D4, 17-35mm, f2.8, ISO1000, cropped in the digital darkroom.
Photographic and poetic meanderings along the countryside or while flying an airplane.
Except as noted, all images copyrighted by and should be attributed to E B Hawley.
I had become many eons ago a traveling literary gnome, inquisitive about places I had and had not visited,
walking the same paths of peoples from the past, through places once grand and still grand,
photographing images that now show me the places about which I still dream . . .
Thursday, August 16, 2012
A Young Man Frees a Young Hawk
A young man came upon a nestling hawk in the grass. Weak with dehydration and hunger, the hawk did not fight or flee when Chris reached down to pick him up. Raised by Wild Bird Rescue this past year, the time came for the Broad-winged hawk to return to the wild. With foresight, the young man chose to release the young hawk near a lake and a forest, sure to provide food for the rest of its life. The young man and the young hawk, both adolescents, embark into their own worlds.
Sunday, August 12, 2012
Nature Below and Above
Lying on inflatable mattresses, MyMrMallory and I watched, between dozes, the Perseid meteor shower. We drove into the countryside, far from city lights, and close to coyotes howling throughout the night. Packs of coyotes communicated to each other from all directions, as if they surrounded us, to the east, the west, the north. Eek. We lay safely inside the truck bed, huddling under a flannel sheet, hoping that the coyotes would not hop up to join us, soft and furry creatures of God though they might be . . .
Other wildlife included turkey (8), sandpiper (3), nighthawk (6), scissortail (2), mourning dove (countless), a lark sparrow, a hawk, and in the morning we spotted approximately forty wild hogs.
Other wildlife included turkey (8), sandpiper (3), nighthawk (6), scissortail (2), mourning dove (countless), a lark sparrow, a hawk, and in the morning we spotted approximately forty wild hogs.
The dark passenger window of the truck provided me with a good filter
to take a photo of the setting sun.
D4, 35mm, f16, 1/6, 400ISO.
Views to the west and the southeast; we surrounded ourselves with open country.
D4, 17mm, f11, 1/13 and 30seconds, 1000ISO, brightened a bit in the digital darkroom.
At times I counted six meteors, one right after the other; at other times, I waited while knowing that soon a white trail would appear from the east, sliding toward the southwest. Some meteors traveled short paths, others long paths from one horizon the other, and others, impressively, finished their trails by explosion.
In the morning, a waning crescent moon rose next to Aldebaran, adding to the beauty of the meteor shower.
Saturday, August 11, 2012
Bookshopped in Archer City
One might find any time a good time to visit Archer City, Texas. Today, though, seemed the best of all these good times. for bookworms, at least. Chris Vaughn wrote a nice story about The Last Book Sale in the Fort Worth Star Telegram.
I have a purpose this morning, other than to practice making photographs; I would like to own a particular book written and autographed by Larry McMurtry, and I would have to ask someone knowledgeable about his work to know which book I have in mind.
In some store fronts, t-shirts with quotes from his novels were available for purchase. Realtor and McMurtry's nephew, Matt, offers the t-shirts at his office next door to Booked Up No. 4. I, though, searched, not for a quote, but for a scene in one of his books, and it is that novel, whichever one it is, that I set out to find.
Update: Good story written by Alyssa Johnston about the sale in the Times Record News, and
another published in the New York Times written by John Williams.
I have a purpose this morning, other than to practice making photographs; I would like to own a particular book written and autographed by Larry McMurtry, and I would have to ask someone knowledgeable about his work to know which book I have in mind.
In some store fronts, t-shirts with quotes from his novels were available for purchase. Realtor and McMurtry's nephew, Matt, offers the t-shirts at his office next door to Booked Up No. 4. I, though, searched, not for a quote, but for a scene in one of his books, and it is that novel, whichever one it is, that I set out to find.
Update: Good story written by Alyssa Johnston about the sale in the Times Record News, and
another published in the New York Times written by John Williams.
Zooming down Highway 79 on my way to Archer City.
Smile! Archer County courthouse. (The clouds! They embellish pictures.)
I HDR-ed this image for effect.
