Another 360° panoramic photograph from my recent vacation. This time, I’m standing on one end of a pedestrian overpass on Muldoon road, just beyond the curve where Muldoon becomes Tudor (the curve can be seen on the extreme left and right of the image).
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My parents’ house, where I lived from mid-3rd grade until I moved out when I was 18, is hidden beyond the trees just to the left of the tree in the foreground towards the right side of the image. The Chugach mountains rise just beyond our housing area, giving it its name of Chugach Foothills. The houses in the mid-ground in front of the mountains went up during one of the housing development booms while I was in high school. Mostly obscured by the tree on the right of the image is a large park, often used for summertime soccer games.
Were you to follow Muldoon Road to the far northern end (a few miles beyond where it disappears in this photo), you’d end up at my alma matter, Bartlett High School. While I moved to Seattle just a few months before my 10-year reunion and didn’t go, my friend Royce was there (while he graduated in ‘90, his girlfriend Stephanie was in my graduating class) and snagged me a Class of 1991 10-year reunion T-shirt which he gave me while I was visiting.
As with the Lake Spenard photo, there is a QTVR photo in the extended entry for this post (I do it this way so that modem users like my parents don’t have to download the 2 MB QTVR movie when they load the main page).






4 Responses
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Just a small note. I think your panoramic shots are great, but somehow, I doubt many people are in the possesion of a 7000px wide monitor. This is why I think you should enable the horizontal scrollbar when opening a new window as it would save consistently dragging the entire window to see the rest of the shot.
(laughs) Oops! Thanks Neil — I honestly hadn’t realized that those were coming up without scrollbars. I’ll get that fixed…
I see that you’ve fixed the scrollbar issue, but you’ve still got the windows opening up at 7000 pixels! haha. A scrollbar is no good if there’s nowhere for it to scroll :p You need to set the window to open to a more manageable size instead of it automatically accomodating the image’s size.
Heh, you can almost see the roof of the house of we sold last week.
Two weeks earlier and I would have posted a little red arrow that said “I live here.”