• rates
    • Class of 2026 Senior Photos. Rates, Contact, and FAQs.
    • Senior Year Images
    • 10% For Conservation
    • Where would like your senior photo taken?
    • Senior Photo FAQs
    • Not What I Wanted: My Diane Arbus Phase
    • Rare and uncommon books for sale
    • How It Began
    • Book of the Month, June '22
    • Witter Bynner's Grenstone Poems
    • Campagne de Russie 1812
    • Longfellow, "Ballads and Other Poems," 1842
    • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: 16 Works By or About Him
    • Familiar Quotations by John Bartlett, Second Edition (Convince me otherwise)
    • Addams Family, BHS Players, March, 2025
    • Brunswick City Limits 2025
    • Girls Hockey, Maine State Championship 2025
    • Replacement of the Frank J. Wood "Green" Bridge, 2023-2025
    • Downtown Arts Festival, 2024
    • Brunswick City Limits 2024
    • Brunswick Girls Basketball, Maine State Champions, 2024
    • Curling Comes to Brunswick.
    • Phantom of the Opera, March 22, 2024
    • Brunswick City Limits 2023, A Benefit For The Brunswick Area Student Aid Fund
    • Pride and Prejudice, BHS Players 2024
    • Northern Maine XC Championship 2024
    • Dragon Scramble, 2024
    • Phantom of the Opera, Dress Rehearsals, BHS, 2024
    • Festival of Champions, Belfast, Maine 2024
    • "Anything Goes," BHS Players 2023
    • Dragon Scramble, 2023
    • The Great Gatsby, BHS Players 2023
    • Six Rivers Youth Sports Zamboni Pull, 2023
    • Harpswell Democrats
    • about
    • contact
    • Walks during a pandemic
    • Baxter State Park 2021
    • portfolio
    • Bynner's Grenstone Poems
    • Moonrise Over Brunswick Football
    • Brunswick Boys 6, Poland/Leavitt et al 1
    • Brunswick Boys win ugly over Cape
    • Brunswick Boys' Hockey 2, Thornton Academy 1
    • Missed calls, too much BC, and another tie with Yarmouth.
    • Brunswick Boys 5, York 4
    • Who plays in the best rink in Maine? The Brunswick Dragons do.
    • Mt. Ararat Boys Tennis visits Brunswick
    • Mt.A Track Meet May 19, '23
    • XC Regionals 2023 (Mainly BHS and a Handful from MTA)
    • Vassar Treble Choir 2023
    • Around Vassar, Fall 2023
    • Brunswick Girl's Hockey 10, Winslow et al 3
    • BHS Swim, Dec 15, 2023
    • Raise the Rink! Zamboni Pull
    • Brunswick/Freeport Boys Hockey Falls to Yarmouth/Cheverus
    • Brunswick Girls Hockey Claims 4-3 OT Thriller Over Yarmouth/Freeport
    • Brunswick Girls Hockey Falls to Cheverus
    • Skolfield Shores Preserve: Three Winter Storms, 2024
    • Mt. Ararat Tops Brunswick, Boys Basketball
    • Collision Course: Eagles Dragons, Regional Championship
    • Brunswick 39, Mt. Ararat 30, Regional Final 2024
    • Brunswick Girls Softball Beats Mt. Blue
    • Brunswick Baseball Drops Medomak Valley
    • Morse and Brunswick Meet in Girls Lacrosse
    • Yarmouth topples Brunswick in Girls Lax
    • Brunswick Boys' Lax Closes Season With a Comeback Win
    • Mt. Ararat Girls Lacrosse End Regular Season 14-0
    • Mt. Ararat Track and Field at States, 2024
    • Brunswick Track & Field at States, 2024
    • Bowen 8, Brunswick 7, Marshwood 6. Boys lacrosse playoffs 2024
    • Brunswick High Graduation 2024
    • Mt. Ararat Girls Lacrosse Moves to Semis With 12-10 Win Over Biddeford
    • Mt.A Girls Lax Edged by Greely in Playoffs
    • Freeport Girls Lacrosse Thrashes Messalonskee
    • Goslings with Maine Coast Heritage Trust 2024
    • Frances Perkins Homestead, Newcastle
    • Brunswick Football at Flight Deck
    • Brunswick/Mt.Ararat/Morse Volleyball vs Hampden Academy
    • Girls XC at Brunswick v Morse, Medomak & Boothbay
    • Boys XC at Brunswick, Morse, Boothbay/Wiscasset
    • Girls Soccer Brunswick 6 Lew 1
    • Football Brunswick 20 Mt.Blue 15
    • Boys Soccer: Brunswick 6 Hampden 0
    • Girls Soccer: Brunswick 2, Camden Hills 5
    • Volleyball, "Brunswick" tops NYA
    • Girls Soccer: Bangor gets by Mt. Ararat
    • Boys Soccer: Brunswick 6 Mt. Blue 1
    • Brunswick Boys Soccer Edges Mt.Ararat 2-1
    • Mt. Ararat Girls Soccer Beats Brunswick 3-1
    • Morse Girls Soccer v Wells
    • Morse Boys Soccer 9, Lake Region 1
    • Brunswick Football, Senior Day, vs. Cape
    • Brunswick Girls Hockey Edges Gorham
    • Come for the Bridge Construction, Stay for the Falcon
    • Brunswick High Baseball 7 Lincoln Academy 3
    • Mt. Ararat Girls LAX 13, Brunswick 8
    • Brunswick Boys Lax Beats Gardiner
    • Brunswick Baseball Tops Messo
    • Morse, Mt.A, and Brunswick T & F at BHS
  • blog
Menu

