Stakes marked l.o.d. surround the work zone at one of six new facilities contracted by the Water and Sewer Authority to vacuum and charcoal-filter malodorous air emanating from the Potomac Interceptor, a 50 mile long gravity sewer on national and regional park properties in Maryland, DC and VA leading to Blue Plains treatment plant. Slated for completion by November 2011by WASA, the Angler's site is still under construction, apparently on holiday break 12/29/11.
The construction schedule allowed "sufficient time to reproduce a[n unnamed] rare, endangered and threatened plant that is located" at one site. I wonder which plant and hope it worked out.
Perhaps this scheme is a good one, but in the mean time visual disturbance assaults the senses like air wafting humidly, putridly and incongrously from vents in the woods. The new building, designed to look like a lockhouse, and the $3.36 million repair to the 2008 canal breach associated with Hurricane Hannah form a continuous construction site. More trees appear doomed with orange x's.
Beyond the unsettling limits of disturbance, a visit to trees and rocks photographed before in search of green.
No thrilling images here, just change and what remains on a visit to an old same place.
Friday, December 30, 2011
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Surfing the Melvin Hazel Branch
Melvin Hazel Branch debouches across Tilden Street from the 1810 Pierce Coach House, once a dependency of the Pierce plantation. While directing the Rock Creek Gallery in the beautiful, granite-walled barn for three years until 2000, I never managed to investigate the stream.
Last week, two days before Christmas, following a night of rain, I met a friend at it's mouth, returning to the branch for the first time since the 11/15/11 hike. This morning brought colder seasonal temps, a more austere palette, saturated trunks, dripping drops and clearing skies, all the better to surf the shifting light amid the coppery warmth and cooler complements of the beech hanger.
Instead of the small digicam, it was dslr + tripod, no cheating intended. Don't look at the logic too closely, but in light of the stated blog theme, this trip grew directly from the earlier tripod-free excursion.
Surfing Melvin Hazel's waters as opposed to its lights, no matter the storm pulse, may not be safe, according to this pdf a stream-caretaking photographer who lives nearby shared. Organics and Metals in Rock Creek Tributaries counterbalance the beauty in the eye of the beholder.
Last week, two days before Christmas, following a night of rain, I met a friend at it's mouth, returning to the branch for the first time since the 11/15/11 hike. This morning brought colder seasonal temps, a more austere palette, saturated trunks, dripping drops and clearing skies, all the better to surf the shifting light amid the coppery warmth and cooler complements of the beech hanger.
Instead of the small digicam, it was dslr + tripod, no cheating intended. Don't look at the logic too closely, but in light of the stated blog theme, this trip grew directly from the earlier tripod-free excursion.
Surfing Melvin Hazel's waters as opposed to its lights, no matter the storm pulse, may not be safe, according to this pdf a stream-caretaking photographer who lives nearby shared. Organics and Metals in Rock Creek Tributaries counterbalance the beauty in the eye of the beholder.
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