Thursday, October 31, 2013

31 October 13

BOO!

And that is the extent of my participation and joy on this fine Halloween!  I hope all the urchins get their sugar high tonight and all the adults get to fill their wine glasses at each stop.

So much for the editorial comment of this dribble.

One of the neat things about participating on Fine Art America is the ability to see what other artists are doing and what is selling each day.  There are some really great people doing some pretty great things out there and we get to interact with each other via comments, blogs and forums.  I enjoy all of them but cannot participate to much as my time is spent in editing, posting and promoting.  
But, please take a look at some of these individuals by clicking on their links.  I will include a couple of people as I go along with my posts here.

http://fineartamerica.com/saleannouncement.html?id=1acfd5609637d41c9a4cf0dfe0e539b1

That's a sale announcement page to get you through Thanksgiving and help prepare you for one of the Real holidays!

This gal is one of the most prolific of the artists there.  She also is a pretty consistent seller as well.

http://fineartamerica.com/profiles/1-sharon-cummings.html

And finally, because I always do things in three's, a gal with some Maryland ties.

http://fineartamerica.com/profiles/francie-davis.html

But we all know that the only work you really want to see is mine, I leave you with this.


A marsh dweller that flashes, like an old man in a raincoat, his colors every time he sings.  The red winged blackbird.  

Happy Hallo all you weenies!









Tuesday, October 29, 2013

29 October 13

Well, back to normal!

Beginning to warm up here after our little cold snap.  Normal!

Somebody hacked my ATM card...the new Normal.
  And that's a good reason not to have any money...none to lose!

The trash people are working their way up the street and that has the dogs on alert and ready to bark...Normal!

The front line warning system (cockateals) haven't gone off yet, but will....Normal!

Sitting here (again) in my virtual office and daydreaming about walking a stream or climbing a mountain....Normal!

Planning dinner......chicken probably....Normal!

Have a lot of images to edit.....daily Normal!

And a bunch to list.....again Normal!

God I love my life!!!

Now have to go outside and set the snares for all the little gremlins that will be coming to the house for candy and stuff.  Just love to see them hoisted overhead in a snare yelling "Trick or Treat dammit!

Now that's NOT Normal!


But it's where the birds are!




Saturday, October 26, 2013

26 October 13

 Chilly Willy!  

A hunerd years ago I was known as Willy.  A nickname which really didn't stick created by some of my high school friends, or maybe it was college.  At any rate, it's 36 degrees warm here this morning and we are "Chilly"!  But, then again it's October or at least it was the last time I looked. 


We had the opportunity to visit old Cape May, New Jersey last week and it always amazes me the extent to which people will go to keep their residences looking nice.  It's the law there! I mean, a hunerd miles up....who cares.  But down here it's paint and groom constantly.  Now this community is the end of a great bit spit of land bordered by salt water on basically three sides.  Sherwin Williams loves this place!  But those old Victorians are a drawing card for the tourists.  They're kept neat and spit shined to use an old army term.

I am not real sure what it is exactly, but I think of other spits of land extending into oceans that draw of tourist dollars is a driving force in lawn and building maintenance.  I mean there's Provincetown on Cape Cod and the ultimate end of land in Key West.  All similar destinations sticking out into oceans. All with similar life styles.  I love them all and all offer fantastic photo ops.  Great restaurants.  And even something called "Nature".  Places where the oceans dictate the daily game plan and not the humans.  Places too where "Time Goes By".



Penn State Vs. Ohio State today...so you know where I'll be!  Great weekend all!

Friday, October 25, 2013

25 OCT 13


We survived another journey north to the Garden State (NJ for those of you who live west of Camden).  The weather was just a normal spectacular weekend with cool temps, drizzle on Saturday and bluebird skies on Sunday.  Sales for this NJ Lighthouse Challenge were off as were the crowds but the friendships were outstanding.  Ronny and Sam drove down just to visit us.  Sam, whose foot is about to fall off due to an old man, self inflicted, dropping of a sign onto said foot injury was in a pergiment (again for those of you west of Camden that's probably a misspelled drug) induced haze.  So the only thing to do was to reinvent the old man shuffle around the place.  You know the type of walk!  Stooped shoulders.  Hands out for balance.  Eyes on the ground in front of your feet and one inch strides repeated as quickly as possible for old men.  I do hope he gets better soon but that's just the way we roll.  Not even change for a quarter given or received.  Love the guy.  Visited with a  High School bud, Carol and her husband Jim on Saturday evening and had a great time free loading.  Nice people them!



