Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Fording The Jordan In Autumn ...



“Never give up, for that is just the place and time that the tide will turn.”
                  ~ Harriet Beecher Stowe
                        ~1811-1896
Visitors to Trexler Nature Preserve, Schnecksville, Pennsylvania ford the Jordan Creek on a late October afternoon, when intermittent autumn rain fails to dampen the beauty of the season.

For more than 50 years kids and kids at heart have enjoyed driving through the creek.

The ford at the preserve is one of my very favorite places to be and to photograph.




  






 

Monday, October 28, 2019

A Place In The Autumn Sun ...


“I cannot endure to waste anything as precious as autumn sunshine by staying in the house. So I spend almost all the daylight hours in the open air.”
             ~ Nathaniel Hawthorne
                    ~ 1804-1864
October’s afternoon sunlight dances along the Hassen Creek Nature Trail, which winds through the woods of Fogelsville Dam Park in Upper Macungie Township, Allentown, Pennsylvania.

Thursday, October 24, 2019

Autumn Falls ...


“But memory is an autumn leaf that murmurs a while in the wind and then is heard no more.”
                       ~ Kahlil Gibran
                           ~ 1883-1931
A single autumn leaf rests in the cascading waters of Resh Falls, which flows like silk in harmony with autumn along the Kittatinny Ridge, also called Blue Mountain. I shot this long exposure capture on a beautiful October afternoon at Lehigh Gap along the Delaware and Lehigh National Heritage Corridor (D&L Trail).

The Lehigh Gap in Slatington, Pennsylvania, is a crossroads where the Lehigh Gap Nature Center’s trails connect two historic trails – the Appalachian Trail and the D&L Trail.

Resh Falls is one of the Five Falls at East Penn along a unique area of the D&L Trail.

Railroading has a rich history in the development of lower Carbon County as three railroads went through the Lehigh Gap.

East Penn Township had two of them on its side of the river as the Lehigh Valley Railroad ran along what is now the D&L Trail. The Lehigh and New England Railroad ran parallel about 75 feet higher on the mountain on what is now the Lehigh Gap Nature Center’s Bobolink Trail.

The engineering needed to build these railroads would be a wonder today, but when you consider that they were done a century ago it becomes more impressive. They built pools along the railroad to collect runoff similar to what we now have as detention basins.

These pools still collect water and they discharge the collected water at five waterfalls that can be observed year round when hiking or biking the D&L Trail.

The Appalachian Trail, a foot path, follows the ridge on both sides of the Lehigh Gap, running 1,245 miles south to Georgia and 930 miles north to Maine. Running from Wilkes-Barre to Bristol, the D&L Trail passes through the Lehigh and Delaware rivers and their canals in Pennsylvania.