Douglas Park Media

  • Photography
    • rates
    • Class of 2026 Senior Photos. Rates, Contact, and FAQs.
    • Senior Year Images
    • 10% For Conservation
    • Where would like your senior photo taken?
    • Senior Photo FAQs
    • Not What I Wanted: My Diane Arbus Phase
  • Rare and Uncommon Books
    • Rare and uncommon books for sale
    • How It Began
    • Book of the Month, June '22
    • Witter Bynner's Grenstone Poems
    • Campagne de Russie 1812
    • Longfellow, "Ballads and Other Poems," 1842
    • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: 16 Works By or About Him
    • Familiar Quotations by John Bartlett, Second Edition (Convince me otherwise)
  • Event Photography
    • Addams Family, BHS Players, March, 2025
    • Brunswick City Limits 2025
    • Girls Hockey, Maine State Championship 2025
    • Replacement of the Frank J. Wood "Green" Bridge, 2023-2025
    • Downtown Arts Festival, 2024
    • Brunswick City Limits 2024
    • Brunswick Girls Basketball, Maine State Champions, 2024
    • Curling Comes to Brunswick.
    • Phantom of the Opera, March 22, 2024
    • Brunswick City Limits 2023, A Benefit For The Brunswick Area Student Aid Fund
    • Pride and Prejudice, BHS Players 2024
    • Northern Maine XC Championship 2024
    • Dragon Scramble, 2024
    • Phantom of the Opera, Dress Rehearsals, BHS, 2024
    • Festival of Champions, Belfast, Maine 2024
    • "Anything Goes," BHS Players 2023
    • Dragon Scramble, 2023
    • The Great Gatsby, BHS Players 2023
    • Six Rivers Youth Sports Zamboni Pull, 2023
    • Harpswell Democrats
  • About & Contact
    • about
    • contact
  • galleries
    • Walks during a pandemic
    • Baxter State Park 2021
    • portfolio
    • Bynner's Grenstone Poems
    • Moonrise Over Brunswick Football
    • Brunswick Boys 6, Poland/Leavitt et al 1
    • Brunswick Boys win ugly over Cape
    • Brunswick Boys' Hockey 2, Thornton Academy 1
    • Missed calls, too much BC, and another tie with Yarmouth.
    • Brunswick Boys 5, York 4
    • Who plays in the best rink in Maine? The Brunswick Dragons do.
    • Mt. Ararat Boys Tennis visits Brunswick
    • Mt.A Track Meet May 19, '23
    • XC Regionals 2023 (Mainly BHS and a Handful from MTA)
    • Vassar Treble Choir 2023
    • Around Vassar, Fall 2023
    • Brunswick Girl's Hockey 10, Winslow et al 3
    • BHS Swim, Dec 15, 2023
    • Raise the Rink! Zamboni Pull
    • Brunswick/Freeport Boys Hockey Falls to Yarmouth/Cheverus
    • Brunswick Girls Hockey Claims 4-3 OT Thriller Over Yarmouth/Freeport
    • Brunswick Girls Hockey Falls to Cheverus
    • Skolfield Shores Preserve: Three Winter Storms, 2024
    • Mt. Ararat Tops Brunswick, Boys Basketball
    • Collision Course: Eagles Dragons, Regional Championship
    • Brunswick 39, Mt. Ararat 30, Regional Final 2024
    • Brunswick Girls Softball Beats Mt. Blue
    • Brunswick Baseball Drops Medomak Valley
    • Morse and Brunswick Meet in Girls Lacrosse
    • Yarmouth topples Brunswick in Girls Lax
    • Brunswick Boys' Lax Closes Season With a Comeback Win
    • Mt. Ararat Girls Lacrosse End Regular Season 14-0
    • Mt. Ararat Track and Field at States, 2024
    • Brunswick Track & Field at States, 2024
    • Bowen 8, Brunswick 7, Marshwood 6. Boys lacrosse playoffs 2024
    • Brunswick High Graduation 2024
    • Mt. Ararat Girls Lacrosse Moves to Semis With 12-10 Win Over Biddeford
    • Mt.A Girls Lax Edged by Greely in Playoffs
    • Freeport Girls Lacrosse Thrashes Messalonskee
    • Goslings with Maine Coast Heritage Trust 2024
    • Frances Perkins Homestead, Newcastle
    • Brunswick Football at Flight Deck
    • Brunswick/Mt.Ararat/Morse Volleyball vs Hampden Academy
    • Girls XC at Brunswick v Morse, Medomak & Boothbay
    • Boys XC at Brunswick, Morse, Boothbay/Wiscasset
    • Girls Soccer Brunswick 6 Lew 1
    • Football Brunswick 20 Mt.Blue 15
    • Boys Soccer: Brunswick 6 Hampden 0
    • Girls Soccer: Brunswick 2, Camden Hills 5
    • Volleyball, "Brunswick" tops NYA
    • Girls Soccer: Bangor gets by Mt. Ararat
    • Boys Soccer: Brunswick 6 Mt. Blue 1
    • Brunswick Boys Soccer Edges Mt.Ararat 2-1
    • Mt. Ararat Girls Soccer Beats Brunswick 3-1
    • Morse Girls Soccer v Wells
    • Morse Boys Soccer 9, Lake Region 1
    • Brunswick Football, Senior Day, vs. Cape
    • Brunswick Girls Hockey Edges Gorham
    • Come for the Bridge Construction, Stay for the Falcon
    • Brunswick High Baseball 7 Lincoln Academy 3
    • Mt. Ararat Girls LAX 13, Brunswick 8
    • Brunswick Boys Lax Beats Gardiner
    • Brunswick Baseball Tops Messo
    • Morse, Mt.A, and Brunswick T & F at BHS
  • blog
×
Lannscape Photo. Pennelville Brunswick, Maine.jpg

