American Rubyspots
The American Rubyspot is a fairly rare but spectacular damselfly. Yesterday, I headed to Hollis, NH one of the two sites*, that I am aware of, where rubyspots are present.
Photographer
The American Rubyspot is a fairly rare but spectacular damselfly. Yesterday, I headed to Hollis, NH one of the two sites*, that I am aware of, where rubyspots are present.
That would be the Contootook River! Late yesterday afternoon I spent about two and a half hours odeing on the Contoocook River by the paper mill in Bennington, New Hampshire…
Another batch of salted-paper prints. These exposures are from our trip to the Southwest in 2018. The prints were made last week. All are small (4×5 inch) test prints of
Two old sayings… “Sometimes you are the bug and sometimes you are the windshield.” and “When life hands you lemons, make lemonade!”. Both apply to this morning’s photography. Part One:
Here is another batch of salted-paper prints. These were made over two days last week. More hot sticky weather coming up later in the week ahead. Stay tuned for another
Late yesterday afternoon I walked the half-mile to Castor Lane (the road through the Harris Center Chenoa property) to look for odes. The temperature was in the upper 70s F
Yesterday (and the day before) were the only sunny days we have had in months. (At least it seems that way!). I spent several hours yesterday afternoon photographing odes over
Hot and humid weather and I don’t get along well. Thus, I often retreat to my basement dim room this time of year to make prints. I spent an evening
On Thursday (22 July 2023) afternoon I carved out about ninety minutes (from 4:30-6:00 PM) for some odeing and took a walk down Hattie Brown Road. The logging operation there
Salt prints made last week from exposures made over the past month or so.