Photographs by Frank

14 March 2013

Powdermill Pond

Filed under: Landscapes,Monadnock Region,Winter — Frank @ 6:00 PM

Yesterday, I made the short (five or six miles?) drive from our house to the west shore of Powdermill Pond in Hancock.  This “pond” is actually a dammed section of the Contoocook River.  The dams (there are three) hold water for use by the Monadnock Paper Mill in Bennington. The upper two dams may also be (or have been) used for power.

I was hoping to catch the light of the setting sun on the eastern (i.e. the west-facing) side of the pond with Crotched Mountain in the background.

The third photo was taken on the drive back home. It is a view facing west across a hay field that was, until recently, owned by one of Joan’s cousins.

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Four frame panorama of Powder Mill Pond; it would print almost four feet wide (by ten inches high):

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11 March 2013

What a Difference a Day Makes!

Filed under: Landscapes,Monadnock Region,Winter — Tags: — Frank @ 6:00 PM

Last weekend brought two days of beautiful late winter/early spring weather. The temperature was in the high forties. Joan and I headed out on snow shoes in the late afternoon both days.

Saturday was bright and clear, not a cloud in the sky. The light was harsh and the sky was completely uninteresting… I made few photos and none are worth showing.

Sunday afternoon brought a front moving through in the late afternoon. The light was “nice” and the sky was interesting… the photos below are the result.

What a difference a day makes!

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Three frames stitched together:

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3 March 2013

Beaver Swamp in Late Winter

Filed under: Landscapes,Monadnock Region,Winter — Frank @ 12:00 PM

Yesterday afternoon, Joan and I strapped on the snowshoes and headed “down back” to the beaver swamp. We had not trekked that way for a few weeks.

There is enough snow on the ground to cover most of the grasses and other low vegetation in the swamp, leaving only the shrubs and snags standing tall. The snow was well aged and crunchy, but easy to walk on… not icy.

It is always interesting to walk on the frozen swamp. One gets views from angles that are more-or-less inaccessible at other times of the year.

The sun was as low as it can be and still illuminate the bottom lands. The light was very variable as the sun kept peaking out of the clouds and then disappearing again.  Thus, the light was good for photos, at least at the onset of our walk.

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23 February 2013

Three Very Different Photos

Filed under: Garden Flowers,Landscapes — Frank @ 10:00 PM

The first photo was taken from the backyard last Sunday at sunset. The spectacular colors lasted for roughly five minutes. I am glad that I did not try to go find a better foreground!

The second photo was taken yesterday morning while I was out doing the weekly errands. The folks at the transfer station crush and bale the aluminum cans that are dropped off to be recycled. The bales are roughly 4 feet by 4 feet by 3 feet and weigh about 600 pounds. There is often a bale or two sitting near the dumpster where we deposit our trash. I have been pondering the photographic possibilities of these bales for some months now. Yesterday I had the Nikon V1 with me and business was slow, so I got the camera out with this result!

The third photo was made on our dining room table this afternoon. I had noticed the flowering Christmas cactus earlier in the day and used the nice soft window light to make this photo.

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The first two photos were made with my little camera (the Nikon V1).

Initially, I also picked up the V1 to use for the last photograph. I was interested in exploring how close I could get (with either lens) and I was interested if I could get a nice shallow depth of field with the flower in focus and an out of focus background; the latter is always a problem with a small sensor camera and proved so again in this case. Additionally neither lens was capable of focusing in close enough to fill the frame with the flower. The V1 is a nice camera but it is not macro capable! The last photo was made with my 90 mm macro lens on the “big gun”.


15 February 2013

A Day Off from Work

Filed under: Landscapes,Winter — Tags: , , , — Frank @ 5:00 PM

I had not planned on making photographs this past Tuesday. However, circumstances gave us some free time so Joan and I headed down to Sachuest NWR in Middletown, Rhode Island. We did not get quite that far. The nor’easter at the end of the previous week had washed out the road and knocked down the power lines along Sachuest Point Road. Thus the road was closed  about a mile or so before the refuge gate.

Instead, we parked at the small lot at the west end of Second Beach (along with all of the surfers) and had a nice walk down the beach. The wind was blowing steadily and the temperature was in the low 40s. The walk down the beach, with the wind at our backs, was slow and pleasant; we moved somewhat more rapidly on the return trip.

I had the  little camera* with me. There were some nice clouds and so I got some nice photographs. Actually, it was very hard to keep my focus on the dunes and the sky since there are always so many interesting “distractions” at one’s feet while walking a beach.

After our walk on the beach we had a late lunch and headed down to Sakonnet Point in Little Compton. Sachuest Point and Sakonnet Point are separated by roughly three miles (of water) as the crow flies. According to Google maps it is roughly 25 miles by road between the two spots… the RI coast is definitely convoluted!

The “orange door” photograph was made at Sakonnet Point; all of the others were made along Second Beach. The reflection in the window of the orange door is as I saw it; it was not “Photoshopped in”.

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*I am getting pretty good at remembering to take the Nikon 1 whenever I leave the house. I was certainly glad to have it with me last Tuesday! On the way back to Bridgewater from Little Compton we stopped at a Best Buy because our cordless phone in the house has been acting up. We found an adequate replacement and had already purchased it when, as we were headed towards the exit, Joan pointed out their display of the various Nikon 1 models… I ended up with the 30-110 mm lens for the Nikon 1 that I had been thinking about. I bet it will be a long time before Joan mentions a camera display to me again!!!!


