Lens Artists Photo Challenge #309 – Balconies

Our guest host PR of Flights of Soul chose Balconies for this challenge. Decks and porches are more common where I live so I searched through my travel archives to find images of balconies.

I decided to feature a few balconies from San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Many thanks to our host PR of Flights of Soul for this challenge Lens-Artists #309 – Balconies

Lens Artists Photo Challenge #308 – Perfect Pairs

The challenge from Elizabeth of Albatz Travel Adventures is to use diptychs to create perfect pairs. I wasn’t familiar with this term so I was glad she defined it like this: “diptych is two images placed in proximity to one another, forming a pair. To make a successful pairing there should be several things in common, and something very different, contrasting.

I love lighthouses and I am fortunate to live close to two different lighthouses. The first one I will feature is the Tybee Island Light Station, Georgia’s oldest and tallest lighthouse with 178 steps to the top. The original lighthouse was constructed in 1736. The lighthouse has been rebuilt several times and the daymark has also changed several times. Today the lighthouse is painted with the 1916 daymark of three stripes – black at the top, white in the middle, black at the bottom.

The lighthouse has just completed it’s latest restoration. The first two images below show the lighthouse during the restoration project and the lighthouse as it looks today with it’s new coat of paint.

The Lighthouse flies an American Flag on patriotic holidays such as Memorial Day, Independence Day, and Veteran’s Day. The following two images show the lighthouse as it was on Memorial Day, 2021 and this year’s Memorial Day, 2024 after the old layers of paint had been scraped off.

The Cockspur Island Lighthouse is shown in the next pair. On the left is a closeup of the lighthouse at high tide as seen from a boat. On the right is the lighthouse as seen from the Lighthouse trail at Ft. Pulaski National Monument near Tybee Island. If you look closely at the image from the trail you can see the top of the Tybee Island Lighthouse to the right of the water tower on the other side of the water behind the lighthouse.

Many thanks to our host Elizabeth of Albatz Travel Adventures for this challenge Lens-Artists #308 – Perfect Pairs

Lens Artists Photo Challenge #307 – Tourist Attractions Near and Far

Our guest host Leanne of Leanne Cole asks us to feature tourist attractions. She says”What the normal tourist wants to see is not always what we want.” For this challenge I chose some often overlooked quirky and fun tourist attractions from around the United States and Canada. To see a larger image just click on the image.

These days, Florida’s beaches and Orlando area theme parks are the main tourist attractions that bring people to the Sunshine State. Long before Walt Disney began planning Walt Disney World there were other attractions for tourists. The header image is from the St. Augustine Alligator farm which was founded in 1893. The following gallery features the glass bottom boats in Silver Springs which have been operating since the 1870s, mermaids at Weeki Wachee Springs which have been entertaining visitors since 1947, and Homosassa Springs State Wildlife Park which has been around since the early 1900’s.

There are museums, factories and distilleries to explore all around the United States. The following gallery features, in clockwise order starting with the upper left image: The Brer Rabbit Museum in Eatonton, Georgia; the Laurel and Hardy Museum in Harlem, Georgia; The Hammer Museum in Haines, Alaska; the Spam Museum in Austin, Minnesota; the UFO museum in Roswell, New Mexico; the Mighty Eighth Air Force Museum in Savannah, Georgia; the Tabasco Factory in Avery Island, Louisiana; the Jack Daniels Distillery in Lynchburg, Tennessee.

You can find unusual attractions if you take the time to look around. Shown below are the tree that owns itself in Athens, Georgia; a double-barreled cannon in Athens, Georgia; the eiffel tower with a red cowboy hat in Paris, Texas; the giant duck boot at the L. L. Bean store in Maine; and the southern most point in the continental United States in Key West, Florida.

The following statues are: Andy and Opie in Mt. Airy, North Carolina; John Henry in Talcott, West Virginia; Buddy Holly in Lubbock, Texas; Fisherman’s Memorial in Glouchester, Massachusetts; Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn in Hannibal, Missouri.

There are many fun things to see on the way to somewhere else. Here are: Cadillac Ranch near Amarillo, Texas; Wall Drug Store in Wall, South Dakota; the Corn Palace in Mitchell, South Dakota; the start of the Alaska Highway in Dawson Creek, British Columbia.

If you enjoy road trips in the United States and are interested in finding other fun roadside attractions, take a look at Roadside America for some ideas.

Many thanks to our guest host for this challenge Lens-Artists #307 – Tourist Attractions

Lens Artists Photo Challenge #306 – Habitat

Tina’s challenge is to examine the habitats of both humans/and or animals.

A quote from the Georgia Department of Natural Resources tells us that “Georgia’s coastal marshlands encompass approximately 368,000 acres in a four to six mile band behind the barrier islands. Thriving in the waters of the estuaries, these marshes have been identified as one of the most extensive and productive marshland systems in the United States. There are nearly 400,000 acres of coastal marshlands in Georgia which represent a considerable portion of all remaining marshlands along the entire eastern coast of the United States.”

I chose to feature images of some of the birds that feed on the fish, shrimp, snails, and other small creatures that live in the salt marsh. Sometimes I see the birds perched in a tree or on a dock above the marsh as they search for food. It’s fun to watch them wade through the marsh or a creek as they feed.

Great egret wades through the salt marsh searching for food
Ibis feeding in the salt marsh
Wood Stork
Roseate Spoonbills and Great Egrets share a tree
Roseate Spoonbill fishing in a tidal creek
Great Blue Heron perched on a rail above the marsh
Osprey searching for fish

Many thanks to our host Tina for this challenge Lens-Artists #306 – Habitat

Lens Artists Photo Challenge #305 – Two Rectangles

Edigio’s challenge is to feature images that show two rectangles. He explains “By two rectangles, I mean you have two dominant rectangular areas in your image. For many people, this is one of those compositional tools we use without thinking about it. These rectangles give balance, harmony, and unity to a composition.”

I had never heard of the idea of using two rectangles as a technique in photography before reading Edigio’s post. I was surprised to find many images in my archives that met his description.

Eleven years ago we were traveling around Alaska in our RV. All of the images in this post are from that trip.

The header image of the Eagle on a branch uses negative space to create the two rectangles. This next image shows how architecture can be used to define the rectangles in an image. This blue building is a good example of rectangles within rectangles.

Juneau, Alaska

For the next image the horizontal line at the edge of the water defines the two rectangles.

Moose in Denali National Park, Alaska

In the next image the two rectangles are defined by the horizontal line which divides the glacier in the upper rectangle and the water in the lower rectangle.

Calving on Aialik Glacier, Alaska

This sunset image is divided into two rectangles, the sky with the volcano in the upper rectangle and the water in the lower.

Mount Redoubt sunset, Ninilchik, Alaska

Many thanks to our host Edigio for this challenge Lens-Artists #305 – Two Rectangles