Tag Archives: photographs

Snow, snow and more snow!

Two major snow storms less than a week apart. I’m getting a wee bit tired of the white stuff now. At least the husband gets off work and I have time to create.
Here are some pictures from last Saturday’s snow…

View from the front yard.

Icicles on the back porch.

Sunset from the back yard.

And here is what I see out my studio window today…

Dining room window…

Out the front door…

Maybe we should try making snow ice cream. Here’s another recipe for snow ice cream.

©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Clyde: Background Finished?

That’s always the question I ask myself when I finish a painting session. Is that area done?

When I stopped work on the portrait of Clyde this afternoon, it was my assessment that the background was done.

The client decided early in the process that she preferred a solid background. No landscape. Nothing special.

She further decided to go with a color that would play a role in Clyde’s coat color, but left the selection of that color up to me.

I had been giving some thought to using Yellow Ochre mixed with a white and another earth tone. But I’ve never been completely satisfied with the way Yellow Ochre tints when used with a lot of white, so when I got ready to paint, I decided to try Transparent Yellow Oxide. After all, if it didn’t work, I could wipe it off and no harm would be done.

Transparent Yellow Oxide comes out of the tube very dark and although that fact made me hesitate, it didn’t stop me. I’m glad it didn’t. The tint is beautiful. It makes me think of warm, sunlit adobe in the lighter areas (and on a day as cold and windy as today is, I’ll take my warmth wherever I can get it!).

I applied Titanium White around the horse and Transparent Yellow Oxide around that. They were blended together with a large, China bristle flat, then I used a small trowel to smooth out the brush strokes. The result was a smooth paint surface with a random blending of colors that further enhanced the look and feel of adobe. It was such a pleasant effect that I did the entire background in that fashion.

Most of the background is light in tone and value, with both darkening toward the edges to create a ‘halo’ effect around Clyde’s head. In the upper left corner and the lower right corner, the color is almost entirely Transparent Yellow Oxide with just a suggestion of lighter value and in the extreme corners, I added Burnt Umber to further darken them.

When I stopped painting for the day, I decided the background was done. To reinforce that idea, I moved the painting from the studio to the drying easel in another room. That also removes the temptation to fiddle and tinker!

One note: The background does not follow the traditional Flemish painting methods of multiple layers. The juxtaposition of a background painted with a heavier, opaque method and a horse painted with finer detail and thinner color layers has always worked well for this type of portrait.

The next step is to let the background dry completely. I’m not sure how long it will take the Transparent Yellow Oxide, but the white will require about a week to dry sufficiently. I’ll check the painting again toward the end of the end, but I don’t plan on doing any further work on it until next Monday.

©Copyright 2009 by Carrie Lewis. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

QT, Scooter, Shadow: Melisa Pearce’s “Touched By A Horse” Boys

QT
This morning was spent photographing three former champion reiners who now have new jobs in life. And yes I do take normal photographs! I once handed a client her proofs and she just stared quietly at them, finally looking up and saying softly…”These don’t look anything like your work”. LOL!

But back to these amazing guys, who are not old and retired but average aged that have experienced career changes in life that they embrace and love. Career changes are not just for people!

Scooter
Each one of these handsome boys have become a therapeutic healer. Melisa is a psychotherapist who uses horses extensively in her work. These are her personal show horses who no longer perform at World championships but work their magic on her clients and other folks who show up from all over the country to participate in one of many equine experiential learning workshops she offers at her Lil Bit North Ranch in Longmont CO.

Shadow
I have been very fortunate to share and sell my art at her workshops. People leave the ranch wanting to bring home a “horse” to solidify their experience so Melisa and I felt it would be more powerful and meaningful if they were able to bring home a representation of her horses whom they worked with. This is a fun and exciting project! I also photographed Kathy Pike’s horses (Coaching With Horses) a couple of weeks ago for the same purpose. This is a very worthwhile project that may continue to help people with their healing process once they are back in their mainstream life.

I will continue to share more about this artwork as it develops.

Enriching the life of humans and horses one day at a time……

Yours in the dance,
Susan
windhorseOne Studios

©Copyright 2009 by Susan Williams. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Summer at Longwood

Took the day off on Monday for a trip to Longwood Gardens. Thought I would share a few pictures…

Got an old stump? I think this is a great idea for a birdbath. Seemed well received by the Longwood bird residents too!

My favorite of Longwood’s summer displays are the water lilies – hands down. So many gorgeous dragonflies to look at too.

One of my favorite new flowers (new to me that is) – Throatwort. I think that I am not in the right zone to grow this though. Maybe as an annual?

