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Entries by Dr. Jeff Harper (342)
Road Trip USA: Delaware Nature Walks - Chesapeake & Delaware Canal + Iron Hill Park












































Bonus Photo:Your intrepid travelling photographer contemplating the absolute meaninglessness of existence.

Iron Hill Park in Winter on Christmas Day 2018
I had never been to Delaware before this winter . . . .
The Delaware woods are unlike any forest I have ever seen.
My daughter's family felt that after so much food and drink over the holidays, we needed a nice long walk.
Iron Hill Park is not an especially large state park, but it is fabuluusly beautiul.
The forest varies from widely spaced trees, to rather thick stands.
And here an there a dense, impenetrable thicket of trees.
The terrain is not flat . . . dips and hills describe the landscape. Nice for walking.
Many trails crisscross the airy woods.
Such a strange and beautifully spiritual place.
A favorite summer swimming hole visible only in the winter.
40(f), clear and calm. Such a pretty place.
These are the places photographers die for!!!
Only a few very large trees to be seen.
We spent a fine couple of hours just wandering in the quiet beauty.
Road Trip USA: Chesapeake City, Maryland

There is quaint and there is QUAINT! Chesapeake City, Maryland is the distillate of cute East coast seaport village.
Old wooden houses from America's past.
I love these old wooden houses . . .
It is November, so the tourists have gone. Very colonial.
Chesapeake City is an old town that was cut in half when the 1839 when the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal was built. A draw bridge was replaced with a bridge high enough to handle supertankers . . . high above the old village.
The high bridge across the canal. The other half of Chesapeake City is on the other side.
The bridge dominates the skyline from everywhere in the village.
Chesapeake City is a pleasant place to stroll around on a chilly November afternoon.
It was my daughter's birthday, so I took her and the granddaughter out for lunch in a sweet old canal side restaurant.
Beautiful November light . . .
We ate on the enclosed veranda of the old restaurant.
We continued our walk around the tiny village where we discovered this tiniest of shops.
Although tourist season was over, some of the gift and knickknack shops were open. I loved these table legs in a clothing shop.
The next time I come to Delaware (just across the bridge) to visit my daughter, my wife and I may stay here.
Autumnal crab pots. My daughter pointed out that I have many, many crab pot photos from around the world. True.
Some of the summer tourist shops were closed, like this ice cream establishment . . . not needed on this very cold day.
An idyllic American colonial village. Sweet.
Beautiful autumnal/Halloween display.
Such a nice afternoon spent. There were several of these old places for sale (hhmmmmm). We saw some of these being fixed up for AirBNB businesses.

It snowed the very next day!
Snow on the Jack-O-Lantern.
The weatherman really missed this one! It snowed all morning and with quite an accumulation.
The old truck in the snow . . .
I was very excited by the snow. So many years in the tropics will do that to you!
Huge, we snowflakes!
I went back outside later in the day . . . . the snow had really accumulated! I have taken my truck and camper from the hot and dry Black Rock Desert of Nevada to the snow of Delaware.
Actual snow! I was soooo excited!
Snow!
Out back of the house . . . a winter forest scene. Beautiful.
Road Trip USA: Steens Mountain, Oregon





























































































































Road Trip USA: Standing On The Corner in Winslow Arizona

































Road Trip USA: Lake Tahoe, California: Hiking the Rubicon Trail


































































Yes, we saw wildlife in Lake Tahoe . . . but it was all around the house!
The hummingbirds enjoyed the feeder. They will leave soon on a migration ahead of the coming snows.
A busy little fellow.
A challenge to the feeder perch.
A visiting white egret.
This one was hunting fish . . . and eventually caught one that was too big to swallow whole!
My host told me there were black bears living in the neighborhood, but this did not prepare me for the excitement of actually seeing one standing in the front yard! This is a real 450-500 pound bear! I had the wrong lend for the low light situation, and was so excited that I didn't check my settings! Oh no! I choked!