Photographs by Frank

26 May 2012

Maiden Voyage

Having decided that we were too old to sleep on the ground but too young to quit camping, we spent some time mulling the options and decided on a teardrop camper. A teardrop camper is basically a bed (queen-sized in our case) on wheels with a camp kitchen on the back. They are light enough to be pulled behind a small car.

After a bit of research (and some last minute mind-changing), we decided to buy a Silver Shadow model made by Little Guy Campers.  We picked the trailer up at the  “local” dealer (Dan Kearney’s  in Rutland, VT) a couple of weeks ago.

On Monday, we took off on our maiden voyage in the camper. Our destination was Rangeley Lake State Park in western Maine. We spent two nights at Rangeley Lake,  a third night in Errol, NH and made it back home for a late dinner on Thursday.

We meandered the back roads both going and coming and covered 679 miles total, including a “loop” to Grafton Notch without the trailer (see below). The “rig” (i.e  Joan’s Forrester with two kayaks on top and the trailer) averaged 23.7 mpg for the trip. We averaged 21.9 mpg on the 218 mile return leg. The unburdened Forester gets about 32 mpg.

Here are a couple of photos of “the rig”:

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We arrived at Rangeley Lake around supper time and had our choice of campsites; there were only two other sites in use. Although, the ranger who registered us was anticipating with a bit of dread the crowds on the coming holiday weekend.

After setting up camp and cooking our first meal on the propane stove, we took a walk along the lake. Upon returning to our campsite (which was right on the lake) we were treated with a great sun set:

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Tuesday dawned gray with the forecast of scattered showers (the first of which occurred while we ate breakfast). We decided to take a drive to see (and photograph) the various waterfalls in the Grafton Notch (ME) State Park area. During the day we made five or six short hikes to various falls and encountered a few more light showers but we had fun anyway!

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We arrived back at the campsite at dinner time. After cooking dinner we launched the kayaks from the campsite and set off towards a small bay nearby. I had made an “executive decision” to leave the camera gear in the car as the light was drab and would quickly begin to fade.

The lake was quiet. We encountered a single boat close up shortly after we launched and only saw a couple of others in the distance as we paddled the lake.

As we headed back towards the campsite, we were treated to the sight of a bald eagle passing overhead. Joan watched through her binoculars as the bird cruised across the lake and made two attempts at fish. (I, of course, had forgot my binoculars!) The bird alit in a tree on a small island and after a short interval took flight again carrying a large stick. Again, she (or he) flew directly overhead at an altitude of maybe twenty or thirty feet. The bird was so close (and it was so quiet) that we could hear its wing beats! A short time later the (presumably) same bird made a return tip back across the lake to the same small island. At this point we headed back towards the campsite in the rapidly gathering dark. It was quite the experience and sometimes the experience is all that matters says he who left the camera back in the car!

Wednesday dawned cloudy but the forecast was for clearing weather. We decided to head for the Magalloway River near the headquarters of the Lake Umbagog National Wildlife Refuge in Errol, NH. We had camped nearby and explored the lake twice before, but had never headed upriver from the NWR headquarters. We figured that we could have a nice relaxed paddle and then decide whether to head home or camp a third night.

The paddle was nice, although not as isolated as the down river (towards the lake) stretch; we did about 4.5 miles before turning around. We got back to the landing at the NWR building around 4 PM.

As we were carrying Joan’s boat back across the road to the car we both did a double take… there was a three-legged bear standing on the lawn near the NWR building!  Upon seeing us, the critter unhurriedly headed down the bank and swam across the river. Our last sight was of its rear end disappearing into the woods on the far bank!

I do not think that the woman in the NWR office really believed our story, but I can’t say that I blame her! I’m not sure that I would believe such a story but having seen it with my own eyes I guess that it is true!!!!!

We decided to camp one more night and headed to the Clear Stream Campground in Errol. This is a nice quiet, but mosquito-filled private campground; nothing had changed from our previous stay here in July a couple of years ago! We set up camp and, instead fighting the vampires, we headed to the Bull Moose Restaurant for an early dinner.

After dinner, our plan was to head out on route 16 to “hunt” for moose. On our way back towards town after dinner we encountered a small cow moose eating the salt-laden mud at the side of the road. There was already a car stopped when we arrived and by the time a couple of more vehicles went roaring by the moose hightailed back into the woods. A good start to the evening!