We Walked Because We Had To

Benet Pols August 29, 2020


Ireland. In the 1970s. Unaccountably that is where these photos took me.

Perplexing because the barn, seen by me a thousand times, and the tree photographed dozens of times, could not be less like the Ireland that it took me too. The rock strewn hills of the Partry Mountains, treeless but for some wind-stunted abstractions, its deep green grass perpetually shorn by flocks of sheep wandering in a steady drizzle or maybe a fog lifted from the grim glacial lake nearby waiting for some quirk of the atmosphere to lift it just high enough up the steep sided valley to condense and drizzle its way back to the boulder strewn earth. The sheep, fractiously companionable, wandered freely. The only sign of humans a spray painted marking in red or blue on their soggy mud-bedraggled fleeces.


How did I get here?

Not the tree. It is a grand thing standing there proudly for all to see. Not the barn. Little thatched whitewashed stone things were dropped here and there around the Irish hills, nothing so imposing as this. Not the nearly cloudless sky.

The shadows then.

But once a day the sun showed itself slanting away from the west called up at the same time every day by some trick of Atlantic gusts pushed through a not too distant fjord, sometimes making a prism of a still lingering rain shower. Forty-five minutes or maybe an hour before the ski darkened and then rain, steady again, resumed its grey work.


Forty-five minutes to bounce a ball in the road—old macadam with its varied pebbles still visible like a crowd of periwinkles following one another over the mild hills and curves down the two mile shoreline of the lake. For forty-five minutes the pumice like surface of the water grew brighter green and even dared to hint at reflecting the odd blue smudges between the clouds. Forty-five minutes to watch the long shadows of the neighbor men stretching out over the road, chasing and catching their makers for just a moment at the crest in the road just to stretch out again behind them as they headed down the hill toward The Larches, the local pub.

The walking then.

Ours is a time of walking.

