Here he is even a bit closer.
"O Lord, what a variety of things you have made! In wisdom you have made them all. The earth is full of your creatures." Psalm 104:24 NLT
Here he is even a bit closer.
"O Lord, what a variety of things you have made! In wisdom you have made them all. The earth is full of your creatures." Psalm 104:24 NLT
Our next large mammal was way too close. He emerged from the lake and instead of going away from us headed toward us on a narrow trail where left was in the water and right a steep bank of rip-rap. We just got across and up the hill a wee bit (and behind a tree) when he went past on the trail at arms length. Magnificent animal and my favorite to see.
I photographed this fellow in Acadia National Park near Witch Hole Pond. The local newspaper ran an article about him and my photo on the front page. Height of my photojournalism experience! It was a treat to see this deer and we watched him for about 10 minutes.
Bison and not Buffalo. Why? American Bison are distinct from the Asian and African cousins, true buffalo. The two varieties in North America are Woods and Plains, they have curved horns, prominent humps and coats vary with the weather, all different from the buffalo of other regions.
2500 pounds of opinion in T. Roosevelt National Park. The opinion was for me to leave, I did.
Herd of Bison headed toward us at Yellowstone NP.
In the aerial sense! These are a few more of the Mountain Goats at Glacier National Park. Picking up on a theme for this last week of summer?
It was so cool to see this mother and her new cub at Yellowstone. We were more than a safe distance and I did not have at the time a long telephoto lens so he is not as crisply focused as I would have liked. But he is there. The only Grizzly bear I have ever seen but we hope for more when we head to Alaska.
These are resident wild horses in the T. Roosevelt National Park. Perhaps they were in a conference meeting. They were quite striking animals and a bit skittish. I thought they would have been more used to people but they did not want you too close. I was in perfect agreement as i did not want them too close either. We got along very well.
These men were simply amazing. Well-read, careful students of history and passionate about things that really matter, they produced - amidst much argument and discussion our Bill of Rights. This is outside Independence Hall with the Liberty Bell to the right in the glass and brick building.
See you in church this week? After all only you can keep you from doing so.
"And let us not neglect our meeting together, as some people do, but encourage one another, especially now that the day of his return is drawing near." Hebrews 10:25 NLT
"the more they seem to be the same." In Boston a statue of King George was toppled and much of it melted to make musket balls. By careful analysis it was determined that this ball recovered at Monmouth NJ was one of those balls. This is at the newly opened Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelphia. More about that collection later.
...in the rain. Lots of rain.
And, yes, it was also quiet. This "replica" whiskey still is on the short Blue Blazes Trail - great name, at Catoctin Mountain Park. This park just a bit north of Frederick, MD began in the Roosevelt era when the Federal government bought up "used" land that was no longer good for farming and converted it to second growth forest and parks. This section has Camp David (with large don't even think about pausing near the gate signs) on one edge and a state parks on other sides. It is a nice but certainly not spectacular park.
Clearly they snuck in while the sun was dark!
Or it may be a jelly fish at the Monterey Aquariam
This area is where the Confederate's set up artillery to force the Union to abandon the railroad wye and fall back across the bridge. This is the Best farm house on Monocacy Battlefield.
Monocacy National Battlefield is only a couple of miles from Frederick, MD, where Cindy went to college. The battlefield today is comprised primarily of three farms that were the scene of most of the battle, Best, Thomas, Worthington, a mill, Gambrill and the river and railroad bridges. This photo is of the huge barn on the Best farm. It was built in 1790 and is about 3 or 4 stories high. The barn got fire during the battle but the walls and much of the structure survived.
View of the house from inside the barn.
I cannot recall the name of this plant - and I guess I am too lazy to find it on the web. Most of the year it looks like a dead stick or a clump of dead sticks. If the rains are sufficient it will bloom briefly in the spring. Most of the stick will grow these bright red flowers and the rest of the plant will get a green covering similar to the red, close to the branch and temporary. It was a bit past the peak when we saw these are the Saguaro National Park.
Reminds me of the passage in Exodus three: "There the angel of the Lord appeared to him in a blazing fire from the middle of a bush. Moses stared in amazement. Though the bush was engulfed in flames, it didn’t burn up." NLT
These men are Civil War re-enactors and were demonstrating the firing orders. Quite complex and in the chaos of battle would be difficult to keep everything straight. Would be one reason they would train so much. This was at Monocacy National Battlefield just north of DC where the south tried one last attempt to take the capitol in July of 1864.
At the downtown City Plaza farmer's market in Raleigh. I don't think they had sushi when the buildings were constructed a few generations ago.
So, there is a large mural on a wall by the downtown farmers market. I had driven by it before but stopped on a Sunday night to take a photo. Then, my grandson discovered this little sculpture - about 8 inches high, that apparently is the "source" of the mural as his little thought bubbles go on and on.
...on the Ocean City, NJ, Boardwalk.
Did you catch it?
The Liberty Bell cracked and was recast twice after its arrival from the Whitechapel Foundry in 1752 destined for the Pennsylvania State House. It "likely" rang on 7/8/1776 when the Declaration of Independence was read. It was cracked in the early 1800's but was not really famous until an 1847 poem was published. It is under the care of the National Park Service but it is owned by the city of Philadelphia.