20 January 2013

Beaver Swamp in Winter

Filed under: Landscapes,The "New" Yard & Environs,Winter — Tags: , — Frank @ 8:00 PM

I made this photograph about a week ago* at the end of our “January thaw”… a couple of days with high temperatures near 50o F and nights with above freezing temperatures.

The forecast called for a cold front to move through and an accumulation of four to six inches of snow overnight and the next morning. I was reading in the living room when I noticed the weather beginning to change.

Knowing that weather in flux often makes for good photographs, I pulled on my boots and headed out for a short walk to the beaver swamp at the back of our property. We live at the south end of this wetland. There are often nice skies at the north end during changeable weather.

I began by taking a few photos from the safety of the edge of wetland. However, I knew the best place to photograph this scene was from near the middle where I could use the channel of open water as a leading line and the view of the sky to the north would be best.

If one has never walked a wetland like this, you need to know that the grassy areas you see in the foreground are called a “wet meadow” for good reason. The clumps of grass one sees are sticking out of a boggy mess. My type of terrain!

The just ending  “January thaw”  meant that the ice in this wet meadow was likely to be thin. I had donned only my regular hiking boots rather than my green wellies. Heading out into the meadow, I calculated that the chance of wet socks was high but one accepts such things in pursuit of “art”.

About three-quarters of the way out, I felt the rush of ice water into my left boot. I must have reacted quickly since I did not feel any of the real squishiness that accompanies a fully flooded boot and it only took a few minutes for my body heat to warm the water so that I did not notice it!

I proceeded to make some photographs while watching the cold front move across the scene in front of me.  The diagonal line of heavy clouds starting at the tree line on the left and heading up and to the right is the front.

I hung around for maybe a half hour until there was no blue sky remaining in view and headed back to the house. I was about ninety percent of the way back to “dry land” when my right boot met the same fate as my left one!

Was the result worth the cold wet feet? I think so!

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*On Tuesday, the 15th at 1:59 PM to be exact; ain’t metadata wonderful!


A Meander on the Lake

Filed under: Landscapes,Winter — Frank @ 6:00 PM

Yesterday afternoon Joan and I donned our “crampons” and went for a hike on Gregg Lake. Bob houses appeared out on the lake on Saturday so we figured the ice was safe for walking on. We meandered down to our camp and around the lake basically used the “drunken sailor” approach to navigation. We ended up at the boat ramp and headed back home via the road; 4.8 miles all told according to the GPS.

I am not sure what small mammal made the tracks but they were quite common in “our” cove and heading over towards the Byron Caughey Memorial Scout Camp.

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The photograph below is a two frame panorama… probably more like one and a half. I was not intending to stitch these two frames together when I tripped the shutter and thus did not think at all about “overlap”. However, when I reviewed the images on the computer joining them together seemed right.

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Winter Lake Shore


14 January 2013

A Foggy Saturday

Filed under: Landscapes,Monadnock Region,Winter — Tags: , — Frank @ 3:00 PM

‘Twas a foggy day on Saturday.

I headed out late morning to make the rounds of my “good in fog” places to photograph… Meetinghouse Hill, the North Branch River and several wetlands.

By early afternoon and fog had lifted considerably and I headed back home in time for a late lunch. Eventually, I settled in to edit the photographs I had made. Some time later, I noticed dense fog swirling around trees I can see from my second floor “studio” window.

I felt compelled to grab the camera again and headed down to the bridge and public beach on Gregg Lake. There are a number of subjects here that “require” dense fog in order to isolate them from rather busy, distracting backgrounds.

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Two from Thursday

Filed under: Landscapes,Monadnock Region,Winter — Tags: , — Frank @ 12:00 PM

Thursday was a warm, for January, day (the high temperature was around  40 degrees ) with some sun. In the middle of the afternoon, Joan and I headed out on snowshoes with no particular goal in mind.

We made a right at the end of the driveway and headed up Brimstone Corner Road.  Eventually, we turned down Boutman Road; at the low point (where the stream crosses the road), we headed off into the woods and looped back up to Brimstone Corner.

As the afternoon progressed, the light got  really nice… soft yet directional.

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6 January 2013

Snowshoe Jaunts

Filed under: Landscapes,Winter — Tags: , — Frank @ 12:00 PM

Just after lunch on the past two days, we headed out on our snowshoes. Rather than heading down the driveway and deciding which way to turn on Brimstone Corner, we headed “down back” into the woods.

Our goal, on both days, were the beaver “swamps” that lie between our house and Willard Pond. These wetlands are more properly called  “wet meadows” according to the book* on wetlands I have been reading.

There are two, roughly parallel  beaver-made wetlands between our house and Willard Pond. A small fraction of the closest one occupies the back of our property and extends roughly half a mile to the north.  The second, lies farther to the west. There is a low ridge and a quarter mile separating the two.

It has been about a week since we have had any new snow and it is quite amazing to see the number of moose and dear tracks crisscrossing the woods. There are also, of course, numerous tracks made by smaller animals.

On Friday, our route followed the edge of “our” beaver meadow and there were a number of places right at the margin of the wet land with dozens of moose prints; spots where they were browsing.  On Saturday, we found a site where a deer had clearly bedded down for a night.

None of these these things make for artistic photos but it is fun seeing them.

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* Swampwalker's Journal: A Wetlands Year by David M. Carroll. Highly recommended!

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