All about scale

All about scale

2023: The year in review

This year’s photos cross landscapes and time, the eternal and ephemeral. From the spiraling mazes of Southwest canyons to the glowing night sky of the Arctic and a handful of people in between, 2023 was about scale.

May 2024 flow easily and provide expanded horizons.

Thanks for tagging along. xoxo TDesert, southwest, New Mexico, Ghost Ranch, maze, spiral,

desert, southwest, Nevada, sagebrush, mining

desert, southwest, Nevada, sagebrush, mining, Owl Club, Battle Mountain

Montana, aspens, outhouse, vibrant

North Dakota, feet, red dirt, mud,

Greenland, scale,

Greenland, whale, abandoned places

Greenland, scale, iceberg, playground, construction,

Iceland, wall art, sheep, stroller

Svalbard, Pyramiden, Longyearbyen, scale, Njordskoldbreen, glacier, abandoned places

WIndow, kitchen, view, Mountain View, scale, Svalbard, Spitsbergen Artists Center, Longyearbyen,

Svalbard, aurora borealis, Longyearbyen, northern lights

I took this photo: Fashion Sense and North Dakota

muddy boots and legs

Displaying my fashion sense, I wear North Dakota.

There were two signs on the front of the building. The more prominent sign did not declare 2 7/8 as the name of the bar, but, rather, said, “ZERO TOLERANCE TO FIGHTING ON 2 7/8 PREMISES.” Welcome to fracking-boomtown North Dakota. I drove by.

That evening a massive thunderstorm piled up along the horizon, clouds towering above open plains, building strength, collecting moisture. Until, in the deepest dark of a moonless night, they had enough and let loose.

The Great Plains create some pretty vivid thunderstorms; this was a beauty. Lightning exploded across town in so many consecutive flashes I could see the length of the main street clearly for several seconds. Not just the blink of an eye that leaves you blinded and wondering if the light had been there at all, these flashes lingered. Clearly jumping from cloud to cloud and ground to cloud, there was constant light. The thunder kept pace, a steady rumble in the background with skull-crushing claps in between.

Then the rain came, pounding on the roof two stories above. The parking lot under my window disappeared behind the downpour, truck tires several inches deep in standing rain, as the drains overloaded.

The storm raged for what seemed hours, eventually tapering off as it moved across the open landscape. I fell back into fitful sleep for too few hours.

Many places become entirely inaccessible after a storm like this. Dirt roads turn to what we called Gumbo in Montana. Red dust, yellow dust, brown dirt, it’s all the same after a night like that, bacon-greased ball bearings. The collective hangover of too much.

Enter, the fracking industry, with its heavily graded and graveled roads that go everywhere, and took me where I needed to go that day. I don’t recall what I was surveying, plants or birds. I remember the landscape, wet and misty from the night’s excess. And, I remember repeatedly scraping mud from the bottom of my boots as I slid through the morning’s work. I took this photo when I realized I was wearing a large chunk of North Dakota. With my newly established fashion sense, I might fit in at the 2 7/8.

The Road not Taken Enough