Tag: landscape photography
Autumn in New York (Set 3 of 3)
The gallery below contains the third of three sets of photos showing the transition to autumn in northern New York.
These photos were taken near Peru, Saranac, and Plattsburgh, New York, and are now part of my Flickr Reboot project.
My other photos from New York are here: New York state category.
The first set of photos in this series is here: Autumn in New York (Set 1 of 3), and the second set is here: Autumn in New York (Set 2 of 3).
Select any image to begin a slideshow. Thanks for taking a look!
Autumn in New York (Set 2 of 3)
The gallery below contains the second of three sets of photos showing the transition to autumn in northern New York.
These photos were taken near Lake Placid and Saranac Lake, and are now part of my Flickr Reboot project.
My other photos from New York are here: New York state category.
The previous set of photos in this series is here: Autumn in New York (Set 1 of 3).
Select any image to begin a slideshow. Thanks for taking a look!
Autumn in New York (Set 1 of 3)
To celebrate the transition to autumn and, hopefully, the shift to some weather in Atlanta that drops out of the hot and dry mid-nineties, here is the first of three sets of photos from a place where fall temperatures are guaranteed to happen: northern New York.
These were taken near Whiteface Mountain several years ago and are among some archived photos I’ve never done anything with that I’ve added to my Flickr Reboot project. My other photos from New York are here: New York state category.
Select any image to begin a slideshow. Thanks for taking a look, and enjoy the beginning of a new season!
Calm Waters
The Saranac River, in northern New York, runs about 80 miles from its source in the Adirondack Mountains to its termination at Lake Champlain near the city of Plattsburgh. On its route, it passes through the centers of many rural small towns established along the river as nineteenth century industries — lumber mills, blacksmiths, iron works, farming, and apple orchards among them — sprung up in the heavily wooded, rich soils of the entire region. The remnants of early plank roads built along the river to service these communities can still be found in the woodlands near the water, and the river later became a source for electricity generation along much of its length. Several of the original, now abandoned electrical substations are just a short walk from where I grew up, along with modernized substations that still contribute electric power to the area. The river features prominently in the region’s military history, and the Lake Champlain monster — Champy — is believed to occasionally winter in the river. : )
The river and the villages it flows through are frequent subjects in the landscape images I’m working on for my Flickr Reboot project. I took the photos below near the high school I graduated from, where the river has carved an inlet around a small island a few steps from the road. You can see a wider view of the location in a Google Maps street view here.
Despite its proximity to the highway, this spot is a tiny oasis at the bottom of a hill. Select the first image to begin a slideshow, and if I’ve done my job well, you might just feel a calm summer breeze drifting over you.
Thanks for reading and taking a look!