School and Barn

This one room school recently became neighbors to a newly renovated red barn. There is a road running right in front of them but I chose to shoot the image from a business located across the field. The bonus was as I arrived I noticed the one room school had lights on inside which I cant say I have ever noticed before but I will take it!

A Sunset Spectacle

This particular evening had a lot of clouds along with an open horizon which hinted this may be a good sunset evening. I took a chance and found a spot to set the tripod up and sat and waited. It kept getting worse until finally I started seeing clouds starting to light up with color. It looked pretty good for about twenty minutes and then quickly faded out.

Photographer Takes a Knee!

This is the same home from a couple days ago except I am downstream looking back. I prefer this angle but both offer decent views! This ice was a couple solid inches and it was maybe 18 inches deep if I were to break through. I placed my tripod and walked around looking for the best reflection and settled on this. I walked all around the ice with no mishaps UNTIL I was on my last two steps to get onto the snow and failed to notice the ice curved upward at the edge and just like that my foot shot out under me and my knee went straight down on the ice before I knew what happened. I laid there in the snow for a few minutes until I finally tried to see if I could walk. One good thing is I had my phone on me which my family knows is something I do not place high value on. Usually its in my Jeep, or muted in my pocket and I see messages days later sometimes. Remember when phones had cords and we were actually free.

Bitter but Beautiful

I will be sharing several different images from this local Covered Bridge I shot during the bitter cold snap. This particular morning Hoar Frost had formed on the pine needles of this stream side Pine Tree. The sun had just risen and was casting the first warm rays on the scene.

Frozen Water Memories

This image was taken when it was 7 degrees a couple weeks ago and I took a chance by walking out to the middle of this creek for an icy reflection photo. The creek was not completely frozen but I tried to use my best judgement when to go no further. I will tell a little story about my childhood and why I still have a solid respect for the dangers of ice and falling in. When I was somewhere around 12 years old or so, me and my friends were sledding at a local park and at this park there was a pond. This pond was completely frozen except an area about 10 feet round where spring water kept it open at the edge. Being a stupid kid I took my friends sled and gave it a push downhill toward the pond while laughing about how he had to now go down the hill to retrieve it! Well despite the pond being 95 percent frozen, you can guess where the sled went, and you would be correct if you said in the open 10 foot hole. So it was getting late and we all headed home to warm up but if I knew what was coming I may have stayed at a friend’s instead. As I am sitting in my bedroom relaxing, my dad gets a call apprising him of the sled at the bottom of the pond situation. He informs me we are heading to the pond right now and I am going in to retrieve it! My dad was a Marine and when he said something you didn’t argue and so I knew I was in for a rough night! We arrived in the dark at the pond and with a flashlight we could see the sled on the bottom directly below the spot where water became ice which was maybe 4-5 feet deep. He said go get it and all I could think was I am going to get sucked under that ice never to come up again and I am balling my eyes out as I got a little over waist deep. Finally my dad yells get out, and then informs me we are now going to the store to buy a new sled that I am going to hand deliver to my friend’s house that night! So my friend got a new sled and I got a life lesson that is still fresh in my mind almost 50 years later! So every time I walk on ice, I am keenly aware of the dangers that exist. Kids nowadays have no clue how easy they have it compared to my generation and to be honest I am not sure I would want it any different. Sometimes life’s little challenges can make you stronger in the long run.

Waiting Paid Off

This image started out with the goal of getting the sun setting behind these trees along with a cool sunset. Well I got the sun setting but it was very intense even up until it dropped below the horizon. Not too long after the sun went down my mind started wondering if there was any chance a buggy might come by to balance out the composition. The thought no sooner entered my mind and I suddenly heard a buggy not too far away. My camera was locked on the tripod pointing the opposite direction, so the bottom image shows all I could do to renegotiate before the buggy trotted by! So I had to ponder what my chances of a second buggy coming by were? I composed my shot with enough space on the right to fit a buggy and decided I would wait a maximum of forty five minutes. I think I had about ten minutes left when I heard the clip clop clip clop headed my way. I shoot manual most of the time so in a situation like this I would adjust exposure as the light level drops, so when the opportunity arises all I need to do is fire the shutter when the horse and buggy reaches the spot. For this image I probably blasted a series of maybe 14 shots starting when the buggy is almost past the tree until it leaves the frame. even doing that I had maybe three shots where the horse looked good and it was in the right spot. You can get an idea how intense the sun was, even while being partially blocked by the tree!

Blessings from Above!

This morning started out very overcast as I headed to a meeting, but returning 30 minutes later this spot was coming alive with the sun’s rays piercing the clouds. I pulled off the road and took a shot, but I decided to wait a little and the clouds opened up more and more till I shot this image which was the peak. I did get a couple with the sun visible but it was higher than the top of this image and it simply didn’t add anything as high as it was.

Light up the Night

Here is a quick example of how adding light to a shot can transform an image. Top image as shot and bottom image as shot with flash thrown in the mix. I enjoy being able to change an image by simply using light to bring out texture in one way or another. This is a very simple technique but it does require a few tools to pull off. First camera on a tripod, a wireless flash sender on camera and receiver on flash and a tablet and camranger to fire the camera and see the image on the tablet. So in sequence, my tablet triggers my camera, then the camera triggers the flash remote, then my flash receives the signal and fires and finally my camranger wifi mounted to the camera sends the image back to me on my tablet where i can analyze if i need to move the light, add power or whatever and there is no need to be at the camera so it opens up a whole set of creative possibilities.

Row of Trees

This row of trees sits along the driveway leading to the farm just over the crest of the hill. I was hoping a buggy would come out the lane for a little visual interest but my patience just could not wait on this pipe dream anymore.

Peaceful Winter Night

This is another night of late night shooting after a snowstorm had passed. The normally busy road was all but devoid of traffic on this evening. I even shot several shots with my tripod set up in the middle of the road! This is one of my favorites from this winter. I can imagine family and friends on an old sleigh going down the road all the while sipping hot chocolate!

Some Work/Some Play

This sleigh just left the snow covered roadway as it heads across the field back to the farm. The two men in the distance are using a horse drawn plow to clear the driveway for the milk truck. You can see the old time bells around the horse on the left and they add such a pleasant sound as the sleigh approaches.