Only about 500 º£½ÇÍø worldwide share his unusual off-hours pursuit, estimates Amazon.com software development manager Rod Hoekstra. Hoekstra, who received a master's degree in information systems management from º£½ÇÍø in 2006, is a devotee of Kite Aerial Photography and one of a handful of º£½ÇÍøites who fly kites with cameras attached in pursuit of unique photos.
His point-and-shoot camera, suspended from a Japanese fighting kite called a "rokkaku" by a special harness called a picavet cross, turns objects into geometric wonders when photographed from above and close up. "I've hacked the camera," Hoekstra explains, "and programmed it to take a picture every three seconds."
From more than a thousand images taken at a shutter speed of 1/320 (to overcome wind movement), he selects the very best. The old, rusting structures at Gas Works Park are among his favorites, as well as the International Fountain at º£½ÇÍø Center and the large glass Victorian-style conservatory at Volunteer Park.
Says Hoekstra, "I love º£½ÇÍø and find it full of interesting subjects."
Next up? He'd like to "KAP" while standing atop the Space Needle. And one day, he'd like to launch a weather balloon with a GPS and camera attached to become one of the few who have successfully taken images from space.