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Day's End

Night Swimmers Below the beaver dam Mirrored Willow & Water Birch Prickly Pear Creek in winter The Fall of Evening on Prickly Pear Creek Disturbance Beaver Pond Reflection Day's End Willow Dam with Ice Willow Tangle Landscape with Red Gesture Two Catkins Beaver Dam Break Marriage Song Notes Expanding Light Evening Light Landscape with Reflection State of Mind

Last night, just moments before the sun went behind the ridge, I stopped along Prickly Pear Creek just a little south of East Helena. There, the creek runs between two ridges and has been used and abused for years, by locals who toss beer cans and garbage in the gulch,and by hunters who discard elk and deer carcasses after taking what meat and trophy parts they want to keep.

I had driven by this creek numerous times, though I hadn't stopped until now. I had Sam with me and we both wanted to get out someplace new. So, this is where we ended up. I had to keep Sam on a leash for this walk - if I hadn't, he would have availed himself of the opportunity to douse with that special fragrance loved by dogs -- "Eau de Carcasse." There were at least 30 carcasses along the stretch of water we walked. Eeeuwww!

I had my camera with me, of course. The light was fading fast and I knew I had to hurry to catch it before nightfall. As I looked around for something that appealed to me -- a scene or detail I might want to shoot, I thought about what many people have told me when they see my photographs of Montana -- that I must live in Paradise, that Montana is so beautiful, pristine, that they want to visit here, to see what (I) see.

Yet here I was, scanning this trashed-out, dumping place for some little detail to photograph. It was worse than a garbage dump. This creek with its sad parking spots, its lovers' lane, its game carcasses strewn in the bushes ... this damaged wetland was a stark testimonial of how little we humans care for the earth.

In anger, I almost turned right around to leave. But something in the water caught my eye. A beaver dam, breached in the middle, icy willow branches bravely stacked against the winter, against the beavers' predators. The little dam was something I needed to see last night - it was a glimmer of optimism, of hope, in this trashed out riverbottom.

I sat for a few minutes, just feet from the large ribcage of an elk. I scolded Sam for being too interested in the bones. He put his head on his paws and watched me shoot -- quickly -- as the light changed and the water shape-shifted.

I wanted to redeem my species somehow, to reach back in time, find the memory of who this little dancing creek had once been, before the cement plant started polluting the waters, before people started using the valley as an unofficial dump and drinking place ... I wanted to catch the narrow slice of sky reflected in Prickly Pear Creek. I wanted to remember, with my mind's eye and my camera, the way graceful branches danced with the current.

I tossed a stone just upstream of the beaver dam. I clicked and clicked the camera shutter until I could see only the beauty of water, of evening, of a beaver's industry and natural design ...

until I could see
only the deep
blue sky and black
branches and golden
light swimming in
blue night
rippling