We headed south of town along the Androscoggin River without seeing another moose but I made a couple of nice landscapes by a wide part of the river where we turned around and headed back north.

It was still light when we got back to the center of Errol so we decided to try Route 16 north of town. We drove as far as Wentworth Location and found another nice sunset scene to photograph but no moose. As we headed back to town in the near dark, we encountered another moose crossing the road as we drove.

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After breakfast at the campsite (the mosquitoes were not nearly as bad as they had been the previous evening) we packed up with the intention of meandering home through the White Mountains… and meander we did! We stopped at the pull off in Kinsman Notch to photograph but mostly I drove while Joan, with map in hand, “told me where to go”! We both enjoyed the scenery and arrived home about 4 PM.

All-in-all we had a successful maiden voyage.

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17 May 2012

Last Weekend

Filed under: Landscapes,Monadnock Region,wildflowers — Frank @ 7:46 AM

Last Friday evening looked promising for a nice sunset so I headed over to “Sky Farm” (a Forest Society parcel) in Deering. The walk to the top is short (about a quarter mile) and the views (mainly to the north) are spectacular. The sunset itself turned out to be a dud, only some low clouds on the horizon. However, the sun provided for some warm low angle light for a brief time; this allowed me to make the first image.

On Sunday, I headed for the Contoocook Falls in Hillsborough… at least it said “falls” on the map… it is more of a set of small rapids. The light was too harsh (even with broken clouds) and there were not many good angles for shooting the river.  However, I did discover some very small (fingernail-sized) wildflowers (Anemone quinquefolia, according to Joan) that made for interesting subjects. As I was setting up, one of the flowers had a visitor.

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6 May 2012

A Lazy Sunday Afternoon

This afternoon, I took a stroll down back to the beaver pond to look for odes. It was cool and mostly cloudy and I was not expecting to see much in the way of odes so I took only my binoculars.

The black flies were not too bad! There were painted turtles sunning on a log in the beaver pond. There were swifts or swallows (one of these days I’ll figure out which!)  foraging from the tops of the snags and there were other birds about.

But, as I expected, there were no odes in flight. However, I did scare a single Hudsonian Whiteface (either a female or an immature male) up out of the vegetation as I walked through the wet meadow.

On my way back up the hill I found a painted trillium, so I headed back out with the camera gear to photograph it. There were also some very small ferns beginning to emerge in the woods. The trillium blossom is less than the size of a quarter and the fern is maybe the size of a nickel.

It was good the get out and photograph. I am looking forward to the next few months.

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22 April 2012

A Few From the Past Week

Filed under: Early Spring,Landscapes,Mammals,Monadnock Region — Frank @ 1:00 PM

I haven’t had much time for making photographs in the past few weeks…I know, where are my priorities!

However, we are back to owning only one house and there is only one more week (plus a week of finals) in the semester… so things are looking good for the near future!

On Thursday afternoon, I headed out at about 5 PM to make some photographs; I had to be in Jaffrey for the Monadnock Camera Club meeting at 7 PM so I took a meandering route from Antrim to Jaffrey.  There were nice skies, good reflections on the water and I was only ten minutes late to the meeting!  Two hours… two nice photographs; a pretty successful outing if you ask me!

The photo of the squirrel is a grab shot through the glass looking out on our deck. This fellow spent some time watching us eat breakfast one morning. I guess that he was hoping for a hand out!

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18 March 2012

Abstracts – Making the Most of a Situation

Filed under: Early Spring,Landscapes — Frank @ 10:00 PM

Yesterday morning as I headed to town to do some chores (the transfer station called and said that it missed me), I noticed two pairs of buffleheads on the quickly thawing lake. By mid-afternoon, I was able to head back with the camera to see if I could make a few photographs of these migrants as they passed by.

In addition to the buffleheads, there were also some mergansers, some mallards and another (unidentified) diving duck hanging around in the open water. Unfortunately all were too far away for any worthwhile photographs… even with the 500 mm lens. I enjoyed just watching them for some time.

The lake was quite calm and I was eventually attracted to the reflections of the lake shore trees in the still water along the far shore. Making lemonade from the lemons nature hands you?

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11 March 2012

After a Long Hiatus

Filed under: architecture,Early Spring,Landscapes — Tags: — Frank @ 12:00 PM

March 10th dawned cold and gray;  an inch of snow had fallen overnight. By noon, the weather looked like it was beginning to break. The possibility of “interesting” skies motivated me to get off my rear end and, after a month’s hiatus, head out for some photography.

