Sunday, January 16, 2022

Let Me Call You Sweetheart ...

 

… “Let me call you “sweetheart,” I’m in love with you

Let me hear you whisper that you love me too

Keep the love-light glowing in your eyes so true

Let me call you “sweetheart,” I’m in love with you …”

      ~ “Let Me Call You Sweetheart”

    ~ popular song published in 1910

  ~ music by Leo Friedman & lyrics by Beth Slater Whitson

    ~recorded by artists including Bing Crosby, The Mills Brothers, Pat Boone, Patti Page, Fats Domino & Slim Whitman

Bleeding hearts bring thoughts of love in bloom on a mid-April evening in spring along the Ironton Rail Trail, which loops more than nine miles through Whitehall Township, the Borough of Coplay and North Whitehall Township, Pennsylvania.

Bleeding hearts are shade-loving woodland plants that bloom in the cool of spring. Although they stay in bloom for several weeks, the plants often become ephemeral, disappearing for the rest of the summer if exposed to too much sun or heat. The roots are still alive, though, and the plant will regrow in the fall or the following spring. The fringed-leaf varieties of bleeding heart repeat-bloom throughout the summer.

 

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.





 


 


 


 


Tuesday, January 11, 2022

The Fire & The Frost ...

“It is the life of the crystal,

the architect of the flake,

the fire of the frost,

the soul of the sunbeam,

This crisp winter air is full of it.”

   ~ John Burroughs

   ~ 1837-1921

   ~ “Winter Sunshine”

    ~ 1875

The fire of the frost and the soul of the sunbeam kiss at sunset, painting a fiery frozen beauty at one of the highest elevations at Trexler Nature Preserve, Schnecksville, Pennsylvania.

This is my abstract view of a snowy scene I shot soon after the historic January Blizzard of 2016.
In a winter shorn of snow until the blizzard, the storm plonked 31 inches of snow on nearby
Allentown in a 24 hour period.


 

Sunday, January 9, 2022

Gold As Ice ...

“I embrace the abstract in photography and exist on a few bits of order extracted from the chaos of reality.”

            ~ Ralph Gibson

                 ~ American art photographer

                       ~ born 1939

The golden hues of a winter sunset fuse with the ice flecking the Jordan Creek in this abstract image.

 

I shot this on a late January day along the Jordan Creek Greenway at Covered Bridge Park, Orefield, Pennsylvania.