Theirs was a country of walking.

Cars were few, roads were narrow. Work seemed to be mainly with the sheep or in peat bog. Peat needed a cart but, like the pace of peat burning, the cart seemed fine with a donkey or an old horse to pull it. The neighborhood walked, or biked, to and fro, if it felt the need to move at all. And in the evening when the sun made its brief appearance to call them out, they strolled.

The lengthening shadows took to walks long ago in Ireland.

The lengthening shadows took me back to walks long ago in Ireland.








The same man would saunter by our little house every evening. His shadow stretching out behind him down the slope just to rush up and catch him briefly at the crest of the next hill. Our place stood at the crest of a hill so he would arrive alone to greet us and be joined by his shadow. We weren't to do more than acknowledge the greeting. There was no clear reason for it, just some tacit understanding that he was not approved of. Perhaps our dour and distant landlady had passed some wordless clues to our parents. So we’d move to the side of the road and stop bouncing the ball back and forth. He’d pass by, smile. I see him in a cap, his hands in his pockets and a jacket hanging in the loop of his arm. Shortly, just after dark we would hear the singing wending its way back along that two-mile shoreline.

But for now we would step back into the road and resume bouncing the ball.

And now in 2020 we walk too.

Relentlessly, sometimes with a grim resignation, we walked. The need to do anything but stay inside overcame inertia, indifferent weather, and habits generations in the making. At the same time came a sense of discovery, joy in simple things, the early greening of moss, the trickle of melt water in an otherwise quiet wood, paths through woods that we had not traveled since childhood, stumbling upon artworks placed in the woods to astound the infrequent passersby. It was spring after-all, or what counts for spring in Maine, so the signs of renewal were there. And we were forced outside to greet them.

The photo of the tree and the barn with its long twilight shadows was taken just two or three weeks into the 2020 lockdown. Our local schools had last welcomed students in person March 12th, my wife was working from home, my oldest had been sent home from college. Only I left the house on a regular basis to a work place radically changed where a mood of, at times, grim, dutiful, determination drove us to normalize the abnormal. On the way home I would stop at, a local market with a keen sense of its responsibilities and purpose in this new and peculiar time. I would scout for an available pound of butter, bag of sugar, or perhaps a treat.

And then we would walk.

Sometimes together, sometimes separately. It was not long before we and others stumbled to the fact that the neighborhood streets no longer met the need. The awkward glances exchanged during the pas de deux of greeting an oncoming walker called for new territory. Hesitant parallel steps from the curb to cross the street lest we cross wakes of exhaled breath not yet cleansed by the daylight and breeze, followed by both resuming the curb before some gesture or nod cemented who would cross and who would stay drove us to more far-flung spaces. A short drive and leaving the car by the side of some rural road opened new territory; even there there were others.

An old navy base in my town has a stretch of disused road and paths on the near side of the runways. I would bike out there in the evening. For six weeks I never went on the property without running into a man I know and his wife; sometimes their grown children were along. I have known this man casually since childhood; he’d been an intimidating kid, a little older, quick to take on the smoking habits of his tribe, a disruptive presence in school. Not a walker by nature, he speaks with the rasp of a man who is never far from a smoke. Bundled against the March wind cutting across the airfield his garment was a vintage snowmobile jacket emblazoned with a sled makers’ logos. No hi-tech fibers of the outsider. Nonetheless they too were driven out for ninety minutes in the weak sunlight. We greeted with a nod and a wistful smile, acknowledging another day’s meeting on the little patch of earth that we do share.

I met a neighbor maybe three miles from our block. I asked him if he was going any place special. “No. Just going.”

Coming home from work on a backroad at a crossroad nearly two miles from town I was slowed by traffic yielding for pedestrians. Usually empty, this intersection had seven pairs of walkers making their ways.

After traversing two land trust properties and a friendly farm my wife and I headed to a town owned patch of woods that leads down to the bay. We had gone too far from home to get back in time to make supper so we called our daughter for a ride. Another time bushwhacking through the woods near the shoreline on that same old navy base we got turned around and had to use location services on the iPhone to show us where on God’s Green earth we were.


A muddy afternoon on one of the more obscure trails of neighboring Freeport’s land trust left us starring in disbelief at a mail box with a name, street number and adjacent newspaper receptacle deep I the woods on rutted, rocky, root filled track wide enough to maybe accommodate a 1979 VW Rabbit. It was wet, there was still plenty of snow deep in the woods, the paths were a quagmire, so we improvised wandering through the woods just off the trail.