The Royal Theatre. Here they viewed "The Last Picture Show"
as part of The Last Book Sale festivities.
No telling who or what pulls up (myself included)
to eat a nice home-cooked meal at the Wildcatter Cafe,
just around the corner from Booked Up No. 4 and up the street
from Booked Up Nos. 1 - 3.
Fabulous old facades in the old town.
A man with an old suitcase walks up Main Street.
Could his suitcase contain a treasured antiquarian book or two, or a change of undies?
Or nothing, mused MyMrMallory, for perhaps he is a character in the show. After his observation, I felt a desire burble inside me to know more about McMurtry's work just to know if -- should MyMrMallory be correct -- which character in which novel this mystery man portrays.
I lean against the glass to look in the front windows of the various locations of Booked Up.
This is Booked Up No. 2.
Purchasers piled their books into boxes, then piled boxes into trucks and trailers.
This is number four.
Booked Up on Main Street.
Pictured, the nice gals who sold me a signed copy by McMurtry.
I asked them, "In which novel, or was it in an article, does McMurtry write about a young character (based on McMurtry's recollections) who looks across the way to a mansion, and that he would see a light in the mansion remain lit well into the night? The character also mentions that the resident of that mansion would drive his Packard down to the road to retrieve his mail from the mailbox."
One of them said, "Oh, yes. I remember reading that, too. Is it in Paradise, or is it in Benjamin Warren?"
"I don't remember seeing it in Paradise," said the other. "We'll ask Larry when he comes in."
Then, the first gal turned to the mysterious man with the suitcase. I hadn't seen him enter the building, and hadn't expected him there, since he walked up Main Street, away from the shop, not down and toward the shop. "Bob, do you know where Larry talks about the time he was a boy and he'd look out the way to Mr. Taylor's house?"
"That would be in Benjamin Warren," said mystery Bob.
"Then that would be the autographed book I'd like to buy today," I said, pleased that someone knowledgeable about McMurtry's work had walked in at the very moment I needed him. Strangely. I wondered fleetingly if his suitcase contained, gently bundled, a copy of Benjamin Warren.
An interesting thing to me is that the local folks of Archer county often refer to Larry McMurtry's house in Archer City as "Mr. Taylor's house," the man who built the house in the late nineteen-teens or early nineteen-twenties. He died in the mid-nineteen fifties, and the house was subsequently sold the the Archer City Country Club. McMurtry later bought the house from them, the golfers muttering through clenched teeth, "He gave us an offer we could not refuse," or so the myth among Taylor's descendants goes.
The scene in the novel supposedly reflects the recollections of the writer's youth. Mr. Taylor did read into the wee hours of the night, and he did own a Packard, I heard say from his descendants. I would like to own a copy of the book because it reflects a part of the history of Archer City.
Other interesting things about Mr. Taylor's house sound like made-up stories: His (first) wife haunts the house, and she (or is it his second?) kept a chicken in the fireplace upstairs while living there. Interesting in that the local folks tell stories about the house and the original owners, and according to one of McMurtry's relatives, so does he, complaining that he feels her ghost during some of his sleepless nights. It is nice, though, aside from Mrs. Taylor's ghost and chicken, that people remember Mr. Taylor with some unspoken fondness, the same kind of unspoken fondness I perceived for Larry McMurtry during my short visit to Archer City.
Bookshelves hold over 100,000 volumes in Booked Up,
minus one autographed novel that I will cherish owning.
Nikon D4, 17-35mm, 100 and 800 ISO, f16 and f2.8.
1988 Jaguar XJS.
Thursday, August 9, 2012
Missus Who?
Abigail? Edna, Ethel, Fanny, Gertie, Hortense, Maude? Molly, Myrtle, or Sarah Ann?
Married to whom? Byron? Buford? Butch, Buck, Bubba?
I feel glad times are changing.
Nikon F100, Sensia 100.
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Not Too Old to Dream, Thanks to a Song about a Kiss
I’ll have you to remember.
When I grow too old to dream,
your love will live in my heart.
