Return to Nature: Coastal Highway 1 & Big Sur
My photographic roots are in nature. I learned to take photographs - or rather, learned how to take better photographs - using the stationary elements of life as subjects: the trees at sunrise in rural NC, the mountains streams and flowers of the Smoky Mountains, the beaches and byways of the Eastern Shores from NJ to Florida. These are the places where I learned that photography wasn't a hobby but a life long adventure. A passion. And while lately my passion has been people, I sometimes long for the quiet & solitude of a world that stands still.
This week I was able to find that peace again.
As I write this draft, I am sitting on a solitary bench on a bluff in a California coastal state park, overlooking the ocean and cliffs, listening to the waves crash some hundreds of feet below me. It is a scene that is among the most beautiful I've ever seen. And I am reminded that too long have I been away from this world. From the early morning draw of the sunrise. From the jeans and trail shoes and dirt paths that go deep into the forest. From the peace. And from the rhythm - a rhythm of the sun: early mornings, late nights, missed meals and big yawns.
Returning to this place inside me is a welcome change of pace. My passion, of late, is photographing people. I couldn't walk by a scene without wondering how it might improve photographically by adding a person to it. It's been an amazing journey, but one littered with something less than quiet. I love it, I really do. But every now and then it's nice to get away, fly solo, and return to a melody in my head composed only of bird song and wind in the trees.
Comments
And my best friend used to run a big resort there in Santa Cruz.
Not only are you an artist, also a wonderful poet.
Beautiful
bill