Sheri (on the left) established bonds with Nancy, my erstwhile FB buddy who paints, interior designs, photographs and writes little books for little kids and is otherwise all around good people.  She and Carl are a wonderful addition to the lighthouse family.  Of course all the usual suspects were on board and it was wonderful seeing them all again.

We stayed two nights at a Bed and Breakfast in North Wildwood, a place I found out later was supposed to be haunted.  Can't tell ya!  Saw nothing strange.  But if anyone is ever in need of a place to stay in Wildwood or North Wildwood, New Jersey....The Candlelight Inn is the place to go.  Easy commuting distance to Cape May and even Atlantic City.  AND, the breakfasts Bill serves are killer!

As some of you know I ordered two 20x30 images printed on metal for the show, and they were the hit.  Didn't sell, but then again nothing much else did either.  Both images drew people from a hundred feet away and all the appropriate oohs and aahs were emitted.  So....If you need images and would like them printed on metal, do so with all the confidence in the world.  Fine Art America does a fantastic job!


The inventory reduction effort continues and I did get rid of a bunch of stuff.  I will not be doing too many more shows like I have in the past and will hence forth venture out only on invitation.  And therefore am selling, selling and selling.  I even sold one of the WWI ammo boxes you see on the table in the foreground.  I am thinking that a digital booth may be in order, but have to look at that further.  In the meantime, we continue to have fun.  

My daughter, Heather, visited all too briefly on Sunday and even help to pack us up.  That was appreciated but I would have like to spent more time with her.  We left Sunday afternoon for my son's place in Middletown, DE and spent the night.  Grandkids are on some kind of drug or fresh air or something that makes them grow, but I guess we all know about that.  Monday and Tuesday at the beach house and then back here on Wednesday. Another whirlwind 2,000 mile trip.  Next a winter visit with the kids and grands in December.

I did manage to get some new images which you will be seeing in the near future on FAA.  One of which was the Cape May LH.


This one is unedited and will be one of the ones to be listed soon.  I had the good luck on Friday evening to have a great sky filled with all kinds of cloud action.  The setting sun is behind the tower which created a shadow of same right over the top of my head.  An interesting take on a normal setting sun image.  Later the more traditional sky color developed, but a lot of the clouds were gone and the set was, well, not so much.  I wish that I could report to you that I had been in touch with the meteorologists and planned to arrive under the conditions you see....But not so.  In the planning stages any good photographer must consider that he/she can just get plain lucky.  We were headed for dinner and just happened to stop by the spot.  The old "Blind hog finds an acorn" rule applied. 

Have a great week end y'all!






Wednesday, October 16, 2013

16 Oct 13

LOOK OUT ANGLESEA

Anglesea is the small community of North Wildwood, New Jersey where the Hereford Inlet lighthouse calls home.  And where we will be headed tomorrow.


I have been attending and showing at the light for 13 years and have developed some meaningful friends there.  Hence, looking forward to it.  But today and tomorrow morning will be spent in preparation and cannot therefore hang around online too much.  But some of the other lights on the challenge are fun places too.  The ideas is for people to make it to all the lights on the tour in one weekend.  The lights will be open for touring and also will have people displaying all kinds of things.  It is a fun week end for all.

You all fly safe now!



Monday, October 14, 2013

14 October 13

TRIVIUM

The weekend was calm here, with not much going on except the best football game I have seen in years.  Of course I am biased, but the Penn State/Michigan game went to four overtimes with PSU prevailing.  Sweet!

Sunday was another successful day of avoiding pro football on the telly.  Just not as exciting as college, but then again I guess I am biased once again.  We did take a mini-road trip up to the lake to see Sheri's cousin's place which is under construction.  Looks like a Junior High School .... yup that large.  We took Missy with us and she loved to get out of the house and her own back yard.  However, the floating dock was a whole nother thing.