Yet on each of these walks we met people. There were the hardcores and wannabes, crisp synthetic fibers, hydration systems, and hiking poles to aid the conquest of a meandering path through a copse, but there were also tank tops, faux-camo, and Mountain Dew.

There is an expectation about conserved public land. We are owed some kind of pay-off. But so many of these walks were just quiet, subtle meanderings that I question that perception of accessible public lands.

All the websites, Facebook pages, and campaign materials feature the big pay day: cliffs, waves, mountain tops with water views, kayak camping on remote islands. Make no mistake, a walk that culminates in a crescendo is a fine thing. But if that is all you want you will miss the fine details, the chance “to see the world in a grain of sand.”

skolfield-preserve-harpswell-heritage-land-trust-photo 2nd-4.jpg



And we were working, some tethered at home to the internet, some more thankful than ever just to have a place to go outside the home. A place to give some little normal structure to the grim reiteration of marking time with the statistical recitation of deaths, infections, hospitalizations, and bombastic fabrications.

We needed outdoors time that didn’t require travel. We needed an afternoon walk.

Maine By Foot, a comprehensive town-by-town list of Maine’s many publicly accessible trails provided an excellent source of new, nearby walks. Some stunning and surprising, some subtle and comfortable like that grain of sand. Land trust websites are also a great source.

Rambling through these properties on a nearly daily basis brought forth the true purpose of the land conservation.

So much if what is preserved is not accessible to the public, but that is okay. The land is there for the grain of sand, for the wildlife, for oxygen, and for carbon sequestration. And it provides a generous buffer to sustain what is accessible.

So much of what is preserved is undistinguished: no grand vistas, no water features, no adrenaline rush from the big climb. But there are the shadows, the horizontal light of afternoon. 

So much of what is accessible and beautiful isn’t preserved at all, at least not formally. It exists in the view-sheds on the rural roads that are seen more fully at a walking pace that at 45 miles an hour.

Go for a walk. Find the greenest green of the moss, marvel at the bluff that hosted a ski area in your childhood, listen to the throbbing of peepers deep in woods of an old navy base, wonder at the light and shadows. Someone made the effort years ago—centuries even as is the case with the Brunswick Town Commons—to leave it alone just for this moment. Take the moment and you may find yourself carried over the ocean and the years to a roadside in Ireland forty-five years ago.





I take my camera with me on a lot of walks but I don’t always use it. Sometimes I go out for a walk with the express purpose of making some pictures.. Other times I just go without it. In this gallery are photos from the Chase Preserve and Freeport Woods, near Maquoit Bay, the Pennelville neighborhood in Brunswick, Bradley Pond in Topsham, Sewall Beach in Phippsburg, The Commons in Brunswick, Bunganuc, Wildes Road in Bowdoinham and Merrymeeting Bay, Crystal Spring Farm, Merriconeag Farm and Skolfield Preserve in Harpswell, Tumbledown Mountain in Weld, and assorted other places around the area.

Enter Gallery






In Maine, Brunswick History, Maine Photographer, nature Tags outdoor photography, landscape photography, maine photo, walking, land trust, conservation, pandemic
acadia-13.jpg

In October's endless brightness

Benet Pols November 6, 2019

In October’s endless brightness I took a walk in the woods with my oldest child.


The trip to Acadia was happenstance. Her college has an odd early fall break, an early long weekend with a Monday and Tuesday off. The rest of the family is just back to school or working.


My daughter loves Acadia and Mount Desert Island. Every summer she goes to a running camp on the island. With a professional staff and college aged counselors, the camp trains some of Maine’s most promising cross country runners. Campers spend the better part of a week sleeping in tents, running the carriage trails of Acadia National Park, swimming its beaches, and staging skits in the campground’s vintage community hall. The most recent summer, after a move from camper to counselor, she embraced the place even more.


Our house has a lot of old nautical charts and survey maps kicking around. Older damaged ones get used as makeshift wrapping paper; the featured locale may match the gift or the recipient. In September she asked me if we had an intact map of MDI for her dorm room wall.



As we pondered what to do with this weird fall break, I won a national parks pass in a drawing at work. Entry required a one sentence essay on what I’d do with the pass if my entry was drawn—I used a semi-colon, some dashes, and more than a handful of commas. For good measure I smuggled in another thought in a parenthetical. I work for a large well-known outdoor products manufacturer that for more than 100 years has made the same iconic piece of footwear; for many people the boot and the company symbolize Maine: flannel, fresh air, pine, the crunch of fallen leaves, or crust on snow.