My first stop was “the bridge”, about a mile from the house… where the road becomes paved. My initial goal was the farm fields in East Washington, but I did not make any photos there. I ended up at the covered bridged in Henniker, NH. I had noted this bridge on a number of occasions but had never stopped to photograph it before.

I was parked behind the school and also made some time to photograph the cupolas of the nearby buildings in good, but not great, light. There are more structures to explore photographically, so I’ll be headed back at some point in the future.

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5 February 2012

Photographic Goings On

Filed under: Uncategorized — Frank @ 8:59 AM

The beginning of the new semester and the weather have conspired to limit the making of new photographs.  However, I have not been completely in active photographically.

A few weeks ago, I had photographs and a short essay published in the Bridgewater Review (a twice yearly publication that highlights faculty work). The folks at the review seem to be a bit behind in updating their website, so here is a tear sheet in pdf format.

Yesterday, I opened an exhibit of roughly thirty photographs at the Tuttle Library in Antrim. There are a mix of color and black and white of all sizes — 5″ x 7″ to 20″ x 24″. Most are of NH subjects with a bit of the rest of New England thrown in. The exhibit will hand until the 24th of February.

Coming up in March, will be the first showing of my Life Cycle of Dragonflies and Damselflies exhibit. The photographs will be up from the 19th of March to 13th of April in the third floor exhibit space in the Maxwell Library at Bridgewater State. An artist’s talk will take place from 12:30 to 1:30 on the 21st of March (here is the announcement).

I have another showing of this exhibit arranged for the gallery at the Northeast Regional Office of the US Fish and Wildlife Service in Hadley, MA but don’t hold your breath as it is scheduled for November and December 2014!


15 January 2012

Snow on the Landscape… Finally

Filed under: Landscapes,Monadnock Region,Winter — Tags: , — Frank @ 12:59 PM

On Thursday and Friday, we finally got some significant (about six inches) snow… that is, if you don’t count the twenty one inches way back in October!

Yesterday dawned cold (about 20 degrees) and gray. However, about 2 PM, I noticed the clouds starting to break up as the expected cold front arrived; the temperature was still around 20. I headed out to the north end of “our” beaver swamp to see what would develop. I took my first photo at 2:35 and spent the next hour photographing the swamp in very changeable conditions; both the clouds and the lighting were in constant flux.

The sun went below the ridge of Robb Mountain just about 3:45 putting the foreground in shadow. Thus, I broke the tripod and my feet free from the ice, packed up and headed home as the temperature dropped rapidly.

It was about ten or twelve degrees by the time I got home. The temperature continued to drop into the night and it was right around zero when I rose this morning. As I write this (at about noon) the temperature stands at about five.

Today might be a day to prints some of the recent photos in my nice cozy studio!

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P.S. As I went to publish this, I notice that it is my one hundredth entry; my first entry appeared on 24 May 2010. The first anniversary passed unnoticed by all!


8 January 2012

The View from Robb Mountain

Filed under: Landscapes,Monadnock Region,The "New" Yard & Environs — Tags: — Frank @ 11:00 PM

Today we decided to climb Robb Mountain. This peak is the southern most part of the ridge “behind” (west) of our house; at 1,820 feet it is the third highest point in Antrim.

There has been extensive logging on the Robb Mt. in the recent past so the terrain is not pristine. However, the views afforded by the clearing are quite spectacular.

The clearest views (and thus best photographically) are to the south overlooking Willard Pond. Mount Monadnock is hidden behind Bald Mountain but Pack Monadnock, North Pack Monadnock and their connecting ridge are clearly viewable above Goodhue Hill.

The steep climb (and probably more so, the descent) are hard on the knees, but the view was worth it. The temperature was in the mid-thirties and it was windy “up top” but not unpleasant.

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7 January 2012

A Warm January Day

Filed under: Landscapes,Monadnock Region,The "New" Yard & Environs,Winter — Tags: — Frank @ 11:00 PM

With the temperature in the mid-40’s, we were tempted outside and on another hike this afternoon. Our goal was Willard Pond. We headed over there via the beaver swamp and came back via the “new” trail.

I spent a little time photographing the pond, but the light was not particularly good nor were the clouds. I spent much more time photographing the stream which feeds the pond.

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