The beard was an experiment in aging.
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21.01.20 Five
There is no song entitled “Five Candles” by Frankie Valli (or Johnny Maestro) but there should be.
Read More20.12.18 Vestiges
By Scott Shephard
Here I am again, though time has passed from the photos in recent posts. Like the blue jeans I’m wearing, the smile has faded a bit. But it’s still genuine and no doubt a little wiser.
Looking at this photo makes me sad and maybe that’s why I have given the photo a dark and moody feel. I’m sad because the old farm house I’m standing in no longer exists. Like Iron Creek in the Black Hills, it was a place of pilgrimage for me for many years. I would go there to take photos but sometimes I would go there just to be out in the country. One day I drove out to the old farmstead and all that was left was a bulldozed pile of trees and rubble. My first thought was that I missed a turn. When I realized I was in the right place, my next thought was “Who said they could do this?” Apparently, someone else had bought the land and needed a few more acres of crop land. For the record, I never owned this property but it felt a little like I belonged there.
I took a lot of photos of the old farm because I found the house and grounds photogenic, It was more than a mere subject, however. Those who have explored old farm houses may understand what I am about to say.
You see, the abandoned house was still alive. Though I never encountered ghosts, I could hear the voices and sounds of the people who used to inhabit this special place when I stood in its rooms and walked among the old farm equipment. When I walked on the wooden floors, I walked where countless others had walked decades before. I imagined the meals enjoyed here, and the births and the deaths that likely happened within these walls. I also wondered what the last residents of this place were thinking when they walked away from it. Happiness? Sadness? Nothing? I’ll never know.
The title of this post is “Vestiges” which is an interesting word. It means “fragment,” “relic,” “remnant” and “echo,” among other things. A vestige can exist in fact and in memory. But it can also exist in photos. While the house is gone and forgotten now, and so, too, are the people who used to live here, the photos remain. They are vestiges.
I turn 67 today and I guess I’m a vestige, too. The tone of this post is perhaps a bit somber, but that’s not how I feel about being a “fragment, relic, remnant or echo” of my former self. So far COVID-19 hasn’t bulldozed me like it has so many of my generation. With a little luck, the right diet, proper exercise and social distancing, I’ll make it to 68.
06-13-15 They Say It's Your Birthday (Athens 6-13-06)
I suspect Deb will not consider a simple blog post a worthy birthday present. . . .
Read More06-02-15 "It's My Birthday" (Glenyce Jane at 2)
By Scott Shephard
We spent the weekend in Minnesota to help celebrate the birthday of our granddaughter Glenyce Jane. She is actually two years old today and it just happens that it is her "golden birthday": she is two years old on the 2nd. We only get one golden birthday.
I'm not sure she understands the concept of "birthdays," but she did understand how to make the bubble machine work. I look forward to warmer weather so she can test the two water squirting sharks I picked out for her. The concept with these is to aim them at her father, not her mother.
Canon 5DIII 1/500s f/4.0 ISO100 24mm
A few others from the day: (click to see them bigger)
And from two short years ago:
12-18-14 Sixty-One and Counting
Photobombed by an eagle . . . . (read more)
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