Jack London State Park kind of wraps around his vineyard, which is still in private hands. That does not stop the vineyard from dominating the view from his farm house, as the vineyard wraps around the house and outbuildings just as the park does around the vineyard. I had been there in the spring when the vines were lush…they have a totally different aspect in October. The regimented, trained growth of the vines on their supports fascinates me, and makes a strong graphic statement.
Samsung Smart Camera WB800F in Rich Tone mode. Processed in Snapseed on the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 2014.
Before dawn on Friday, we had enough rain to give everything a good wetting…and to bring a lot of leaves down. When I opened the back door to the deck my first thought was, “Ah, this is fall!” It felt like fall, smelled like fall, looked like fall. But of course, it was only a wet fall morning…late fall at that…but there is a lot of atmosphere to a wet morning in late fall…a lot of memories to key…a touch, at may age, of definite nostalgia. I went back inside for a glass of cider 🙂
But then I got the camera and wet back out to see what I might find to capture the mood. This is an odd image for me. I realize that I rarely take pics, or a least share, pics of man-made objects…and cars least of all. I am not a car guy. As long as it runs reliably and is not actually embarrassingly dirty, I am fine with it. Just a car. But I could not resist the deposit of wet leaves on the windshield. That is just so fall! So wet morning fall.
Samsung Smart Camera WB800F in Rich Tone mode. Processed in Snapseed on the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 2014.
And here, for you traditionalists, is a more typical wet fall morning shot. Same camera and settings.
There is a well grown stand of Atlantic White Cedars at the far end of the boardwalk at Saco Heath. The trail loops through the trees and back. A softwood sapling provides a splash of color along with the dying ferns of fall. And the light of a late afternoon in October sheds its glory over the whole scene.
Samsung Smart Camera WB800F in Rich Tone mode (in-camera HDR). Processed in Snapseed on the Nexus 7.
The acidic standing water in a wet Maine forest of mixed hardwoods and softwoods bleached the color out of the leaves of the past years, while a single red berry and a few of this year’s leaves provide vivid contrast. It has the look of an intentional work of art…but it is totally “found”…just as the natural processes of the forest made it.
All I had to do was to provided the frame. Found along the boardwalk through the forest on the way into Saco Heath.
Samsung Smart Camera WB800F in Rich Tone mode. Processed in Snapseed on the Nexus 7.
I had some fun with back-lit oak and maple leaves yesterday on my late afternoon photoprowl. The sun was at just the right angle and the leaves, oaks in particular, we’re at just the right stage of turn.
I have been experimenting with Smart Auto on the Samsung Smart Camera WB800F. The camera has about 20 different Scene Modes that it chooses from based on an analysis of the information on the sensor, before it determines final exposure. So far it has done a really good job. My back-lit leaves were all taken in Smart Auto.
Processed in Snapseed on the Nexus 7.
It has been a good fall in Maine, despite a week of wind and rain at just the wrong time. We lost some of the early color so that when I returned from a week of travel I thought, from the evidence right around home, inside the tidal zone, that fall had passed me by. A photoprowl inland cured me of that misapprehension. Even 10 miles from the coast, the full color show is on.
This is Old Falls Pond, which some of you have already seen this week in another view. I photograph the pond in all seasons, but it is especially attractive in autumn. This view, with the bright bush in the foreground, the fog over the water, the wispy clouds and reflections, and the line of vivid foliage across the way makes a dynamic composition with a lot to look at.
Samsung Smart Camera WB800F. Rich Tone mode (in-camera HDR). Processed in Snapseed on the Nexus 7.
And for the Sunday Thought. I have 100s of images of Old Falls Pond taken over the past 5 years. I have probably shared 10 or more just from various autumns. This view is only a variation on the theme…taken only moments and yards from other popular images…and yet I was so compelled to try the effect of the bright bush in the foreground that I actually went looking for it.
I don’t think I will ever tire of trying to capture the beauty of Old Falls Pond in fall. And I think that is a good thing. I think when I can no longer find beauty I am compelled to share in Old Falls Pond in its autumn splendor, when I stop looking for new angles and stop seeing the possibilities in new skies, then…well then something essential will have died in me. I don’t think that is going to happen.
