Did you take some time this month to enjoy the beauty of fall?
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Did you take some time this month to enjoy the beauty of fall?
Read MoreEveryone looks pretty serious here . . .
Read MoreDawn's early light.
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Read MoreIt’s nice to have a willing subject to photograph.
Read MoreIf you visit at the wrong time, the Devil’s Tower is more easily seen from a distance.
Read MoreBy Scott Shephard
This morning, just as the rising sun was touching the tips of these trees with its golden light, I launched the drone to see what I could see. My main interest was in picturing “the Cabin” in its setting. It’s always interesting to see things as the soaring hawks do given that ground level views become mundane.
From this vantage point I see that the Earth itself is mostly unchanged, that the trees have grown and that the Cabin perseveres. I have weathered the most, I think, which is the way it goes.
It occurs to me that this place, built almost a half a century ago, is more than a house. It is an important repository of shared and personal history. It contains countless stories. Tears have been shed here and there have been a few arguments. But it has mainly been a place of joy and laughter.
And, as I think Clint and Glenyce intended all those years ago, the Black Hills cabin is all about family. We’re lucky to have this little place in the Hills.
DJI Mini 3 Pro 5 frame HDR
It was a perfect morning and time to photograph Saint Stans Basilica
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Read MoreTree roots and limestone engender deep (and perhaps pointless) thoughts.
Read MoreCampsite #41 in Council Grounds State Park
Read MoreScott Shephard
Southwest of Merrill, Wisconsin (North of Wausau)
It stopped raining long enough yesterday for Deb and me to venture out into the Wisconsin countryside just west of Merrill, WI, where the Council Grounds State Park campground is located. My goal was to photograph trees, of which there are many shapes and varieties.
We generally think in terms of “fall” colors but as we drove east across this beautiful state yesterday morning, it was evident that “spring” colors get short shrift*. They are plentiful and, after many weeks of generally colorless landscapes in our part of the USA, are much appreciated.
Though this photo doesn’t necessarily illustrate this, spring is a great time to photograph trees because you get the best of what a tree offers: you get the structure, including the trunk, the bark and the lines and textures of the branches. But you also get a touch of nascent color.
I mentioned a couple days ago that black and white photos reveal lines and textures. But in a photo like this color is essential. Color is life. It is affirmation. And, in spring, the color of budding leaves is the color of Hope.
DJI Minnie 3 Pro 5 frame HDR
*Sorry for the archaic language. This phrase means “unsympathetic dismissal.”
A few more views from the same location: