I retired this past weekend. Some photos from the evening where they celebrated those years at Waypoint. It was a very special evening.
They gave us a trip to Disney!
Son, Geof spoke, nice surprise.
I retired this past weekend. Some photos from the evening where they celebrated those years at Waypoint. It was a very special evening.
They gave us a trip to Disney!
Son, Geof spoke, nice surprise.
At Colonial Williamsburg - one of the costumed interpreters on horseback, the General Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette or if you wish his full name and title - Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de La Fayette.
This small structure is off the main street and behind other buildings. So it is easy to walk down the street in Williamsburg and not see these structures or some of the neat gardens. That’s too bad. It is worth poking around the corners and opening gates.
This is a bit of forest with the sun going down and igniting a carpet of orange. This was along a battlefield road in Yorktown National Balttlefield.
Enjoyed watching the Marquis de La Fayette at Colonial Williamsburg as he worked the open grass area near the old courthouse.
This little guy is a denizen of Jamestown Island in Virginia along the James River. He inhabits this specific tree and likes to perch on the edge of the tree, but if you get too close he drops down into the tree. Dennis Mook of The Wandering Lensman and I were shooting photos one morning and he knew about the owl and, fortunately, the owl was home that morning.
Love the streams and the color in the fall.
…for a walk, or a picnic, or for bird watching, or letting the fresh air wash over you or, better yet, take a photograph. Acadia National Park.
Clearly I forgot to post some of the photos from the massive celebration for the 300th park. No expenses were spared on the celebration signs.
Lots of ice cream of course
Massive beverages
And a few fans (of Cadillac)
Hiking on the Golden Canyon trail in Death Valley National Park leads to a fork in the trail where you can go to the right and continue up to a plateau and it is the way I hiked one time when I was here before, or to the left. I chose the left route because I wanted to see “the Red Cathedral’ and we were not planning to hike the whole length of the trail up the to highway. This way the hike was just a three mile out and back. The Red Cathedral wall is impressive.And with the late afternoon sun the red was vivid. Great hike, hot even in April. This shot is a panorama with five photos merged into a single wide shot.
A salute to those who served. With thanks.
This photo is of the monument to Perry at Lake Erie to commemorate the victory over the British in the War of 1812.
This is the first bear we spotted in Denali National Park. He was spotted from the bus at about 40 feet. I posted a shot of him a long time ago but I like the processing on this one much more. Besides, who can get enough bear? Plus you get a little Latin lesson. The educational value of this blog is unsurpassed.
I am woking on some older photos that have been neglected or in some cases very poorly processed and I came across this Willow Ptarmigan from the Wonder Lake area of Denali. Most of the Ptamigans we saw were on the road or in the open tundra, but this guy was a bit shy. I really like the startled look the eye ring gives to this most colorful bird.
The is a portion of the Jessup Path in Acadia National Park. It is a neat area of marsh and transition trees. The birches are dying because the larger hardwoods are growing and blocking out the sun. This is natural. The area was burnt in a significant fire years ago and the birches grew quickly and now that the hardwoods have reached a more mature size the birches are losing out to them. The result for now is a neat landscape of white trunks and - in the fall - of a colorful canopy. Here the boardwalk is nearly a mile long and pretty straight. You can see, maybe, a group of people approaching deep in the trees on the boardwalk.
This is a Western Meadowlark. The songs of the Eastern and Western are distinctive and both are melodic- but the visual differences are subtile. The yellow in the Western extends past the beak toward the eye. This Western was photographed in the Badlands National Park.
On Cadillac Mountain in Acadia National Park.
This is a shot at Jordan Pond but not from the usual place at the end of the lake but at an inlet about 1/2 mile east of the Jordan Pond House. It gives a different perspective on the two Bubbles, South and North.