One of the central ironies of my job is that I spend my working days far from the out-of-doors. The stark realities of an efficient modern facility that saves Christmas for millions year after year is that many of us spend our working days indoors with the hum and buzz of machinery in place of the snap of twigs and birdsong. But with liberal access to its outdoor programs, bucolic camps owned and maintained just for employees, and programs like the park pass giveaway, time off is focused on the outdoors. And time outdoors is celebrated.



It’s not as though we needed the pass to get into Acadia. Admission is inexpensive; once you’ve been to a national park you realize what a deal it is.


But I do love a bargain. And in this case, the bargain was an inspiration. It got us to Acadia and a few other spots along the road.

My daughter and I had been to Acadia together before. Another odd holiday in the fall of 2001, the season of empty skies: a fall when people gave up planned travel time, skipped weddings they had booked, and went to weddings nearby home to fill in for guests from away who could not fly. A friend was running an Inn on Deer Isle. The guest list dried up, but we were an easy drive away. So with her cousin, born a few months before her, and two sets of parents she spent a few days on Deer Isle exploring quarries, paying homage to Burt Dow, eating in nearly empty but welcoming restaurants, and making a day trip to stroll the nearly empty trails of Acadia strapped to one of her parents’ backs. Hiking with a Kelty pack slows you down. The pace is more a stroll than the forced march of some hikes. It is a lot more about being there than getting there.



Her cousin was walking but my daughter had yet to walk.  In fact she didn’t crawl; she was a scooter.  But she didn't drag one leg behind and hitch. With her legs nearly perfectly symmetrical and the soles of her feet meeting like hands in prayer, she threw her arms forward and lifted her body, full speed ahead. When moving at full clip she sounded like a dufflepud. The know-it-alls were generous with their gloomy opinions about the repercussions her motility would have for her: reading, writing, speech, gross motor skills, fine motor skills they preached gloom. They were wrong of course.

2011 acadia ilp-2.jpg
JWTleahacadiasmaller.jpg




She rode the Kelty pack like an elephant master steering her beast of burden one way and another—reaching this way and that, thrashing when necessary, chattering to her cousin with all the words she had. Late that night as a lightning storm lit the walls of the old Inn to keep her awake, she tottered from the edge of her portable crib to her mother, just four, maybe five full steps but beaming as if she had just won a race.



This October the walk was just as unhurried. We started around Jordan Pond in tandem with a young couple clad in matching yoga pants who hustled to the shallow end of the pond where its outlet is strewn with large rocks. The rocks make a path into the water for the money shot. In the background are the photogenic Bubbles—north and south—a pair of perfectly matched rounded mountains that rise abruptly from the far shore of the long and narrow pond, apparently sculpted by the receding glaciers just for the ardent instagrammer. The Bubbles can frame you, you can pose is if holding one in each palm, or suspend them one from each set of forefingers and thumbs.



The pair bustled ahead and immediately assumed their positions, he with the camera, she with her head coquettishly cocked to one side, and a hand rested just-so beneath her chin. The bickering started on cue. The cocked-head pose alternated with a scowl as the muse waited impatiently for the camera man to get the Bubbles in the right place.



The unexpected morning cold sent us back to the car. With long pants and another layer, the extra time gave the couple a few hundred meters head start and we learned again that, “life starts all over again when it gets crisp in the fall.”



Don’t get me wrong. I took a lot of pictures myself—maybe 45 that were keepers, the stunning landscapes, sunsets, funny shots, the money shots from the peaks, but my favorite is just the girl strolling along stopping to consider things and chat a bit. The park is there in the background, but the main thing is the walk.

Coming to the pond we had two choices: go left and work our way around to the sunny-side of the pond or go right and head directly toward the Bubbles. My daughter chose left, and the far side, based on the need for the sun’s warmth. But the walk down the west side turned out to be the better path. It meanders a bit and gives you changing views of the scenery. Because of wet ground and some habitat conservation efforts, significant portions of the path feature narrow elevated board walks. There is a detour into the woods around some trail reconstruction that pushes walkers away from the pond and into the woods for a brief time through a little mushroom forest. Near Tumbledown Cove the path features some uneven walking over and around granite boulders that provide more opportunities for the Instagram shot—we briefly crossed paths with the young couple here too.

