Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts

Monday, April 22, 2019

a winter's tale video ...


“A Winter’s Tale” is told through my original photos set to the swingin’ sound of the wonderful Bobby Darin’s “Call Me Irresponsible” in this showcase of winter’s beauty.

My greatest joy as a photographer is harmonizing my favorite original photos to music to create a lasting snapshot of the season. Enjoy! …

Also on my You Tube Channel at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qm-tx1Jtmvo

Prints, Gifts and Décor of images available on my Fine Art America site, http://tami-quigley.pixels.com.

Sunday, April 7, 2019

Whitetail Winterlude ...


“Nature is not a place to visit. It is home.”
              ~ Gary Snyder
              ~ born 1930
         ~ Pulitzer Prize winner for Poetry, 1975
My favorite white-tailed deer doe, at right, and her fawn – now almost a yearling – pose for a mother-daughter winter portrait on a February evening at home in the park.

I’ve been blessed to photograph this doe and her fawns since 2012, and it’s a true joy to me personally and as a photographer.

Wednesday, April 3, 2019

Frozen In Harmony ...


“Music comes from an icicle as it melts, to live again as spring water.”
                    ~ Henry Williamson
                         ~ 1895-1977
            ~ English army officer, naturalist,
                  farmer & ruralist writer

Cascading waters above the Bushkill Creek are frozen in harmony with later winter beauty on a sunlit, early March afternoon at Jacobsburg State Park, which spans between Wind Gap and Nazareth, Pennsylvania.

Jacobsburg offers environmental education programs from the preschool environmental awareness programs to high school level environmental problem solving programs, historical programs, teacher workshops and public interpretive programs. Once the site where the famous Henry Rifle was made, the Jacobsburg National Historic District lies almost entirely within the park. Henry’s Woods offers very scenic hikes and the rest of the center grounds have multi-use trails.

The park surrounds the Bushkill Creek.

The original land for the center was purchased by the Department of Forests and Waters from the City of Easton in 1959. In 1969, additional land was purchased using funds from Project 70. This brought the total land area of the center to its present size of 1,168 acres.