Like most photographers, I'm a sucker for an interesting abandoned house or store, especially if it's being reclaimed by nature. In Coldspring, Texas, several dozen miles north of Houston, I came across this scene, with an old, rusted, red dump truck to add to the ambiance. I also wondered if someone is using this relic of a storefront, since it has electricity run to it...
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When my friend, Jack, had their summer home in Wyoming, we would visit, and, yes, we would be a pair of Jacks exploring the countryside. He was also a photographer and we spent countless hours on his 4x4 ATV's roaming through the mountain ranges and valleys in the Eastern Rocky Mountains, the Snowy Mountains and the vast Wyoming plains. This shot was taken as Jack was snapping a photo from a vista looking northwest over some of those rolling plains.
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I'm not sure if this duck was doing yoga, stretching after a long flight or simply showing off its translucent plume, but I'm happy that it decided to do it while I had my camera pointed at him. This particular mallard is a Virginian, enjoying this year's late-fall warmth near Chesapeake Bay.
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Just like forest floors all over the world, moss, lichen, algae and fungi target fallen trees, trunks and branches in Pinnacles National Park in California. The process in which forest remnants are decomposed provide nutrients for both the reclamation agents and the forest itself, without the need for photosynthesis or chlorophyll. That they are so colorful is a beautiful happenstance for photographers and backwoods hikers alike.
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AuthorJack Huber has taken thousands of photographs around the country and in his foreign travels. Archives
January 2021
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