So,
kiss me, my sweet,
and
so let us part.And when I grow too old to dream,
that kiss will live in my heart.
When
I could hold my love in my arms, and we would listen to Vera Lynn cooing, “When
I Grow Too Old to Dream,” I heard some sweet lyrics sung by a woman with a
lovely voice. Beam back to the present, thirty years later, I hear the lyrics that
reflect what I feel today.
The lyrics, I read in Wikipedia,
were written by good ol’ Oscar Hammerstein II back in 1934, in between World Wars
I and II, when Vera Lynn began her career. Lynn made the song significant
during Great Britain’s struggles as she uplifted the spirits of civilians and
soldiers.
Lynn was in her twenties when the Second World War started, and there
she was, she owned the world, she stood on top of it, she saved it with her
remarkable voice. She remained on top of the world, in fact, when at age 92, her
collection, We’ll Meet Again: The Very
Best of Vera Lynn, became the number one ranked album in the UK.
Not that I get all teary-eyed
when I listen to the song these days, though I have on occasion wiped a tear
from my cheeks when I sing it; the thing is that as one grows older, memories
become a kind of hope to hold on to; and we hold on to them gently, lest we
squeeze them to pieces.
In our older age, we recognize the timelessness of
Hammerstein’s lyrics, the hope that lingers in us as we sing, “when” we grow
“too old,” an age that we will not reach while the kiss of one’s love lives in
our hearts.
Lynn, in her nineties, had not grown too old to dream, and certainly
neither have I in my fifties. While in our mid-twenties we might believe in
some things, in an older age, while we know we cannot own or save the world, we know
that we can dream about it, we can dream about standing on top of it, all
thanks to the memory of a kiss.
Sunday, August 5, 2012
Saturday, August 4, 2012
First Saturday of every Month, Jenny Flies
To learn about the JN-4D, please visit the web site or their Facebook page.
The pilot and his two gals after the flight.
Wide angle view of the Jenny's port side before her monthly flight at Kickapoo Airport.
Starting the Jenny. Note the fire extinguisher. Safety first.
Jenny in flight.
Landing. And a beautiful landing it was today.
Returning to the hangar.
Nikon F6, 17-35mm, Portra 160, and polarizer filter, cropped in the digital darkroom.
Farrier
After leveling the hoof, the farrier nails the shoe in place.
Then shaves the shoe and hoof with a rasp.
And here is one of the horses who receives tender care from the farrier.
D700, 230mm, f/5.3, 1/640, ISO 800, aperture priority, cropped in Aperture.
Friday, August 3, 2012
Cattle Guards, Old and New
On land that has served as a cattle ranch for over one hundred years, expect to come upon sites that give a glimpse into the past. Here I show two cattle guards, one still serving its purpose, and one dragged aside as if its new purpose would become a decoration in the middle of the prairie.
Nikon D700. I subsequently suffered through a painful amount of post-processing in the digital darkroom with these images, taken the same day. I quarreled tediously with the white balance and color settings. Finally, capitulating, I slid the saturation level all the way to the left and felt slightly happier with the images. These black and white images should serve to me as a reminder to check my camera settings before making each photograph. Thanks to Aperture software and the tolerance of digital photography I can still document things I come upon in the Texan panhandle.
Repaired cattle guard.
A cattle guard, oddly, in the middle of a pasture. (If things could talk.)
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
Cicadas for Breakfast
A scissortail flycatcher studies me as I reach for my camera.
The three nestlings wait quietly in their nest.
Cicadas, grasshoppers, crickets, and other insects are plentiful.
One parent holds a cicada in its beak while the other hovers nearby.
Cicadas for breakfast. Yum!
D4, 80-400mm at 400mm, f5.6, 1/4,000, cropped in the digital darkroom.
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Scissortail Flycatcher Family
And what a delight to come upon a nest brimming with scissortails! Both parents and three nestlings feel the heat of the noon day sun and July temperatures of over one hundred degrees Fahrenheit. The slivers of leaves on the pitiable mesquite plant in which they lived provided nothing of the shade they needed.
Cornell lab has a nice article about them, and Birds of Oklahoma displays beautiful images of the scissortails in aerobatic flight.
