Monday, December 31, 2018

Tuesday, December 18, 2018

When I arrived at Suwanee River State Park yesterday, I expected to take the trail that follows the spring fed stream to the Suwanee River.  To my great surprise, the trail, boat launch ramp and entire area I intended to explore was seriously flooded.  These two photographs were made at the top of the launch ramp which was underwater just beyond where I was standing.  I still want to hike that trail, but will have to wait several weeks or more until the flood waters subside. (MF Film)






Monday, December 17, 2018

These photographs were made near the confluence of the Suwanee and Withlacoochee Rivers.  Recent heavy rains raised the water level above the bases of several hoary old oaks draped in Spanish Moss leaving the ends of the lowest branches awash.  In the afternoon sunlight it was easy to conjure Tom, Huck, and Jim, in their ragged straw hats and bare feet, sitting on the banks. Of course this was not the Mississippi, but I have the sense that there might be a strong resemblance nonetheless.







Sunday, December 9, 2018

Here are several more from the trip described below. 






Friday, December 7, 2018

An area I've not explored at all until this past week is the 'springs'.  The springs are all along the Suwanee and Santa Fe Rivers and feed those rivers to a degree.  These photographs are mostly of those feeders.  (MF Film)



 








Friday, November 30, 2018

I hadn't been to Marineland Beach in quite a while, but decided to go today.  The 'rocks' are coquina and very interesting in themselves, but I was more interested in their relationship with the sea and sky.  Just for fun, I've also linked to Benjamin Britten's Four Sea Interludes which I was thinking about while using the camera.  (MF Film, #15 Deep Yellow filter and polarizer.)  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J20ROYLZfX0









Sunday, November 11, 2018

More from northern Georgia this past week!  I am still excited by our time in the mountains so different from the coastal terrain of Florida.  By sheer good luck there still were abundant, vibrantly colored leaves though I expect they'll all have fallen by Thanksgiving.  It's not like I'm unused to these mountain views, but it's been a few years and it felt like visiting old friends.  (Pentax 67, 135mm lens, and K2 yellow filter)










Saturday, November 10, 2018

Our week in the mountains of north Georgia were refreshing and memorable!  Needing a break from Florida's terrain and weather, the trip was a welcome elixer!  I will be posting photographs I made while there and these several will serve to begin.  All were made on film with my Pentax 67 medium format camera and a K2 yellow filter.








Thursday, November 8, 2018

As I'm red-green color perception deficient (color blind is inaccurate and pejorative) I work almost exclusively in monochrome, but now and then I take a cellphone pic because I love the colors whatever they are!  This is such a photograph from the porch of a cabin in the Blue Ridge mountains where we stayed this week. 


Friday, November 2, 2018

It was fun to revisit photographs I made a few years ago in NY (and there may yet be more to come), but I live in Florida now, and need to keep exploring what's here.  This is the last month on my state park annual pass so I felt a need to squeeze another visit or two before I have to renew the thing.  These are from Little Talbot Island SP yesterday.  (MF Film with orange filter)




Sunday, October 28, 2018

I decided to revisit some photographs I made years ago in New York.  They've all been posted on this blog before, but were presented differently with ersatz mats at a smaller size. I think the ones I've chosen have 'legs' and are worth seeing again.  Though these are negative scans, the actual photographs were made with film and were printed in my New York darkroom, a facility I no longer have here in Florida. 





 




Friday, October 12, 2018

There is a part of the beach at Big Talbot Island SP littered with trees that have succumbed to wind and weather.  The three images I've attached here are from that place.  The one with the wooden and wire fence is a view from the top of a bluff of maybe 20 or more feet with one of the scores of fallen trees below on the sand. When I first visited the place there had been a long staircase to the beach.  The next time I visited, it was gone and a 'snow fence' was keeping people from falling off the bluff.  It was easy to walk around, and many people did so they could scramble down the bluff to the sand.  Finally, what you see in the pic includes that original fence plus a wire one that continues beyond and has made it impossible to circumvent.  It's safer, but kinda ruins the view.  The other images are of two of the beautiful old trees in the parking and picnic area.   (MF FIlm)











Thursday, October 4, 2018

I can't explain my attraction to chaotic clusters of driftwood, but attracted I am!  I see design where it  isn't purposefully arranged to be that way.  And, bleached, weathered wood appeals to me as well!  All this is from Little Talbot Island SP in northeast Florida on the Atlantic coast.  (MF Film)











Monday, September 24, 2018

Here are three more photographs of live oaks.  These were taken at Fort Matanzas National Monument.  (P67, 55mm, Delta 100)






Thursday, September 20, 2018

Returning from Washington Oaks State Park yesterday, I encountered a threatening sky that I thought was stunning.  Pulling off the highway in the opposite direction from my route, I found a little place to park. The body of water here is the Intracoastal (which most people mispronounce as the Intercoastal).  (Pentax 67, 55mm lens, Delta 100 film)




Washington Oaks SP features formal gardens on the west side of the road, and access to the beach on the east side.  I've not been there in a over a year and was surprised to discover that the beach side had been closed all this time to recover from extensive storm damage inflicted over a year ago. The ranger told me that most of the dunes had been washed away, the parking lot sank, and more. He did tell me that it should be opened again soon having undergone natural and man aided recovery in the interval.  So, having driven for about an hour to get there, I decided to make the most of it and chose these live oaks to photograph.  (P67, 55mm, Delta 100 film)