Tag: photostroll

  • Updated Gallery: Columbus, Georgia

    Updated Gallery: Columbus, Georgia

    Gerald and I were in Columbus, Georgia, today, which included a delicious lunch at The Black Cow — no word whether the name is related to the Steely Dan song — and which meant a few photographs:

    United States Post Office and Court House (Eagle Detail), Columbus, Georgia

    One of several of the Post Office and Court House (the header photograph is that building, too), along with a few others from downtown:

    Lamp and Buildings, Downtown Columbus, Georgia
    Arches, Planes, and Sky, Downtown Columbus, Georgia
    Tower and Spire, Downtown Columbus, Georgia

    Columbus is really well covered in its dedicated gallery: check it out. The majority of today’s photographs, however, were from the Columbus Museum; those will be posted Monday. Stay tuned.

  • Updated Gallery: Sarasota – Ringling Museum

    Updated Gallery: Sarasota – Ringling Museum

    The Ringling Museum in Sarasota, Florida has been a place I’ve been taking photographs since I lived in the area, almost twenty years ago now — and a place where I continue to enjoy taking photographs whenever possible.

    The grounds have these amazing banyan trees, with root systems larger than many houses:

    Banyan (black and white, detail)

    They’ve expanded over the years, adding buildings, a new entrance, and additions. This is the Chao Center for Asian Art:

    Chao Center’s Asian Art Siding #3 (Detail)

    The old Ca d’Zan gate is the new main entrance:

    Ca d’Zan Lion

    And, of course, the whole compound is right on Sarasota Bay:

    Ringling’s Bayfront

    Take a virtual stroll through the Ringling grounds with 24 new photographs, along with many more over the years, and a few extra photographs from Sarasota proper. Enjoy.

  • Updated Gallery: Franklin Delano Roosevelt State Park, Pine Mountain

    Updated Gallery: Franklin Delano Roosevelt State Park, Pine Mountain

    As I mentioned yesterday, Gerald and I enjoyed a lovely first-of-spring drive out of middle Georgia. Our destination was Pine Mountain, home of F. D. Roosevelt State Park. Needless to say, there were cameras involved.

    Starting on Dowdell Knob, FDR’s favorite picnic spot — with its amazing valley overlook:

    Roosevelt’s Grill With a View, Dowdell Knob

    Next was the park’s office and overlook complex:

    FDR State Park Office (B&W Study), Pine Mountain
    Stone, Shutters, and Stars and Stripes
    FDR State Park Overlook: Rocks

    Peruse the entire gallery here. And when you have some extra time, all of FDR State Park is worth a visit; it’s got everything from hiking trails to cabins to the Callaway Gardens Country Kitchen in its 9049 acres. Enjoy!

    Bonus: Georgia Public Broadcasting, at the premier of its film A President in Our Midst: Franklin Delano Roosevelt in Georgia, said:

    Franklin Delano Roosevelt had a very special relationship with the State of Georgia. This compelling documentary spotlights the mutual benefits that the friendship provided to both the president and the people of Georgia. The film is based on the book, A President in Our Midst: Franklin Delano Roosevelt in Georgia.

    It’s no Ken Burns, certainly, but if you’re not familiar with FDR’s extensive time spent in west Georgia, it might be worth your time. See it here.

    Bonus gallery: Callaway Gardens, from 2008.

  • New and Updated Galleries: Woodland, Thomaston, and Yatesville

    New and Updated Galleries: Woodland, Thomaston, and Yatesville

    The end of winter here in Georgia means beautifully warm days, flowers and trees budding, and photography. Gerald and I took a road trip this weekend, enjoying almost 200 miles of driving — and four photostrolls.

    We’ll cover three today, heading west from Middle Georgia:

    Yatesville Peach Blossoms #1

    See everything from Yatesville, pop. 408, here.

    Next is an update from Thomaston, whose downtown square is typical of Georgia:

    Upson County Courthouse (B&W Study #2), 2022

    That gallery is available here.

    Lastly today is a new stop: Woodland, in west-central Georgia, near Pine Mountain and Warm Springs, northeast of Columbus.

    Woodland Antiques
    Postal Angel (Awning to be Free)

    Woodland, whose population also happens to be 408, has a gallery here.

    Many thanks to Gerald for the company and good day. Next up: FDR State Park, likely tomorrow.

  • Where You At? A Bioregional Quiz

    Where You At? A Bioregional Quiz

    A few days ago, Jason Kottke posted an item that raised an important enough question — well, twenty of them — that I wanted to repeat it here. The questions stem from a 1981 quiz1Developed by Leonard Charles, Jim Dodge, Lynn Milliman, and Victoria Stockley, originally published in Coevolution Quarterly 32, from winter 1981, asking how well you know your local natural environment. They are:

    1. Trace the water you drink from precipitation to tap.
    2. How many days til the moon is full? (Slack of 2 days allowed.)
    3. What soil series are you standing on?
    4. What was the total rainfall in your area last year (July-June)? (Slack: 1 inch for every 20 inches.)
    5. When was the last time a fire burned in your area?
    6. What were the primary subsistence techniques of the culture that lived in your area before you?
    7. Name 5 edible plants in your region and their season(s) of availability.
    8. From what direction do winter storms generally come in your region?
    9. Where does your garbage go?
    10. How long is the growing season where you live?
    11. On what day of the year are the shadows the shortest where you live?
    12. When do the deer rut in your region, and when are the young born?
    13. Name five grasses in your area. Are any of them native?
    14. Name five resident and five migratory birds in your area.
    15. What is the land use history of where you live?
    16. What primary ecological event/process influenced the land form where you live? (Bonus special: what’s the evidence?)
    17. What species have become extinct in your area?
    18. What are the major plant associations in your region?
    19. From where you’re reading this, point north.
    20. What spring wildflower is consistently among the first to bloom where you live?

