Road trip

The world’s largest skateboard.  To be found, naturally, at the skateboard camp, Woodward, where we dropped Dan recently (that’s him in the foreground).

Pennsylvania was HOT and dry, although I understand that they received some rain since our trip.  You can see how hazy it was.

Blogging has changed me since the last trip down.  On my mind frequently during the drive — seeing the beautiful barns, some in fine repair and others not — was Virginia Gertenbach’s work — both her blog and her quilts — and notably a recent article in “Quilting Arts”.

I like to take pictures as we are driving.  Part of me still revels in the non-filmness of digital photography — all those blurs of nothing can be deleted at no cost to me! I also like ‘drive by shooting’  because it frames reality very differently from how I, as picture-taker, do.  I  like to view the randomness of the camera’s eye.  Sometimes, I get something really interesting that I would never in a million years have framed  ‘on my own’.

The picture below was taken while driving — not exactly speeding along, for obvious reasons — but not stopping to carefully frame a picture either.  One of the buggies was filled with a sweet grouping of children under the age of ten and I would have love to have captured an image of them, but that is one of the foibles of drive-by photography.  The reason I like THIS picture, though, is it lets the viewer feel the oddity of cars and buggies occupying the same road.

6 thoughts on “Road trip

  1. deemallon

    I think the buggies belong to Mennonites, but I’m not absolutely sure, Karen.

    Thanks for the links, Lynda — just looked at the beautiful beach pictures on Chocolate Life and Jazz… lovely!

    Reply
  2. ancientcloth

    I love Amish country. I have spent some time there and I never tire of seeing there beautiful perfectly manicured lawns, clothes hung on the lines and the folks dashing about doing their daily chores. I love the simplicity.

    Reply
  3. deemallon

    It is quite a contrast to living in a busy suburb of Boston where no congregation of people (e.g. waiting for a train, waiting to buy coffee, loading groceries onto the belt) is free of devices — blackberries, phones, ipods. Not that I want to give up my toys, but…. all this rushing?!@ All this noise?

    Reply

Leave a Reply