The pace was the thing though. Interesting little spots to stop and inspect, in and out of the shade. We had had plans to do Jordan Pond in the morning, get lunch and find another vigorous hike for the afternoon, but the pleasant pace and an unspoken Mac Davis mentality kept us, consumed with delight gazing through October’s endless brightness at the brilliance of Jordan Pond.



(With phrases borrowed from two great writers, F. Scott Fitzgerald and my father)

In Maine, Maine Photographer Tags acadia, acadianationalpark, friendsofacadia, acadianrunningcamp, walking, hiking

Search Posts

 
  • May 2025
    • May 17, 2025 Did you click like? Don't forget the money!!! May 17, 2025
  • March 2025
    • Mar 14, 2025 "Guzzle." Why Books Are So Much Better Than The Internet. Mar 14, 2025
  • February 2025
    • Feb 22, 2025 The Benefits of Clarity (in Lightroom anyway) Feb 22, 2025
    • Feb 6, 2025 One True Friend: The Brunswick Area Student Aid Fund Feb 6, 2025
  • January 2025
    • Jan 5, 2025 Lurking by the River: Happy New Year From My Friends Rachel and Frank Jan 5, 2025
  • November 2024
    • Nov 23, 2024 It was my father who first put him down cellar Nov 23, 2024
  • September 2024
    • Sep 26, 2024 Bangor Girl's Soccer Upends Mt. Ararat, 2-1. Sep 26, 2024
  • August 2024
    • Aug 23, 2024 Bartlett's "Familiar Quotations," a Second Edition (convince me otherwise). Aug 23, 2024
    • Aug 18, 2024 Arts! Crafts! Music! and a little bit of learning. Aug 18, 2024
  • July 2024
    • Jul 27, 2024 Seeing With New Eyes Jul 27, 2024
  • June 2024
    • Jun 14, 2024 Quesadillas for cash, golfing for good Jun 14, 2024
  • May 2024
    • May 6, 2024 Four Thousand New Old Books: tales from the Flea Market, Part II May 6, 2024
  • April 2024
    • Apr 30, 2024 Killdeer, A Jack Antonoff Project Apr 30, 2024
  • March 2024
    • Mar 9, 2024 Four-thousand new old books: Tales from the flea market, Part I Mar 9, 2024
  • February 2024
    • Feb 3, 2024 Photographing Phototropism: embracing the optimism of a single yellow birch. Feb 3, 2024
  • January 2024
    • Jan 5, 2024 Famed Broadcaster Dale Arnold Visits Six Rivers Youth Sports to Help Raise The Rink! Jan 5, 2024
  • December 2023
    • Dec 30, 2023 Saying Good-bye Dec 30, 2023
    • Dec 16, 2023 Raise the Rink! Hockey Moms and the Rest of the Skating Community Come Together to Have Some Fun and Build a New Rink in Topsham. Dec 16, 2023
    • Dec 1, 2023 We Belong to the Rock. Dec 1, 2023
  • November 2023
    • Nov 24, 2023 Scouting Locations, Looking to Photograph the Northern Lights Without a Plan Nov 24, 2023
    • Nov 21, 2023 On the Trail of John McKee, Part II: A Missed Opportunity Revisited. Nov 21, 2023
    • Nov 17, 2023 Getting In Touch With My Inner John McKee Nov 17, 2023
  • October 2023
    • Oct 2, 2023 I told Carter he might be the last kid with a yearbook photo taken under the Green Bridge Oct 2, 2023
  • July 2023
    • Jul 28, 2023 Get The Light While You Can Jul 28, 2023
    • Jul 14, 2023 Brunswick's Folk Orange Debuts EP Jul 14, 2023
    • Jul 5, 2023 Golfing for Good, The Peter Gardner Scholarship. The Brunswick, Maine High Class of 1980 sets out to endow their third perpetual scholarship with the Brunswick Area Student Aid Fund. Jul 5, 2023
  • June 2023
    • Jun 23, 2023 The Sportswriter Jun 23, 2023
  • April 2023
    • Apr 2, 2023 Grant Wood Was a Drone Pilot Apr 2, 2023
  • March 2023
    • Mar 30, 2023 The Best Picture I Never Took: Missing the Hero Shot. Mar 30, 2023
  • December 2022