You might have to zoom in a bit to see that she is splayed on the deck with front paws holding on for dear life.  Hey, stuff I'm walking on or laying upon is not supposed to move.  She flat out did not like that part of the trip.  There is a little bit of color in the trees, but we just don't get the mountain colors down here.  Too bad.  And we probably won't get a decent chance at the fall colors next week as we will be Jersey Shore bound from Thursday this week to the same next week.

I do love to free wheel photograph as you know and found two places of great interest.  The first being some old Texaco pumps at a little store along the way.


The other image (s) I made were of an old barn or shed on a little dirt road (Country Roads).


This is an unedited image of the barn.


As you can see the edited image looks a lot different than the original.

  I happen to feel the final product is more attractive.  Remember, I am not here to massage my own ego.  Some would say that it is large enough already.  No, my purpose to to create something someone might want to hang on a wall.  If someone doesn't like the final image, well congratulations....you have a mind of your own.  And I go onto the next image.

  A very wise man of the sales type once said this to me.  "Of the universe you are selling into, you will always get a particular percentage regardless of how good, or bad, a salesman you are.  The trick is to take away part or all of some other salesman's percentage."

  So that's the trick.  And proverb number 1,123 of Skip's almanac of garbage knowledge and other useless trivium.  Oh and I have no idea whether Trivium is a word or not, or means what I want to say.  Just a piece of trivial info!  That's my definition and I'm sticking to it.

OK, I looked it up and it's not quite what I thought it would be. But then again it might fit in a twisted sort of way.
  
"An introductory curriculum at a medieval university involving the study of grammar, rhetoric, and logic."

Have a wonderful week and work on those percentages.



Saturday, October 12, 2013

12 October 13

Morning all!

 The weather God has seen fit to treat us with a calm, clear day with the temperatures in the low sixties.  It's quiet an the dogs have not yet begun to stir and are getting into their "Feed me, feed me" mode.

The stupid birds have not even found that it's daylight yet.  And that's a good thing.

This is the kind of morning that brings to mind flat lakes, small boats and fishing rods.  Well, to me anyway.  To you it may be mountain passes, snowy peaks, or wide beaches with quietly lapping surf or a mountain field full of wild flowers.


A sunrise so inviting that even emergence from under warm and downy blankets isn't the chore it often seems to be.  Pike Place perking in an old percolator pot and the smell of bacon turning a crispy brown.  Sounds and smells.  It's funny what the mind can conjure up when it is free wheeling through the memory chips of the fastest and largest computer that only God could make....the human brain. 

 We do that when we have no sticky notes before us.  No shopping list on the fridge.  No to do lists made the night before.  And no pressing issues in that sometime over used structure on our shoulders.  Given what's going on around us, we probably should exercise that structure a little more often.

I guess we seasoned citizens tend to roam through our mental library's more than the young.  We at least have shelved more books than the young and should, should I say, have those significant memories that allow us to actually sit back and enjoy the moment.


Days like this, in quiet and leisure thought, I am reminded too of the serenity prayer.

God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,

The courage to change the things I can,

And the wisdom to know the difference.

If I could have lived that prayer all my life, I think that I would have been a better person.  But alas I am human and well those old memory chips can also give us problems as well from time to time.
It is however, a delightful day here in Shangra La South and right now I would not have it any other way.

Stay well read my friends.





Wednesday, October 9, 2013

9 OCTOBER 13

Fifty eight degrees here in Shangra La South.  I understand my friends on the Jersey coast are bracing for a nor easter today.  Just what they need up there, but what the heck it's shoot a camel day!


I sure do hope that the shore keeps the sand on the beach and not inland where the front end loaders have to be brought out again.  Been a tough year for those folks.

We are beginning to see the photos of the colors in the North East.  Jack Nevitt has been posting stuff from West Virginia and Rebecca Latson is in Maine.  You might want to check their links here to see some fantastic work.



I continue to be desk bound, editing and posting.  I am about all ready for the trip to North Wildwood.  Wondering if I can rent a flat screen TV to run the website during the show and generate orders directly there from.  Just a thought, but am not sure I have the technical expertise to pull that off.

