The third stop on day two of photographing Indiana covered bridges was the Dick Huffman Bridge. I’m including a link to another bloggers site for his coverage of this bridge, rather than my usual links to an official government site.
As I was making my first shots of this bridge a number of vehicles crossed at intermittent intervals, stirring up dust, which I had to wait to clear. One pickup truck stopped just passed the bridge. The driver got out and walked towards the bridge. As he passed, he said he was going to check the water flow. I thought maybe he was doing some sort of official survey. As I walked back through the bridge and was passing him, he explained that the following day was the youth duck hunting season opening and that he was taking his son duck hunting by putting a boat in at another location and floating down the creek. He had hopped to not have to paddle the boat, but the flow looked very minimal, so he was going to have to paddle down the creek.
The bridge is not really leaning as much as it appears in the above photograph. Shooting from this angle the wide angle distortion accentuates the tilt and I could not remove it without tilting the roadway in the process.
Back on the other side of the bridge, I walked through the wooded area bordering the creek and found a way to get down into the creek. It was a little muddy along the creek edge, but I managed to avoid the worst of the mud. However, I had a limited area in which I could move around in the muddy channel, unless I wanted to get really muddy.
The log makes a good leading line object, but I wish I could have gotten closer to the bridge.
Until next time,
Ken