Getting an interesting photo is often about being at the right place at the right time. Sometimes, as with this photo, it’s about getting to the right place at the right time.
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Seasons
Getting an interesting photo is often about being at the right place at the right time. Sometimes, as with this photo, it’s about getting to the right place at the right time.
Read MoreAnother Iron Creek photo . . .
Read MoreBy Scott Shephard
I am about to experience my 71st South Dakota winter. Given that I don’t like winter, I may be the perfect example of Einstein’s definition of insanity: Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.”
But I’m not insane and I don’t expect anything different: we will have snow and we will have some very cold, short days. At some point, I will ask, “Why do we live here?!”
I have good answers to that question but I won’t offer them here. Instead, for those of you in the Great White North who feel as I do, and even for those who live in more benign climates, today’s photos might offer a literal answer: there is wonder and beauty everywhere. All we have to do is open our eyes. In my case, when I picked up my camera on a cold morning in November, 2009, I chose to open my eyes and I couldn’t get enough of what I saw.
Beyond their literal meaning, I think there’s a symbolic meaning to the photos. On the second morning after an election that has left some people disillusioned and feeling hopeless, I suggest that you look away from that news and seek solace in all the good things that no doubt surround you.
It could be flowers and frost but there may be simpler things. For example, yesterday morning our youngest cat Zoe followed me downstairs at 2:30 am after I had learned about the results of the election and couldn’t go back to sleep. She watched me make coffee, rubbed against my ankle and when I picked her up, she purred. A little bit later, as I was working on yesterday’s somewhat dark and esoteric blog post, Zeke, our 11 year old cat came into my office. He rarely has time for me but yesterday he jumped up on my desk and lay down in front of the keyboard. When our eyes met, he, too, started to purr. It’s good to have “people” in your life that are oblivious to current events. Yesterday, I was grateful for the hope, comfort and consolation in something as simple as a cat’s purr.
The cats helped me yesterday. Today these photos take me to a better place and help me forget the things I don’t really care for, including South Dakota winters. Maybe they’ll do the same for you.
Canon 5DII f/4.0 1/100 sec ISO 320
Did you take some time this month to enjoy the beauty of fall?
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:
Three of my most favorite people.
Read MoreIt’s a mysterious Christmas gift left by a kind stranger.
Read MoreThey can play the part of victims but their lives are really remarkably comfortable.
Read MoreWho says that yard work isn’t fun?
Read MoreThere are at least two kinds of volunteers.
Read MoreToday I ask you to admire trees that are otherwise ignored and taken for granted.
Read MoreThere are a few things I like about winter.
Read More