While taking a break, I have been dismantling the apocalypse garden in the back in order to move it to a spot more in direct sunlight.  Last year's garden was a bust and I think it basically did not have enough light.  It at least gets me off the puter for an hour or so.  One of the local banks was robbed yesterday, and in a small community that's big news.  People just desperate I guess.  What will all the lies being generated out of Washington lately, things are just a little dicey.

  A man after my own heart has the answer to all that though.


And my mind wanders from time to time to those days when I did that....... just go fishing.


And this addled old mind slips back into "The Putt" just offshore on the Big Lake with a landlocked salmon coming to net.  Those moments when the rest of the world can go hang.  No photos to be taken or edited.  No crass commercial moments to be created.  Just eight ounces of fishing rod, ninety feet of fly line and a two and half pound of salmon doing his best to stay alive not knowing he will be released anyway.  Parts of life have been a good life.

Well my friends survive your Nor Easter, stay safe and know we are all thinking of and praying for you all.  

Good Hump day my friends,  stay thirsty!





Tuesday, October 8, 2013

8 October 13

Morning all.

  Welcome to the day before shoot a camel day! We actually had some rain last night and a little yesterday.  It was much needed.   Warm though here south of the sun!

I have been posting some of the images made at the Cayce Blue Grass Festival and must admit that some of the pictures look pretty good.  And a couple have gotten decent reviews.


Lighthouses still seem to be the seller category bringing in the bacon.  And for that I am eternally grateful.  The latest one yesterday of a light on Block Island.


"This image of Nubble Lighthouse in York, Maine will be going onto the site later today.  Such an amazing spot to see.  One can view the Nubble, or island, upon which the house is perched from a huge parking lot overlooking a rocky escarpment on the mainland.  I just wish I could be there during a North Easter.  That would be something to see. 

 I wrote a little history about the light some years ago when I was selling small prints on eBay.

"This light was built on a rock just off shore at York, Maine in 1879.  An interesting cable car built for one or two people at most, runs from the parking lot to the “The Nubble” or rock upon which the light was built.  This is the evidently the only way for people and supplies to reach the light.

President Hayes signed the order providing the huge sum of $15,000 that was spent on building this lighthouse, not a small amount in 1879.  The tower is short, only forty feet, but the elevation on the rock is over 80 feet above sea level.  An interesting part of the architecture displayed in this image is the walkway from the keepers house to the tower itself. Obviously, this is a requirement where the winter weather is so inclement from time to time that protection is needed just to reach the tower.  New England farms were also built with this feature connecting the barn and house.  This feature is also seen at a number of the other Maine lights." 


The Fall Gallery is filling up and I will be starting a winter one before too long.  Anything to make it easier to navigate the web site.  Still have some scanning to do and thousands of images to edit and post.  All that is not going to get done this year.  I think that I was a little over optimistic earlier when I said that I would like to be finished this year.  As it is I have over 1600 image posted and have had almost 270,000 visitors.  All that makes me happy, happy, happy!

We made reservations at a B & B for the 19th and 20th up in North Wildwood.  Now I'll have to do a thousand worth of business just to break even in lodging.  Not sure that's going to happen, but it's for a good cause.

Y'all have a good day now!

Sunday, October 6, 2013

6TH OCTOBER 13

JUST A PICKIN AND AGRINNIN!


At the Blue Grass Festival yesterday.  Now that takes real talent.  
My floater's job was basically to drive a golf cart to pick up people at outlying parking lots and ferry them back to the event.  And visa versa.

I know spellcheck there is no such word as agrinnin!  And I probably butchered the spelling of visa versa....But God still loves me!

"If you have gotten on this cart, be aware that you have done so at your own peril because we follow no established or recognized driving laws"!

Hold on!

That put em at ease.  What fun!  It actually seemed that I had some kind of authority. 


The crowd was light early but picked up later in the day.  Lotsa corn dogs and greasy fries sold to mostly overweight folks who appeared to be urban cowboys and not true mountain people.  The true blue grassers were probably busy making their own music......and moon shine.  OH and for you politically correct weenies, get a life because I can be sarcastic from time to time.  Everybody I talked to had a great time.  A family event with lots of stuff for the little rug rats and no booze for the adults made for a wholesome outing.

