After descending from the cliffs, we drove into Shelburne Falls for lunch and to enjoy this delightful little town. Here we watch as a women prepares to blow a glass vase.

Next we hiked up to a place called High Ledge which overlooks the Shelburne Falls Valley. On the trail Jeanine pauses to pick apples from a tree along the path. The search for a perfect apple would eventually find Jeanine climbing up into the tree. Eventually she settled on three apples which would be consumed later on our journey.

I had ocassion to look at some of my old photos today. This one taken in 1981 documents my last visit to the Grand Tetons. My cousin Vincent and I stopped here briefly as we drove cross country from California to Indiana. I had just completed my Master’s degree at Stanford and was moving back to the Midwest. When Maya sees this photo she is going to point out that my feet should have been together and my toes more pointed. I recall that the other side of this wall was a steep cliff and will use this as my excuse for poor form.
Between sleep-overs and soccer practice, Jeanine and I found ourselves kid free late this afternoon. We decided to go out for ice cream and stopped along the way to buy fresh organic produce at Hutchins Farm Stand. Jeanine was stocking up for her next cooking class while I was shooting this still life. When I looked up I saw one of my soccer teammates with a couple of stems of broccoli in his hand. I let him know they would be closing any minute and he gave me a funny look. I then learned that he and his brother are the owners of the farm and stand and could not believe the synchronicity. This man who I so enjoy playing soccer with also grows the food which my wife prepares for our family and to which I am drawn as a subject for my photography.

This musician plays an instrument of her own design consisting of nested glass bowls of increasing diameter on a long pole connected to a crank. A member of the audience was asked to turn the crank while she moistened her fingers and applied them to the various bowls to play music using the harmonic vibration of the glass. The sound was as beuatiful as it was difficult to describe.
