I'm happy to be back with my March 5 on 5 post! Even though I shot and processed a ton of photos this past month, I felt myself drawn to these shots I took during a very unexpected snowstorm here on the coast at the beginning of the month. Todd and I were headed south to Boston for the day, and the blizzard came on so fast and furious that we decided to cancel our plans and just hang out here in southern Maine instead. It ended up being a fairy tale snow globe of an afternoon during which we spotted this fox carrying his lunch of a wee mousie across the snowy lawn of a grand old home by the seashore.
This shot of Nubble Light in York looks peaceful enough, but I cannot tell you how bitterly cold and windy it was! I was nearly blown into the water getting the shots above and below. In the lighthouse photo I know that the water looks peaceful, but that's just my crop. The shot below is literally what was going on just a few yards away. I stood in the same spot for both of these pictures, just turning my body slightly. I've actually never come so close to being hurt while taking a photo.
We had a beautiful thaw immediately after this storm, complete with crocuses blooming in our yard, trees budding, grass greening, and the tulips and daffs beginning to poke through the soil. Then today, April 4th, we woke to 16 degrees Fahrenheit and another snowstorm. I took a short, again very chilly, walk through the West End Cemetery here in Portland after lunch, stopping to pay a visit to one of my favorite gravestone, this beautiful willow marker of Dorothy Abbot. The West End is the most gorgeous neighborhood in Portland, full of late 19th-century homes, many of them built after the Great Fire of July 4, 1866, which destroyed much of the city. We are fortunate today that much of Victorian Portland still survives. A stroll through the stunning West End down to the quaint Old Port still gives one a strong sense of what this seaport must have felt like in the 19th century.
If you'd like to see more 5 on 5, head on over to this post by Leanne Godbey Hymes. I hope you're well, my friends! I'll be back soon, hopefully with much more spring-like photos and thoughts to share. xo Gigi
So lovely, Gigi. While we haven't had the snow, the temps have dropped here on the mountain. It was 31F this morning and the winds were really howling. Freeze warning tonight - ugh! All of our hydrangeas have budded out and I'm afraid we'll lose our flowers for this year. Happens often enough up here at our elevation of 4000'. With the warm March we had, everything is popping out and greening up, but the stalwart natives wait patiently.
ReplyDeleteSuch a beautiful post Gigi. I find the picture of the fox especially enchanting. Happy Spring my friend!
ReplyDeleteReally glad you didn't get hurt taking those shots and I really love seeing them, such a wonderful and interesting place you live!
ReplyDeleteOh yes the wind, especially nasty by the shore, great shots though. This back and forth weather is killing me.
ReplyDeleteSuch a pleasure to look through these Gigi! The fox image is just adorable and I love the pop of red in the 2nd image. Hope you have a wonderful April! :)
ReplyDeleteThat image of the fox is forever etched in my mind. I just adore that capture. I'm horrified to know the backstory and how you risked life and limb to take that and the other stunning images of the lighthouse. What a turbulent sea that was! It's amazing to think that second image was in the midst of all that danger! I just love your work and I'm so happy to have you participating in our little group. Much love!
ReplyDeleteEach time I see the fox photo I just think it is stunning! What a lovely capture. Oh my those waves are dangerous for sure. All gorgeous though. Crocus seem to make an appearance even on a cold winter day. Hope spring stays around for you soon.
ReplyDeleteWow that snow! Your first image truly is like a fairytale, just beautiful!
ReplyDeleteThat fox photo looks like an illustration from a book of fairy tales. Stunning!
ReplyDeleteTruly amazing photos, Gigi! I especially love the pops of color and the wild weather. The photo with the fox really stands out. I agree that it looks like an illustration from a book.
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