Page & Index Blue phantacea.com Logo, prepared on PHOTOSHOP by Jim McPherson, 2008

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Webpage validated: Spring 2010