Tomorrow.......back to sex, drugs and rock and roll!

  Cause as Jimmy Buffet says...."It's a long way between Saturday night and Sunday morning"
I love you too Lord!



Saturday, October 5, 2013

5 OCT 13

Another Saturday...Thank you Lord!

The recent draught in sales ended last night with a large piece sold to a North Carolina buyer.


It's funny.  I go a couple of weeks without a sale and three or four happen all at once.  I must admit that my week on the road threw the marketing efforts into the basket and perhaps that is just catching up now, but I am appreciative of any and all sales.  I once thought that goings on in the macro economy of the country had an effect on sales, but I am becoming to suspect that effect is more of a long term thing.     Sales seem to be more directly related to the amount of social marketing I do.  Just some thoughts there.  Note to grand kids....hard work!  That's the secret.  The holy grail!

Today, Saturday, I am a floater at the Cayce, SC Blue Grass Festival.  You know the old saying that we all rise to the level of our own self incompetence.  Well now I also have the title to go with it.  Floater. Crap!  And how did I volunteer anyway?


There are going to be a lot of these played there and maybe I can get some interesting photos.  You know I will carry a camera.  There won't be a need to take a walk this morning as I will be on my feet from noon to seven.  Then in two weeks we're off to New Jersey and the Lighthouse Challenge at Hereford Inlet.  For the uninitiated, please click on the links in the text for further information and crass marketing attempts to catch your attention. 

It's not that early, I know but the dogs have not realized that I am awake and hence are not whining for food.  And the stupid birds are still asleep....that leaves me the only one rumbling around here with my Pike Place Roast in hand.  Thank you Starbucks!  It's always nice to start the day with that hidden extra caffeine kick.  That's how they market you know!  Highest caffeine of any coffee around.  Not advertised as such, just insidious.  I wish I could create a way to make my photos as addictive as their coffee.  Maybe scratch photographs and sniff?  I think you can tell I am reaching for stuff to write.  So I better close and get to some real quasi work done!  

Supposed to be in the 90's today so I will be working on my farmer's tan as well.  Then along around Tuesday or Wednesday we get to meet Karen.  No, not a real person but a tropical storm.  We do need the rain as the creek's down.

Now you see that's the teaser for you to check back around that time to see if the ark I built is ready.

Stay happy my friends.

Friday, October 4, 2013

4 OCTOBER 13

I feel like it's 30 years ago. 

 No, not wandering around in my thready memory or regressing into some sort of middle age childhood.  No!  I attended two meetings!  MEETINGS I tell you! You know...with other people present.  And where I had to add something cogent and speak with some kind of voice that sounded unlike Uncle Si, but rather someone who actually knew what he was talking about.  God, the stress!

The first was an artist's meeting with the town's mayor and others trying to promote the town by highlighting the activities of local artists.  OK, I'm down for that as it gets our name out there in the hopes of bringing more warm bodies with money into the community.  I get it.  And am appreciative of any and all activities in that regard.  And will participate with vigor and actual fondness for what we will be doing.  

The second was a one hour webinar supposedly teaching me how to use Pinterest to sucker you poor folks into buying something from the website.  Please note the link and the crass commercial moment there.

In the cool stuff category today..............

But, here's a kick!  Got a water tower?  Old rusty, crumbly thing, hanging out there on the edge of town surrounded by empty beer cans and used personal hygiene products.  You know the image.  A spot for local teenagers to prove their manhood by climbing just to show off to the girls and exercise the local emergency management people.  Probably you wish they could arrange for a hurricane or twister to remove the old eyesore!  


Well, here's an answer to all our wishes!  Paint the @%$@$#^% thing and use it to advertise your community.  Beautification they call it!  Advertising they might call it.  Promotion it might be called.  Net net.....it could improve the look of the community.  Throw in a donation to a needy cause as part of the painting promotion and you have a pretty neat project.  And to top it all off you and I can actually own part of the mural.  How sweet is that.

Genius!

I urge you to go the this website and donate. (note this NSA and IRS) Your donation will probably be tax deductible and for a mere quarter century you can own a two foot square part of the mural.  


And if you have any friends who are Clemson fans.....Buy em one too!  Doing so could be your best practical joke of the year!

