Walking On

Canon 60D, Canon Camera, Canon Lens, Canon Live View, Fall, Farm, Flora, High Dynamic Range (HDR), Home, Homestead, Photography & Conceptualizing Beauty, Project 365 - Photo-a-day, Season, Still Life, Sunset
1 Grain Bins - Manning, Alberta

1 Grain Bins – Manning, Alberta

2 Leaning Grain Bin - Dixonville, Alberta 1

2 Leaning Grain Bin – Dixonville, Alberta 1

3 Leaning Grain Bin - Dixonville, Alberta 2

3 Leaning Grain Bin – Dixonville, Alberta 2

4 Former Farm - Manning, Alberta 1

4 Former Farm – Manning, Alberta 1

5 Former Farm - Manning, Alberta 2

5 Former Farm – Manning, Alberta 2

6 Former Farm - Manning, Alberta 3

6 Former Farm – Manning, Alberta 3

7 Former Farm - Manning, Alberta 4

7 Former Farm – Manning, Alberta 4

8 Rails - Keg River, Alberta 1

8 Rails – Keg River, Alberta 1

9 Rails - Keg River, Alberta 2

9 Rails – Keg River, Alberta 2

Imagining, remembering former times of a much younger Life when the journey taken was as much as a walk to a friend’s home – ringing the doorbell, checking to see … ‘You want to come out for a walk?’ Not an appointed or scheduled time, not appointment, not a time with rigorous intention or time to be maximized, fully, just time to talk, to get beyond the four walls of our homes and explore the world, to see what’s happening and to return. My friends and I were the better for it – the fresh air, the walk and the talk enriched us.

Now, at my present age time and times are planned with others and very rarely do they involve shared journey. Getting out, photographing the world, paying attention to surroundings now involves the disciplined journey of getting away, most times alone, and the work involved is in ‘seeing’ the world. Talk and exploration occurs with photographs and now holds narrative about what each photographer has seen and experienced. Meeting and narrative rather than journey have become focal point. Here, a day’s drive has taken me south and back and photographs record fall’s early morning colours. And, my wife will be the first to recognize the association to my cousins’ Rimbey farm with the farming imagery.

Listening to – Martyn Joseph’s take on many Bruce Springsteen songs; standing out are ‘The Rising,’ ‘Walk Like a Man,’ ‘Thunder Road,’ ‘If I Should Fall Behind’ and ‘One Step Up.’

Quote to Inspire – “I love photographing. It’s that simple.” – Stuart Franklin

Deposit Point – Grain

Best Practices - Photography, Canon 60D, Canon Camera, Canon Lens, Fall, Farm, High Dynamic Range (HDR), Home, Light Intensity, Photography & Conceptualizing Beauty, Prime Lens, Project 365 - Photo-a-day, Summer
Grain Bin - Dixonville, Alberta 1

Grain Bin – Dixonville, Alberta 1

Grain Bin - Dixonville, Alberta 2

Grain Bin – Dixonville, Alberta 2

Grain Bin - Dixonville, Alberta 3

Grain Bin – Dixonville, Alberta 3

On the back road between Manning and Fairview old, wooden grain bins are found and are located within large fields as deposit points for grain in harvest. Well-constructed wooden grain bins still stand while those that were constructed hastily erode, leaning and falling over. Those made with plywood walls sometimes have a wall missing leaving only the frame and exposing the bin’s interior. Wood grain bins are more a thing of the past with corrugated metal grain bins made by Butler, Westeel or Roscoe now being used, bins set on cement pads, often clustered at highest dry points on a farmer’s field. This well-constructed grain bin has caught my eye regularly; caught at the time of harvest amid ready and ripe grain wood’s texture and lines appeal as does colour and context.

Listening to – Kacey Musgrave’s ‘Keep It to Yourself’ and David Gray’s ‘Flame Turns Blue.’

Quote to Inspire – “What I did, anybody can do.” – Weegee