Just Guineafowlin’ Around By the C&O Canal

Location Taken: Maryland
Time Taken: June 2008

Once upon a time, a little more than four years ago to be specific, my Mom decided to walk the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal trail that runs along the Potomac River from Washington DC to Cumberland, Maryland. She recruited her friend Ben and my sister Fiona to go along with her on her first excursion, planned to go from Great Falls Park (a bit north of the Washington Beltway, and a very lovely place to boot, with a magnificent set of waterfalls), up to Harper’s Ferry. That’s about 45 miles of walking, and they weren’t in the best of condition, so they planned to take it slow, about 10 miles a day, camping overnight along the trail.

As for me, well, I was the driver.

I drove them to Great Falls (and got some lovely photos), dropped them off, and then got back to my regular life, waiting for them to call to say “come pick us up!”.

The first call came the very next day.

They’d forgotten some stuff, you see. So I grabbed the gear, and drove the 45 minutes out to the rural convenience store they’d stopped at.

Which, of course, is when I discovered that my cell phone was out of charge, and they were nowhere in sight. It took at least 15 minutes of me looking around before I finally spotted them down by the nearby stream.

While I was searching, though, a flock of guineafowl wandered by. Talk about free range. They just merrily clucked along, looking for more delicious ticks and spiders to eat. They didn’t exactly stop to pose for a photo, but I got a couple anyway.

…This may have added a couple minutes to those 15 I spent searching for my people…

After I found them, we grabbed some stuff from the convenience store. It’s one of those really nice rural stores, where they have just about everything you need on a daily basis crammed into a small room, and a lot of local foods. Ben really liked some of those, though I can’t recall if it was jam or BBQ sauce he bought…

Then I dropped them back off by the trail, and went home. And remembered to charge my cell phone.

Next day, next call.

They’d hit a stretch of the C&O trail where the canal had filled in to become large ponds of stagnant water. And if you know anything about stagnant water, you know that means mosquitoes. Lots of mosquitoes. Miles of mosquitoes.

They’d camped for the night not too far from one of these ponds, and while only the requisite few mosquitoes made it into the tent, the ones outside made their presence known. By buzzing. All night long.

My sister was already half-cracked by the time morning came. She’d not slept well with all that buzzing. And then it was time to get out of the tent, and go out into the realm of mosquitoes. And the stagnant ponds region continued for several more miles.

She had lots of bug spray on, so it wasn’t the biting that was the problem. It was the buzzing, the constant buzzing. She covered her head in a blanket, to muffle the noise, which got her through a few more miles. But it still kept wearing on her, buzz after buzz.

And then, a little after noon, enough was enough. She just sat down on the trail, covered herself with the blanket like a tent, and refused to go any further until they called me to pick them up. She would not put up with another hour of this infernal buzzing, much less three more days of it.

So, I had another 45 minute drive to do. Well, more like 1 hour, since they were further along the trail. They’d gotten to the closest access point to them, which was a tiny, poorly marked road off of a solidly rural road in a solidly rural part of the state. At least they were all paved. I drove past the access road and had to turn around to get on it, but I found it.

And picked them up.

Their grand adventure ended about a third of the way to the goal, defeated not by exhaustion or frustration but by mosquitoes.

  

A Delicate Pink Flower Bud – Hmm, yeah, it’s pretty, I guess.

Location Taken: Frankfort, Michigan
Time Taken: May 2008

I don’t know what this flower is. I took this photo four years ago at a garden shop, and I didn’t check the tag. But it is very lovely.

I find it odd that I put so many flower photos up here. You see, I’m not actually that fond of flowers. For my plant needs, I stick to trees and leafy plants. They’re beautiful for much longer, and in a much more subtle way than the brilliant display of a bloom. If I had a garden of my own (rather than just a couple potted plants), the only flowers I’d put in there would be on vegetables and fruits.

On a side note, potato flowers are rather lovely.

Still, flowers are really good for photography. And for other forms of art, for that matter. The folds of the petals bring in contrast and lines, and the colors tend to be quite dramatic and often varied. I draw and paint and photograph flowers far more often than any other subject.

But that still doesn’t mean I like flowers, just that I recognize their beauty.

Heck, when I got given a rose at the Renn Fest, I wasn’t at all interested in the rose itself. I tried turning down the rose seller when she insisted that I take it, it was paid for already and everything, and only accepted it after three or four refusals. And then I sketched it, in pencil. And then took it home and gave it to my Mom. I’d gotten all I’d wanted out of it; a chance at creating some more art.

And my Mom does like flowers, and she did enjoy the rose, far more than I did.

Though we both agree that live potted plants are better than cut flowers.

  

Storm Clouds Rolling in, Low and Black.

Location Taken: Maryland
Time Taken: May 2008

I’ve got to write this fast since I need to take some stuff to the dump before a storm line hits, so here’s a nifty photo of a storm!

We get strong storms here, as the front lines are fully established as they pass over the Appalachians and hit the wet air from the Atlantic. Sometimes that means we get rain all day, other times we get really strong pockets of thunderstorms. And the occasional tornado.

We’ve got a tornado watch up in this area right now. If I hurry, I can get my errands done before I get swept away, so off I go!

  

As the day slips away, Beauty comes out to play…

Location Taken: Trout River, Newfoundland
Time Taken: July 2012

I’m feeling uninspired from a lack of sleep, a host of aches from work, and from helping get my Mom and sister on the road to Seattle this morning. Won’t see either of them again for over a month.

So time to pull out the sunset pictures! They’re pretty, but tough to talk about!

Newfoundland has long sunsets. A lot of it’s just from how north it is, with the sun at a lower angle in the sky all the time. But the bands of clouds that are a frequent feature above the island just lengthen them more, dimming the light nicely.

And still, every so often, the sun does manage to peek out of the clouds for those beautiful shots right above the horizon. Add in a lovely ocean, a few dramatic rocks, and a beach, and you have a beautiful composition.

Heck, the only reason I didn’t put this one in my “best category” is that I got two other photos of this sunset that are even better than this one!

  

Lotus and Leaf and the Art of Copying

Time Painted: Spring 2010

Nothing much today, just a lovely picture of lotus.

This was drawn during the Chinese Painting Class I took. That’s why there are characters in the corner. The teacher gave us a set of characters that had the same approximate sound as our names to write on our assignments.

For this piece, the composition wasn’t original. We were assigned a piece of art that vaguely looked like this and told to copy it. Since art is very individual, we all had different results, none all that close to the original.

This sort of thing is apparently pretty common in Chinese art classes. And it used to be common in Western ones, too. A lot of the really famous painters got their start copying the art of the masters to figure out what tricks they used.

There’s still some remnants of it in US art classes. The occasional rare assignment to sketch another person’s art when we go on museum field trips and the like. But it’s nowhere near the months-long deliberate study of a single art piece that used to happen.

It’s a reaction to the rather strict copyright rules of the modern day.  Even tribute pieces get looked at askew.

And it’s actually hurting art teaching. Most artists get started by seeing art they really like and copying it, and then enjoying it enough to keep at it while picking up the skills they need for original compositions. That’s why fanart is so popular, both to make and to look at. It’s both entertaining and educational. It’s really too bad it exists in such a gray area legally.

Modern art classes lost a lot of focus when they dropped that. It meant a switch from mastery of one piece to dabbling around looking at many pieces, learning what you can without copying more than a little here and there. Like this piece, where all I copied was the composition.

It’s no wonder I mostly dabble in various art forms, rather than focus on one and actually master it…