Be a part of recordable history.  And you don't have to wait till you die to do so.  OH, and by the way the photo above is not of the one their going to paint.  It's somebody else's wreck I captured along the Country Roads

Some bullets!

88 Foot tower
10,000 virtual squares available
Each 2 foot square can provide 25 meals to Harvest Hope Food Bank
All squares must be funded by Nov.1
Eric Henn, a nationally known mural artist will paint

So please go to the website,  blow the moths off your wallet and help out.  It's a good cause on so many levels.






Thursday, October 3, 2013

3 October 13

The 19th and 20th


That is the Hereford Inlet  Lighthouse in Angelsea or North Wildwood NJ.  The event will be the NJ  Lighthouse Challenge.  The first one was held in 2001, I think.  According to the Lighthouse Digest at least.  It was a big deal back then and still is today.  I have been there for each one so this year makes this year my hum, er, aah 13 years.  Jeez, had to use both hands and a part of a foot for that one.  Hereford looked a little different back then.


Different paint job and different time as this was taken in the winter in the late 90's.  I enjoy going there because of the people who run the place and just gathering with other lighthouse freaks.  This is an article I wrote for their news letter a few years back which kinda sums up my ties to them.

"The Making of a Fine Image"

"I met the Hereford Inlet lighthouse in February of 1995 when I was photographing the lighthouses in New Jersey for a poster which was subsequently published later in that year.  Unknown to me at the time, I should have done the photography later in the spring when the Victorian gardens were in full bloom.  I am a professional photographer of some modest renown specializing in lighthouses and other beach and maritime studies.  The original photos I made in 1995 had nothing to do with the “Image” of this light. 

Lighthouses and the history of them, their locations, keepers, legends and or myths have become a favorite topic of not only my vocation but my avocation as well.  There is a sense of history and drama associated each light not found in other historic structures.  I guess the aura of the ocean and the mariners lost at sea lend a mystique to lighthouses.  Each light has its own romance and local devotees eager to work long hours to maintain them. The original Keepers, for the most part, were paid less than $500 per year to keep and maintain their light.  Current “Keepers”, for the most part, are unpaid in dollars but reap much more in the satisfaction of promulgating the legends.

When most ships were powered by wind and sail, sailors were necessarily limited to hugging the coastlines.  Lighthouses were the only sure marker of one’s location and served to warned ships to stay away. Modern shipping is conducted with GPS, radar, and other marvels of the electronic age.  Lighthouses hence have become more of a destination rather than beacons warning of potential disaster. 

North Wildwood is blessed with an historic beacon carrying on the history and mystery of an age long gone.  Hereford Inlet Lighthouse is truly a destination in itself.  Yes, for the lighthouse aficionados there is that.  The Victorian house, the tower, the light, the memorabilia are all there for the lighthouse buff.  But this treasure also affords one of the most unique Victorian gardens on the east coast.  Steve Murray is the Superintendent of Parks for North Wildwood and is responsible for the spectacular plantings surrounding the lighthouse front and back.  With 25 plus years of experience in seashore gardening, Steve has created the setting for the crown jewel of North Wildwood.

I have witnessed and documented, over the last ten years, a total exterior renovation of the physical structure, bringing it back to the way it was when the place was built in 1874.  But the infrastructure, gardens, and location are merely the shell.  A shell held together by the folks who put in many long hours of dedication and pure work.   This is truly a place where people afford other people an opportunity is see, visit, learn, and contemplate.  Steve also serves as the head of the organization.  Betty Mugnier is the unofficial modern day “Keeper” and runs the place with the help of Jane and Marie.  Sam and Ronnie Black run the food concessions when there is an event at the light and Ralph Feindt sells lighthouse caps and other memorabilia to help raise funds.

It is ironic that a place which was originally intended as a signal for mariners to avoid has become a place for folks to gather.  But it seems that lighthouses are just that today, a place for good folks to gather.  And, Hereford Inlet Lighthouse is one of the finest places to gather on the east coast and is truly the crown jewel of North Wildwood.  And that is the image I see."