Also known as the swallow-tailed flycatcher, this species of kingbird spend their summers in North America where they nest and raise their young. By the end of the summer, old enough to fly, the young accompany the parents in their return to Central America where they will spend the winter. In the meantime, they will find a mate.
Scissortail flycatchers returning to Texas every year provides us with a sight of beauty.
F6, 80-200mm, Portra 160.
Sunday, July 29, 2012
Calf among Flowers
Unintended double-exposure reveals a sweet face of a calf surrounded by flowers.
Nikon F6, Portra 400.
Faces of Hound
I cropped some of the photos I made of the old dog. In addition to having a handsome face, he expresses himself unabashedly and so looks photogenic.
D4, 10mm, f2.8, 1/250, cropped for effect and removed a blemish
during post-processing in the digital darkroom using Aperture.
Saturday, July 28, 2012
Zwanzig Jahre alt (Feed Me)
Ich liebe spielen. (Feed me.)
Ich liebe Kekse. (Feed me.)
Ich liebe dich. (Feed me.)
D4 with ultra wide lens cropped for effect.
All Bark and No Bite
For the past few days, our clouds have managed a few thunderous barks. No rain.
D4, 50mm, f3.5, 1/6400, ISO100.
Friday, July 27, 2012
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Plowing of Fields
The farmers store the wheat in rolls, plenty to feed the cattle
through the summer months and well into winter, thanks to a moist spring.
With the wheat harvested, Doug pulls his plows with his tractor from field to field.
On a plowed field, cattle egrets rest by a pond, and then flush by my presence.
Except for the drought, things proceed normally, which is a blessing.
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Let Lovely Turn of Phrase Begin
JMHawley Gave Me a Kiss to Build a Dream On
Listen, will you? I think that . . . literature, poetry, music and love make the world go round . . . while mathematics explains things; I fill my life with them, then go walking in snowy woods.
Let us go then, you and I
like two etherized patients floating
through life, together feeling prufrockian.
DDB Jr. makes my world go 'round; during his absence, Pachelbel fills it up.
One summer I sailed across the Atlantic Ocean, then through the Gulf of Finland to reach Saint Petersburg; I pursued Joseph Brodsky in its alley ways. I dream of making that two summers.
I read “Biking to Electra;” found my way in a Jaguar car, and glanced at the flashing steel grasshoppers at sunset. I’ll follow K.O.P.’s footsteps after he followed N.Scott Momaday’s; find warmth and inspiration on a rainy mountain.
Throw chinese coins for the I Ching.
Save the whales, the spotted owl, the woman in toil.
Cast a fly for trout; my memories of fly fishing under the sunny blue Colorado sky remain; I yearn to build more . . . with more trophy Browns.
Listen for the swan’s calls on the Baltic Sea. Feel KKII's joy, his arms spread wide in Yazilikaya.
Good night, Jimmy Durante, where ever you are.
Listen, will you? I think that . . . literature, poetry, music and love make the world go round . . . while mathematics explains things; I fill my life with them, then go walking in snowy woods.
Let us go then, you and I
like two etherized patients floating
through life, together feeling prufrockian.
DDB Jr. makes my world go 'round; during his absence, Pachelbel fills it up.
One summer I sailed across the Atlantic Ocean, then through the Gulf of Finland to reach Saint Petersburg; I pursued Joseph Brodsky in its alley ways. I dream of making that two summers.
I read “Biking to Electra;” found my way in a Jaguar car, and glanced at the flashing steel grasshoppers at sunset. I’ll follow K.O.P.’s footsteps after he followed N.Scott Momaday’s; find warmth and inspiration on a rainy mountain.
Throw chinese coins for the I Ching.
Save the whales, the spotted owl, the woman in toil.
Cast a fly for trout; my memories of fly fishing under the sunny blue Colorado sky remain; I yearn to build more . . . with more trophy Browns.
Listen for the swan’s calls on the Baltic Sea. Feel KKII's joy, his arms spread wide in Yazilikaya.
Good night, Jimmy Durante, where ever you are.