View allAll Photos Tagged fenceposts
I went for a walk down a country road in the late afternoon and these are the results. I didn't get all that far!
A wooden fencepost with barbedwire attached in Eagle Nest, New Mexico. The wood shows the effects of being exposed to the elements.
I love looking at landscapes, sometimes I even photograph them.
But what I really love is finding some small element within the larger scene,
and sharing what I can find within that single item.
So there I am in this beautiful valley, with mountains all around me
and I begin looking at this fenceline.
All the posts are those new metal spikes with places to attach the wire.
Then
I see it!
One old, lonely, out of place, yet still functional, wooden fencepost.
Barbedwire still solidly held in place, and additional wire wrapped around it.
After years of having been exposed to the elements,
the grain within the wood is proudly visible.
Smaller things make up the most grand!
Another one from the shoot on Ditchling Beacon. Wish I'd used my ND grad filter on the sky to avoid the patches of burn out, but still fairly happy with this.
Across the street from my daughter's house in Apopka, Florida, Sunday morning, Sept. 23. The only lens I had with me was an Auto Sears MC 50mm f/1.7, so I had to get close. The bird let me get up to about eight feet for this shot without seeming disturbed. It was more interested in something on the ground under the fence, and I had to wait for it to look up to get this shot.
"I know how to sit on a fence. Hell, I can even sleep on a fence. The trick is to do it face down with the post in your mouth."
-Dwight
Step one: run into oddly pointy rock with lawnmower. Step two: fail to dig out with hands. Step three: get pitchfork, shovel, and wife. Step four: excavate 20 inches of rusted fence post while yelling "The Germans are digging in the wrong place, Marian!"
Our final session at Westhope College before the summer break. Our photographic task was "Endings"
This is one of the photographs I took
One of the fenceposts along the trail on the way up to Daecheongbong at Seoraksan National Park.
Sokcho, South Korea.
Can anyone confirm id? On a fencepost on a threatened site in Strathspey, Scotland with apparently malformed or damaged wings.
Osborne County, Kansas
Trees were scarce in the part of Kansas so the settlers used to use rock slabs for fence posts.