So in the next week or two I will be busy loading the camels and donkeys for yet another trip north on the Blue Hair Highway.  Pictures will have been framed, matted, and packed.  Posters will be ready to lay out on tables and business cards will have been printed.  I look forward to seeing some of the old regulars that attend each challenge.  Like the Christian motor cycle club that seems to make it each year.  You can hear them coming from miles away.....Harley's you know.  Families with small children in tow.  Historians or just plain the interested.  Sure I'll make some money (pass that on to the IRS please NSA), but the comraderie means more than cash ever will. 

 So, enough drivel...I gotta get to what some would call work!


Great day everyone!











Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Two Oct 13

You know it's fall when----

It's sixty degrees here in the south at seven in the morning.  But still going to mid 80's later.  

But elsewhere pumpkins are in the air and every drug store is selling Marigolds.  Used to be you went to a drug store to get what .....wait for it......drugs.  Now they're supermarkets.  Oh well it's progress.

  I often wonder what our founders would say if they just had a chance to ride in a car to a mall.  Even old Ben Franklin would be amazed.  And he almost became a crispy critter when he flew that kite.  He didn't listen to his Mom either.  "Ben don't go outside....it's raining!" "And put your boots on."  "Don't stand under any trees....there's lightning!" Kids, they never listen.



I love fall or autumn.  But then again at my age I love any season change.  But fall kinda gets the old juices flowing.  Lower temperatures.  Less humidity.  Great sunsets.  Prospects of going out in the woods as a hunter gatherer (hunting, that is for you of public educations, with a weapon...gasp).  Sneaking into the woods, simulating a bushel of apples, in search of a deer to harvest.  Now it's with a camera and not a weapon.  Watching a flock of wild turkeys feeding on acorns.  Over zealous home owners decorating for Halloween.  I used to love that holiday, till I got arrested on mischief night.  Well not really, but probably should have been.  AND, that's another story for another time and another place.

 A couple of additions to the "The Galleries".  Please note a new gallery called Country Roads.  Some images have been added and there will be more as we move on.  Please note the links in the blog upon which you can click upon for a crass commercial moment.

Chow! (little European lingo there) and enjoy the day.

  Mike, Mike, Mike what day is it?




Tuesday, October 1, 2013

FIRST OCTOBER 2013


Travelling this past week enabled me to not only capture some interesting photos but to also do some rather deep thinking.  Now bear in mind I had just come off a weekend of frivolity with a bunch of seventy something "Seasoned" citizens and hence "Deep" may have less of a meaning that what one would normally associate with basic intelligence.


I saw kids going to school in big yellow buses.  Amish folks working with what our grand children would call primitive tools.  A society labeled by some in the media as primitive.  


I saw farmers cutting corn with big green or yellow machinery that cost them over a hundred thousand dollars per unit.


  I saw children in high school driving machinery that cost in some cases over thirty thousand per unit provided by loving or perhaps guilty parents.  Or fixed up antiques and hot rods. 



I saw folks who worked from three am till two pm catching seafood for the rest of us.






I saw once proud ways of life abandoned by folks who had perhaps passed on.  Or who just couldn't make it work.  Estates where inheriting families had to sell or parcel out just to pay usury death taxes.  Or just plain second or third generations that just had no stomach for the hard work and dedication it would take to keep going.


I saw gas pumps where the last sale was under a dollar a gallon.

I saw "Americana".

  No split screen news casts produced by agenda driven ideologues who want their point of view to become America.  I saw no biased, self aggrandizing professional politicians who huff and puff and refuse to do the work we hired them to do.  They think us ignorant and unable to care for ourselves. 

 I see they shut the government down this morning at 12:01.  I was asleep at the time.  Interesting and infuriating that these pompous rectums that run our politics will still get paid for not doing their job despite a payroll shutdown for everyone else.

I saw parents working hard to make a go of it.  I saw parents taking care of their children so that they would live in a better place than they themselves.  I saw children being taught the ABC's by caring parents.  But, I also saw a Parent/Teacher meeting where out of 24 students only four parents had the care or interest to attend.  I saw parents work all day only to take their children to riding lessons or hockey lessons at night and then get only five hours sleep before starting it all over again.

I saw Americana on the Country Roads.  

It was all inspiring, but yet melancholy and sad as well!