It won’t happen because I fully intend to find and share the beauty of everyday, every season, everywhere I am. As I have said often in these Sunday posts, that is my act of worship…my homage to the Creator, the way I express my love, my gift back to the one who has gifted me with life…with eyes to see and a heart to feel and a mind to make sense of it all..with a spirit that can participate in the on-going act of living, loving, creation that is all we know and are.
So I expect you will see other views yet of Old Falls Pond in fall…for as long as I can get there. Happy Sunday!
One of the fun things about a camera with sweep panorama is that, even when you are not after a true panoramic effect, you can still quickly and easily break out of the bounds of your widest zoom to catch more of the scene in front of you. At 23mm equivalent field of view, I had to choose the center, left of center, or right of center view of Old Falls and the foliage. With sweep panorama on hand it was a simple matter of flipping the camera up on end and sweeping it around from left to right to capture the whole scene. This is only about 100° and the vertical camera makes the image unusually tall for a panorama, so the effect is more super-wide. I like it. It gives the falls scale and includes more of the fall color.
Samsung Smart Camera WB800F in Panorama mode. Processed in Snapseed on the Nexus 7 and then reprocessed for a bit more impact on the laptop usinge the edit tools in Google+ Photos.
I was afraid this might happen. I was away from home for a week working in Alabama, and fall came and went while I was gone. I come back to Maine to find lots of leaves already on the ground and the oaks turning. Such is life.
On the other hand, the oaks this year are as intense as I have ever seen them. Some years they just slide from green to brown. This year they are blazing red. And never more so than in the low fall sun-light of a late afternoon. These are mostly in shade and they still glow.
Samsung Smart Camera WB800F in Rich Tone mode. Processed in Snapseed on the Nexus 7.
The leaves are turning. The leaves are falling. It is that time of year again. I found this leaf, fallen in just the right spot to catch some late afternoon sun shining through, along the shore of Old Falls Pond between Kennebunk and Sanford Maine. It was curled to stand just so…and I put the camera on macro mode and placed it practically on the ground for the shot.
Samsung Smart Camera WB800F. Processed in Snapseed on the Nexus 7.
There are a few places locally that bring out the best in the autumn color. It is early yet, but this time of year is when the birding festival circuit heats up again and, this year, I have no weekends free at all in October, so I have been trying to fill myself with early fall color, just in case.
And there is no where more reliable for color than Old Falls Pond on the Mousam River. Add an autumn sky overhead to reflect in the water and frame the shot with a fringe of turning leaves and it is a sight to behold, and a joy to capture.
Samsung Smart Camera WB800F in Rich Tone Mode (HDR). Processed in Snapseed on the Nexus 7.
And for the Sunday Thought. Someone posted a slightly malicious comment on my new adventure over at gobirding.us overnight. Something about my having too much time on my hands since I was running too many boring and redundant blogs. This gentleman has posted similar, just slightly nasty, comments on this page in the past. Hurtful. Intended to hurt. I can generally roll on past them, and I will this one, but that too much time on my hands remark hits home…and not , probably, in the way the writer intended. I have never been more aware of just how little time I have on my hands. I am, for the first time in my life, seriously thinking about retirement, looking ahead and counting the years I might have left, and wondering how best to redeem them. What will I do when I can do what I want, at least to the extent my retirement budget allows? How many more falls will I be able to get out to photograph the autumn leaves? Etc.
I can not, of course, know, but I do know, in a way that is new to me (and as old as mankind) that they are limited. Finite. Numbered, perhaps in the single digits. I can, and do, of course, hope. I hope for lots more falls. I hope for the health to enjoy them…but one thing I know is that I do not have too much time on my hands.
And that is somehow an appropriate Sunday Thought, here in the autumn of the year. I would like to go out like a New England fall, full of bright color under amazing skies. I hope my work over at gobirding.us is just the early fall show, and that the real season of brilliance is still to come. And I have a faith, as well as a reasoned confidence based on all my experience in life so far, that my time is in the hands of one who has all the time there is.
So, today, I will do my best to enjoy and celebrate what is…today, the early fall color at Old Falls Pond, and the changing foliage framing an infinite sky. Happy Sunday!