This is how to see the place where you belong.
This is how to love
the places you spend your days and nights.
Look under the surface
love the beauty you find there
no matter where you are.



~~~~~~~~~~~~

40 photos | 812 views



Comments on this set

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Muffet  Pro User  says:

The picture of the light reflecting on water captivated me first, but the writing will probably stick with me even longer. I found it haunting in the nicest way. Thanks!
Posted 31 months ago. ( permalink )

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larry&flo  Pro User  says:

I don't know how to add to what Muffet said. I was attracted by the pictures and captured by the writing.
Posted 31 months ago. ( permalink )

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MontanaRaven  Pro User  says:

thank you for reading the whole thing, Liz and Larry and Flo. I know it's long - I expect many people will skip the text.
Posted 31 months ago. ( permalink )

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florencita says:

This is so beautiful!
Written 20 and 22 Jan...my birthday on 21 Jan...Thanks for that wonderful gift!
Flo
Posted 25 months ago. ( permalink )

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MontanaRaven  Pro User  says:

you're very welcome, Flo ... my pleasure. :-)
Posted 25 months ago. ( permalink )

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me*voila (away)  Pro User  says:

Magnificent! I guess we have to grow older to see the beauty in abandoned things, to find textures where no one looks and to appreciate that we are there, in that moment, to be part of it and be grateful!
Posted 18 months ago. ( permalink )

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M00k  Pro User  says:

I love how you look beyond and I admire your ability to show this to us!
Posted 18 months ago. ( permalink )

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storyseeds  Pro User  says:

It is good to know Raven still watches over this land, seeing with a keen eye the detail of good and bad, death and life, renewal, destruction with an eye poised still to bring hope to those creatures who so easily, so often live in benighted blindness
Posted 18 months ago. ( permalink )

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MontanaRaven  Pro User  says:

thanks mevoila, m00k and storyseeds, for reading and looking. (and commenting!)

storyseeds, your comment is a mini-short story in itself. thanks!
Posted 18 months ago. ( permalink )

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Corydora  Pro User  says:

Your remarkable words add so much to this haunting set. Thank you for sharing this unforgettable experience :-)
Posted 18 months ago. ( permalink )

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0 W8ing  Pro User  says:

I like your appropriation of the Steven Stills lyric, Maureen, as I've always liked that song, too.
So many people, when they get a camera, go looking for some "good photographs" like the ones they admire by the famous and the pros. Only after that empty pursuit fails to satisfy do they start to photograph what they see in their own way, and begin to make satisfying And interesting pictures.
Recently, in our Raleigh flickr group, we drew 'assignments' from a hat. One such was "Hate it, Shoot It", taken from a Popular Photography article years ago. It may seem to be the flip side of your point, but perhaps it really is the same coin.. expressing what matters with this incredibly effective medium.
You consistently either do that or find the hidden beauties among the otherwise dismal or disgusting... another fine sort of discrimination.
I'm sure you only scratched the 'surface' of that place. Maybe we'll see more.. maybe not.. I just applaud what you've done with it, already.
Posted 18 months ago. ( permalink )

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MontanaRaven  Pro User  says:

thanks wayne ... you got it:
"Hate it, Shoot It" ... may seem to be the flip side of your point, but perhaps it really is the same coin.. It is the same coin. I should send you a wide-angle shot of this place so you can see what I mean when I say "I almost turned right around to leave ... Hate it Shoot it is exactly what I was doing. And in doing that I came to love the place.
Posted 18 months ago. ( permalink )

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former ly  Pro User  says:

how inspiring! great eye to see beneath and beyond all the debris of today with intent to preserve... ah, if we could just spread that vision with everyone...thank you for sharing your insight and beauty with us!
Posted 18 months ago. ( permalink )

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Églantine  Pro User  says:

Good for you, Maureen, for resisting your urge to turn away! May your efforts to see the beauty have a rippling effect!

with admiration,
Fleur-Ange
Posted 18 months ago. ( permalink )

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Lynn Morag  Pro User  says:

What a fabulous set!
Posted 18 months ago. ( permalink )

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Vol-au-Vent  Pro User  says:

Maureen, this set is really outstanding - and yet - I got to see it because of that deer's foot (didn't believe what I saw.... I wanted to know more, so I looked through the whole folder) and I thought, I would never take photos of things I find terrible and revolting (in attitude, not in how you took a very beautiful photo!)

You managed to show the sheer beauty of this dump and I am glad you did.
Sometimes I think that life is ugly enough so that I don't particularly wish to dip deeper into it; I prefer - honestly - to enjoy the beautiful, the enjoyable moments.

But I know you well enough by now to be aware that you are a very positive AND sensible (hope this is the right word) person. I love your colourful work and I adore your writing. So, all in all, it's a positive comment, this, right?! :)

You should get a medal for putting your finger on this bleeding wound - and for your tireless engagement for nature!

Love from Switzerland and BINGO for being yourself.

Kiki
Posted 18 months ago. ( permalink )

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ghb624  Pro User  says:

This set is an amazing piece of work, and I mean both words and photos. The writing conveys at least half, if not more, of the powerful impact.
Your description of that place makes me vividly recall several places in my area, but one in particular -- a stretch of backwater off the Tennessee River. It's a wooded, secluded area that attracts quite a bit of fishing activity. I've gone there because it's a good spot for putting in with a canoe or kayak. But it's also depressing because of all the abuse one sees, committed by those who go there to fish -- or whatever. No animal carcasses, but lots of litter and other signs of the heavy foot of man. The thing that's most difficult to understand is how those who (apparently) enjoy some aspects of nature's bounty can still have so little concern for its preservation and protection.
Maureen, the experience and vision you shared here is most inspiring!
Posted 17 months ago. ( permalink )

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MontanaRaven  Pro User  says:

Jerry, I hope you go back to that place on the river someday ... with your camera. And go in winter, before the new green leaves and buds -- and life -- start covering up all the neglect!

I have found this kind of winter photography (the sort I put together in this set) to be more challenging in some ways. But if I had to do it all over again, I would still choose to shoot these photos in winter. Maybe because winter is starker, less "clothed" or covered-up with green life ... it feels like more of a stretch to find beauty in the midst of all the garbage and destruction ... yet for that very reason it is worth the effort.

If we can see beauty even in the worst situations then we can see it anywhere. And hopefully through sharing that vision, help others to appreciate more, the places they live.
Posted 17 months ago. ( permalink )

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*brilho-de-conta says:

you are amazing!
Posted 17 months ago. ( permalink )

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wordfortreasure says:

I've just spent the most peaceful, inspiring hour looking at many of your images and reading your thoughts, both in flickr and on your blog. Thank you for sharing so much of yourself and your world, and for reminding me to take a moment, to breath, and see the beauty all around me. I am so grateful to have stumbled upon such a lovely soul. :) angela
Posted 7 months ago. ( permalink )

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