    I did poorly. (In the words of the authors, “It’s hard to be in two places at once when you’re not anywhere at all.”) In fact, I did so poorly that I decided to not only follow up on the questions but put my camera where my mouth is.

    In answer to the first question, Macon and a good chunk of Middle Georgia get their drinking water from the Ocmulgee River:

    Ocmulgee (River) Origin

    In fact, this past weekend’s trip to Monticello and Barnesville were merely extensions of the trip to Jackson Lake and Dam, so I could see where the Ocmulgee starts. Next up is to trace the Yellow, Alcovy and South Rivers, which feed Jackson Lake. (See the rest of the photographs from the Jackson area.)

    Jackson Dam #1

    But I’d ask everyone reading this to ask yourselves the same questions. As Kottke points out, most of the people living here years ago would have known more of the answers than those of us who live in the built environment do. He passes on an idea from Rob Walker:

    Pick one of the questions you don’t know the answer to – and make it a point to learn what that answer is. After you’ve mastered that, move on to a new question.

    Go!

    • 1
      Developed by Leonard Charles, Jim Dodge, Lynn Milliman, and Victoria Stockley, originally published in Coevolution Quarterly 32, from winter 1981
  • New Gallery: Jackson, Georgia

    New Gallery: Jackson, Georgia

    This past weekend’s road trip included five stops, including Monticello and Barnesville, which I covered in the last post. However, there were three more stops in the middle.

    Jackson Dam, which forms the headwaters of the Ocmulgee River — and which has a fishing area with this neat scene:

    Walk and Deck, Jackson Dam

    Jackson Lake, formed by the Yellow, Alcovy, and South Rivers:

    Jackson Lake (Wideangle)

    And Jackson proper, which has a traditional (for Georgia, at least) town square with a courthouse:

    Butts County Courthouse #5, Jackson

    Also, this — with perhaps too cute a title:

    Downtown Door During Reconstruction, Jackson

    All of these have been added to a new gallery. Check it out.

  • Monticello and Barnesville Galleries Updated

    Monticello and Barnesville Galleries Updated

    February has been beautiful here in Georgia, with spring just beginning to show — which means the Leica and I are out and about again.

    Let’s start in Monticello. (Although named for Jefferson’s estate of the same name, it’s actually pronounced “Monti-sello.”) The tractor’s still there:

    Monticello Tractor (Pinhole)

    And my chase of architectural details continues anew:

    Cornice and Corbel, Collected

    More to see in the updated gallery. (A reminder: once there, click on any photo to start a slideshow.)

    Next, Barnesville:

    Red Southern Caboose Against Blue Sky

    Across Main Street is this:

    Whitewalls of Thine Increase

    Enjoy that updated gallery, too.

    Bonus Update: Gave the 235 some exercise, too — which means a couple of photographs.

  • New: Cochran and Dublin Galleries

    New: Cochran and Dublin Galleries

    Spring is fleeting here in Middle Georgia — a heat wave next week promises triple-digit weather — so took the camera for a wander. Cochran and the other Middle Georgia State University was up first:

    Cochran - MGA

    A few shots from Cochran’s downtown, as well:

    Cochran - Downtown

    See the new Cochran gallery here.

    Next up was a brief stop on Chester — single photograph posted here — then Dublin, where Martin Luther King made his first public speech, in 1944. There’s a little park to commemorate:

    Dublin - MLK park

    Downtown, alas, prominently features a Confederate monument (like so many places here in Georgia):

    We’re working on it. Meanwhile, check Dublin’s new gallery here.

    Last but not least, added a few shots to Macon’s miscellaneous gallery:

    East Macon fire watch tower

    Check the whole thing, covering almost fifteen years, here.

    Special thanks to Prof. Gerald Lucas for the continued use of his Voigtlander 21mm ƒ1.8.

  • More New and Updated Middle Georgia Photography Galleries

    More New and Updated Middle Georgia Photography Galleries

    New this week is the delightful little town of Yatesville, on the road from Macon to Thomaston:

    See the rest in the new Yatesville gallery. And speaking of Thomaston:

    Only a few photographs in that gallery, but more when I get a chance. Next, Barnesville:

    I could have sworn I had more photographs from there, but am glad to have at least added to that gallery. Lastly, I’ve added to the Forsyth gallery:

    All of the new photographs are from Forsyth’s City Cemetery.

    Enjoy!

  • New and Updated Middle Georgia Photography Galleries

    New and Updated Middle Georgia Photography Galleries

    There was another photostroll yesterday, which in turn leads to three updated photography galleries, from:

    Bolingbroke;

    Juliette; and

    Forsyth.

    Also, a new gallery:

    Monticello. Five of the posted photographs detail the Old Monticello United Methodist Church, which is discussed on the Georgia Trust website.

    Enjoy — and thank you for your support.