Vermont; Green (and Blue) Mountains (Part Three) ; July 2019

August 25, 2019  •  Leave a Comment

To an outsider's eyes, Vermont is full of iconic scenes of pastoral repose. Accurate or not, this impression of unostentatious charm is quietly pleasing and calming. Sort of Bucolic Lite, but in the nicest way.  Here, lush trees, a modern barn that could be a century old, a dinner table shaded against an uncharacteristically aggressive sun, two chairs offer a scenic view after a hard rain, a turkey in the rough, brilliant flowers immediately before a sudden downpour.

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The repurposed Waterbury train station now has high end coffee, gift shopping, historic displays, and rotating art.

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After a lifetime of mainly expressing myself with words, my postings here will mainly rely on images.  They will speak for themselves to some extent, but I'll usually add a few comments of explanation.  I've taken photographs for decades, since the 1950's, inspired in part by my father's photographic skill.  Four years of photo assignments and quality darkroom time eventually gave way to decades of casual and family picture-taking.  I re-immersed myself when I left film and turned to digital.  

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