Introduction
On this site, I posted a picture (almost) every day, from December 3, 2010 to December 3, 2011. Only 16 days during that period are without pictures. All but two pictures were taken on the day of the post. Sometimes the daily picture represented the day in a larger way; sometimes it was just a picture. Since I posted so often, some pictures are more interesting than others.
After one year of posting a daily picture, I posted pictures less frequently - whenever I had something worth sharing.
After two years of more casual posting, I decided to once again post a daily (or almost daily) picture in 2014.
I'm not a photographer, and most of these pictures were taken with an inexpensive digital camera. A few were taken with a cellphone camera. Click on any picture for a larger view.
After one year of posting a daily picture, I posted pictures less frequently - whenever I had something worth sharing.
After two years of more casual posting, I decided to once again post a daily (or almost daily) picture in 2014.
I'm not a photographer, and most of these pictures were taken with an inexpensive digital camera. A few were taken with a cellphone camera. Click on any picture for a larger view.
Friday, December 28, 2012
State Line
The state line is literal in McCaysville, Georgia/Copper Hill Tennessee. If you stand to the right of the blue line, you're in McCaysville; to the left, you're in Copper Hill.
Sunday, December 23, 2012
Northern Washington Farmland
Thursday, December 6, 2012
An Unexpected Walk Into the Past.
My family moved to Alpharetta, Georgia when I was twelve. At that time (1970) it was a small rural town, 25 miles north of Atlanta. Moving there was something of a cultural shock to me. It took weeks before I could understand what most people were saying. At the time, Alpharetta was the southernmost point in Georgia where Georgia Mountain Dialect was spoken. There were great bluegrass bands around. And the countryside was filled with mysterious one-lane dirt roads dotted with the occasional unpainted wood house.
Since then, much has changed. Alpharetta and Roswell (the next town to the south) are suburban bedroom communities of Atlanta. They are highly developed and heavily populated, with expressways, shopping malls, and upscale gated subdivisions. But late this afternoon, while geocaching, I came upon an amazing, forgotten piece of the past. In what used to be the country between Roswell and Alpharetta, I hiked on abandoned roads and visited a cemetery that has been forgotten by most folks around there.
Based on the tombstones which are still legible, this was a McGinnis family cemetery. I went to school with McGinnises back in the day, and there is a McGinnis Ferry Road in the area. I wonder if any McGinnises still live in the area.
One of the amazing things about this experience today - as desolate as these pictures look, I could hear the traffic noise from the expressway (GA 400) very strongly the whole time.
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