    • Dec 26, 2022 Laura E. Richards's House, Lost to a Christmas Fire Dec 26, 2022
  • October 2022
    • Oct 22, 2022 What a Way to Go: A Scholar's Death Oct 22, 2022
  • September 2022
    • Sep 12, 2022 A Full Moon, and Football, Return to Brunswick High School Sep 12, 2022
  • June 2022
    • Jun 19, 2022 I buy it if I like the album cover. Jun 19, 2022
  • February 2022
    • Feb 27, 2022 Who Owned This Book? And, Have You Seen "Topper" Lately? Feb 27, 2022
  • December 2021
    • Dec 31, 2021 The Back-Checker Dec 31, 2021
    • Dec 22, 2021 Hey Catherine Maria Sedgwick, What's Your Pub Date? Dec 22, 2021
    • Dec 13, 2021 Pull Up In Black And Orange And Get Rowdy Dec 13, 2021
  • November 2021
    • Nov 24, 2021 The Tree in Mr. Hubbard's Yard Nov 24, 2021
    • Nov 16, 2021 A Couple of Old Friends Nov 16, 2021
  • October 2021
    • Oct 30, 2021 Down by the River, I Shot My Camera Oct 30, 2021
  • September 2021
    • Sep 8, 2021 f/64. I wish. Focus stacking in pursuit of legendary detail. Sep 8, 2021
  • January 2021
    • Jan 24, 2021 A Favorite View Jan 24, 2021
  • December 2020
    • Dec 16, 2020 On Its Way Home, Samuel Parker's Exploring Tour Beyond the Rockies. Dec 16, 2020
  • August 2020
    • Aug 29, 2020 We Walked Because We Had To Aug 29, 2020
    • Aug 24, 2020 Old Books With Maps, Always a Welcome Trip Down the Rabbit Hole. Aug 24, 2020
  • July 2020
    • Jul 11, 2020 You Want to be Where Everybody Knows Your Name (Or Do You?) Jul 11, 2020
  • May 2020
    • May 16, 2020 This Year, Go Ahead And Buy That Teacher Gift May 16, 2020
  • April 2020
    • Apr 13, 2020 Learning To Judge A Book By Its Cover Apr 13, 2020
  • February 2020
    • Feb 8, 2020 Kate Douglas Wiggin. A Face of Brunswick in 1904 and the first President of the Bowdoin Society of Women Feb 8, 2020
  • January 2020
    • Jan 26, 2020 A Chop Shop For Old Art Books? Jan 26, 2020
  • December 2019
    • Dec 27, 2019 Harriet Beecher Stowe, A Face of Brunswick since 1850. First editions, her imitators, detractors, and their work. Dec 27, 2019
    • Dec 4, 2019 Not What I Wanted: My Diane Arbus Phase Dec 4, 2019
  • November 2019
    • Nov 6, 2019 In October's endless brightness Nov 6, 2019
  • September 2019
    • Sep 15, 2019 Where is Elm Island, Mr. Kellogg? Sep 15, 2019
  • August 2019
    • Aug 20, 2019 A Rabbit Hole Filled With Books Aug 20, 2019
    • Aug 8, 2019 It's No Drive-In Movie, But The Price is Right Aug 8, 2019
  • February 2019
    • Feb 22, 2019 1344 Pounds of Granite Feb 22, 2019
  • November 2018
    • Nov 23, 2018 Light the tree with Brunswick High's talented singers. How did they get so good? Nov 23, 2018
    • Nov 3, 2018 Welcome Home Lily Nov 3, 2018
  • October 2018
    • Oct 29, 2018 Maine's Most Complete Coverage of the State Cross-Country Championships . Oct 29, 2018
  • September 2018
    • Sep 26, 2018 Learning a New Sport, Part II: At least there is no offsides. Sep 26, 2018
    • Sep 3, 2018 Learning a New Sport Sep 3, 2018
  • August 2018
    • Aug 28, 2018 They Don't Build Them Like This Anymore Aug 28, 2018
    • Aug 26, 2018 Bridge Stories: A VW Beetle named Gregor? Aug 26, 2018
    • Aug 22, 2018 Not What I Wanted Aug 22, 2018
    • Aug 21, 2018 On The Road From Belfast: A Conversion Story Aug 21, 2018
  • July 2018
    • Jul 22, 2018 The Fruits of Her Labor: How to Brand a Job. Jul 22, 2018
    • Jul 17, 2018 Drive-by shooting Jul 17, 2018
    • Jul 13, 2018 Joy gives way to empathy. Jul 13, 2018
    • Jul 8, 2018 Finding the vantage point. Jul 8, 2018

Powered by Squarespace