“Meanwhile the sunsets are mad orange fools raging in the gloom....”
~ Jack Kerouac
~ 1922 ~ 1969
A Great Blue Heron is silhouetted against a blazing mad orange summer sunset in early July at Trexler Memorial Park, Allentown, Pennsylvania.
Trailscapes is a place to find the beauty of nature in my original photos and videos of nature set to music. Find the beauty, inspiration and whimsy in nature! There's beauty all around us, we just have to look for it in the simplest things! All images are copyrighted. Prints, decor & gifts are available for purchase on Fine Art America at https://tami-quigley.pixels.com/ Inspire your home & office with images that mirror that magic of ordinary days! Twitter @tamitrailscapes
“Meanwhile the sunsets are mad orange fools raging in the gloom....”
~ Jack Kerouac
~ 1922 ~ 1969
A Great Blue Heron is silhouetted against a blazing mad orange summer sunset in early July at Trexler Memorial Park, Allentown, Pennsylvania.
~ Jack Kerouac
~ 1922-1969
It’s a mad orange sunset as a summer sundown creates silhouetted beauty as it sweeps across Trexler Memorial Park, Allentown, Pennsylvania in this abstract image I captured on a beautiful late August evening.
~ Jack Kerouac
~ 1922-1969
Sunflares spark an abstract beauty around a mad orange sunset on July 5, 2021 along the Ironton Rail Trail, which loops more than nine miles through Whitehall Township, the Borough of Coplay and North Whitehall Township, Pennsylvania.
Looking more like the moon than the sun and shining with a wild beauty, the sun holds court in a hazy, milky sky.
The orange haze in the evening sky is likely the result of wildlife smoke in southern Canada affecting conditions very high in the atmosphere.
The Ironton Railroad was a shortline railroad in Lehigh County. Originally built in 1861 to haul iron ore and limestone to blast furnaces along the Lehigh River, traffic later shifted to carrying Portland Cement when local iron mining declined in the early 20th century. Much of the railroad had already been abandoned when it became part of Conrail in 1976, and the last of its trackage was removed in 1984.
In 1996, Whitehall Township purchased 9.2 miles of the right-of-way from Conrail, transforming it into the Ironton Rail Trail.