Indiana Fall 2022 – Rainy Day at the Cabin

During the two weeks we were in Indiana this fall, we witnessed how fleeting the beauty of fall color can be.

Fleeting, Graying Fall

These images were made from the back balcony of our cabin one rainy, misty day.  When we first arrived, those bare trees had leaves and the tree on the left was nearly all green with only slight color beginning to show at the extremities of one branch.

Rainy Gray, Fall Day
Creeping Gray
Peak, Past Peak, Gone
Rainy Day Woods
Misty Morning

Astute observers will note that these images are all of the same general scene with various compositions.  The light rain, wetting the scene, brought out the color in the gray tree trunks, bare limbs and foliage, while at the same time muting the more distant trees.

Later,

Ken

Indiana, Fall 2022, Part 4 – Indiana Backroads

Fall Backroad

I’m sure I’ve said this before, but here it is again:  Backroads are often the best way to find uncommon beauty.  Or maybe that should be common beauty, since it is all around us, but maybe taken for granted.

Stones Not Rolling
Shorts and Talls
Forest Feet
Down into the Forest
Fall Layers – Gamboge, Green and Russet
Intertwined – Vine Weave
Mossy Fork
Vine Messengers
Treeline
Pink Fall
Portal

Is this a natural scar or a portal into another world?  If a portal, would the other world be weirder than our’s today?

Until next time,

Ken

Indiana, Fall 2022, Part 2

Outcrop Fall

In Brown County State Park I walked along a creek capturing fall color alongside the creek bed.

Outcrop Fall 2

Having an interest in geology, I had to include some of the rock layers exposed along the creek bed.

Fall Creek
Rocky Fall Creek

There were only a few shallow puddles of water in the creek, so walking in and along the creek bed did not require getting my feet wet.

Fall Hillside
Brown County State Park, Fall 2022
Fall Falling
Creek Walk
Fall Creek
Peeling
Reaching Out
Reaching Out 2
Enticing Autumn

More fall in Indiana later,

Ken

 

Indiana, Fall 2021, Part 18 – T. C. Steele Historic Site

I found the T. C. Steele Historic Site marked on an online map of the area around my operational base in Indiana.  I had never heard of T. C. Steele, so I did what I usually do in such situations.  I searched for information on the internet and discovered that T. C. Steele (1847 – 1926) was an American Impressionist painter, and a member of a group known as the Hoosier Group of painters.  I decided it worth while to check out this historic site.

The site is located at the actual home and studio in the countryside, where T.C and his wife lived and worked.  There were maybe a couple of more visitors at the site, when I arrived at a fair sized, newish looking parking lot that even had an electric vehicle charging station.

As I walked towards the visitor center, I stopped at the wagon with iron rimmed, wood spoked wheels that served as T. C.’s portable studio.  The wagon is a custom built, enclosed wagon with a wood burning stove in one corner.  I made a few iPhone images of the interior and exterior, but none were sufficient to fully capture the utility and quaintness of the vehicle.

There is a modest fee, payable at the visitor center.  There are scheduled tours that one can take to see the interior of the studios and there are hiking trails around the grounds, garden and through a portion of the Hoosier National Forest across the road from the site.

I elected to walk the grounds on my own, then take a trail through the forest.

Golden Tree, T. C. Steele Historic Site Grounds

The grounds and gardens are attractive and pleasant to walk through.  I was impressed by the large hardwood trees on the site, but my attempts to photograph those trees and showcase the grounds did not work out well.

I chose a forest trail and hoped for better photographic results in the woods.

Yellow and Green, Hoosier National Forest at T. C. Steele Historic Site, Indiana, Fall 2021
Woodland Path, Hoosier National Forest at T. C. Steele Historic Site, Indiana, Fall 2021

The sheer volume of objects in a forest make it difficult to get really unique images (at least for me).  I went through my photos a number of times, thinking most were a lost cause, before finally beginning to choose a few to edit.

Deep Woods, Hoosier National Forest at T. C. Steele Historic Site, Indiana, Fall 2021
Hillside, Hoosier National Forest at T. C. Steele Historic Site, Indiana, Fall 2021

Photos in forest can seem so much alike, that I get easily discouraged trying to capture the scenes.

Intimate Hillside, Hoosier National Forest at T. C. Steele Historic Site, Indiana, Fall 2021
Green Profusion or Intimate Forest, Hoosier National Forest at T. C. Steele Historic Site, Indiana, Fall 2021

In the end it seems that forest photos are mostly about colors, textures and light, since most of the objects in the photos are so much alike.  I struggle to come up with good titles for images, especially the forest ones.  I could not decide which title was best for the image above, so I gave it two.

Woodland Creek, Hoosier National Forest at T. C. Steele Historic Site, Indiana, Fall 2021
Leaves, Hoosier National Forest at T. C. Steele Historic Site, Indiana, Fall 2021
Path to the Light, Hoosier National Forest at T. C. Steele Historic Site, Indiana, Fall 2021

To be continued,

Ken

Indiana, Fall 2021, Part 17 – Charles C. Deam Wilderness

A continuation of photos captured during a morning hike in the Charles C. Deam Wilderness area of the Hoosier National Forest, Indiana.

Woodland Path
Bent and Bowed, Not Broken
Topical Conference
Dense Forest
The Ravine Way
Tree-O
Three by Three
Gatway
Lighting the Way
Green Markers

That’s it for this hike.

Until next time,

Ken