Regrowth | Guana River Wildlife Management Area

Regrowth | Guana River Wildlife Management Area

Hiking in Guana River Wildlife Management Area, I came across charred tree-trunks and underbrush due to the controlled burn, underwater trail, new growth, and the reflections of colorful trees in the water. I was reminded of the poem by Phillip Larkin:

The trees are coming into leaf

Like something almost being said;

The recent buds relax and spread,

Their greenness is a kind of grief.

I used a Hasselblad CFVII 50C/907X with an XCD 30/3.5 to capture these images.

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Here is Okefenokee swamp, full of pathless, seamless, peerless mud.

Here is Okefenokee swamp, full of pathless, seamless, peerless mud.

Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge is so unique that it is on the list to become a World Heritage Site. It contains 353,981 acres of National Wilderness Area within its expansive boundaries and is home to the headwaters of both Suwannee and St Mary’s rivers and the Okefenokee Swamp.

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Of sunstars and reflections in the woods

Of sunstars and reflections in the woods

The start of my first hike on this trail felt like inhabiting the famous scene of Akira Kurosawa's movie Rashomon, where the woodcutter walks through the woods. Instead of an axe on the shoulder – like Takashi Shimura (the woodcutter) – I walked carrying a sturdy tripod angled at 45 degrees over my left shoulder.

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Vilano Beach Long Exposures
Shehzad Khan Niazi Shehzad Khan Niazi

Vilano Beach Long Exposures

Testing Lee SW150 Filter system on a 17mm Tilt Shift lens on Vilano Beach. I used a 10-Stop ND “Big-Stopper” to make long exposures.

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