Another favorite I hadn’t heard of before, Showy Hebe. I just adore purples and blues in the garden…

Flowers… are a proud assertion that a ray of beauty outvalues all the utilities of the world. ~Ralph Waldo Emerson

©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Tiger Cheese

Sorry, this post isn’t about tiger cheese (although that is one of my husband’s favorite cheeses – the cheese with the tiger on the label). I’ve been tagged again, this time by Linda over at The Briar Rose Gate. I had to play along because this one seemed really fun. The rules are take the 6th picture out of the 6th folder on my computer and blog about it. Since I have two huge picture folders that contain tons of sub folders and hundreds of photos, I’ve decided to do two photos.
The 6th picture out of the 6th folder on my hard drive was of a tiger from the Philly Zoo (America’s 1st Zoo!). It was taken soon after they built their new Big Cat Falls, a really nice enclosure for the large cats. This picture was taken in the winter, the best time to visit the zoo if you hate crowds. I think when we went that time there were about 10 people in the whole place. We had a great time sitting and watching the cats. Tigers are my husband’s favorite animal and we’ll probably go there on Monday, his birthday.

The second picture was from my external drive where I store most of my photos. Oddly enough this is another photo from Alkmaar, Holland which I just posted about a week ago. The 6th picture in that folder is of a lady wearing in traditional Dutch dress on the opening spring day of the town’s big weekly cheese market. You can see the Kaas Museum behind her. I didn’t go into the cheese museum because I don’t care that much about learning about cheese. I was more interested in the local beer museum :)

So today the little one went to spend the night at her “Grammy’s” house and I get the next 2 days to paint! I haven’t had a moment to paint in over a week so I’m really excited. I have two signs started and two commissions to work on.
Off to paint now!

©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Recipe for disaster, ranch rodeo, cowboy, photos.

Labor Day in Montana, means Rodeo! We chose to attend a ranch rodeo in Choteau, Mt. Half the fun was that we knew some of the cowboys, or knew their folks, so the action gets very personal. The crowd is involved, and loud, and the riders are totally harassed by their friends and viewers.

My favorite horse choice for this rodeo, was this buckskin. His performance was flawless! These photos are of the trailer loading contest. The announcer called out the number of a steer, the cowboys would rush the steers, sort out their number, and one of them would rope the steer.

Sometimes there are four or five ropes out at once, and there’s more rope dodging than roping going on! In this instance, the buckskin and his rider, got the loop on the steer and began dragging him toward the trailer.

In this contest, the steer is drug to the trailer, the rider piles off his horse and hangs onto the steer, while the other cowboys on his team try their best to help him. They push the steer into a horse trailer, and get him into the pen at the front, then slam the door on him and go get two horses and load them into the back compartment of the trailer.

At this point, the cowboys lock both latches on the trailer gate, and run around to sit on the flatbed. Contest over! The team with the quickest time wins the money.

This guy got the steer to the trailer, jumped off and his friends grabbed the end of the rope with him. The steer made a big swing around the back of the horse, running the rope up under the saddle as he did so. One of the guys came running to try to extricate the horse.

When he ran up, the steer began to swing around the horse, and the rope came undone.

Some horses would have gone crazy in this situation, but not this buckskin! He calmly walked away. Now that’s a horse! The crowd went wild, the cowboys got the steer and the horses loaded and that was that. What fun.

Ranch rodeos promote the old time cowboy ways of doing things. A real, hands on approach to rodeo, with lots of teamwork involved.
Donna Ridgway

©Copyright 2008 by Donna Ridgway. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Donna Ridgway’s website.

Pack mules going behind Swift Dam.

We were out fishing one morning, then headed to the dam house from the ranch, for breakfast…I saw a Forest Service trailer going by, so told Robert if we got to the trail head we could probably watch the mule string as they loaded the packs.

I enjoy watching the Forest Service mules, they work hard, and they’re so used to following each other in the strings they develop their own ways of getting along with each other. Much of the way mules treat each other involves humor. So it’s always a pleasure to see them.

From my previous post about the trail head into the Bob Marshall, you see where the trail winds it’s way up the cliff face behind the Dam House. Here the mules have climbed the trail and they’re headed out behind Swift Dam.

I took a lot of photos of this pack string as they were loading up. If you would like to create some paintings of pack mules, as they’re being loaded, just ask. Photo prices for artist reference begin at $20.

Donna Ridgway

Email Me if you have questions, or want to inquire about purchasing a painting.

Remember, you can find horse art , Western art, Mule and Donkey art
wildlife art, cow art, and animal paintings, my reference photosfor sale on my website.

©Copyright 2008 by Donna Ridgway. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Donna Ridgway’s website.

Coming down to Swift Dam, near Dupuyer, Mt. Bob Marshall trail head.

As we came down the trail above Swift Dam, we could see the Dam House, it’s that little white dot in the center of this photo. In 1964, Swift Dam was an earthen dam, and it broke. My uncle was the dam keeper at that time. He was haunted after that, thinking he should have known the dam was going to break. Many lives were lost and he felt responsible, even though there are events you can’t control. It’s a miracle he and his family didn’t lose their lives, for it could easily have happened had they been living in the dam house at the time. Luckily, they were at the ranch house working when the dam broke.

In this photo, you can see how the water roared from the gorge, narrowly missing the dam house. My cousin and I were talking, remembering the flood, we’re amazed that trees have grown back in that path of destruction for we never thought we’d see that in our lifetimes.

Switching gears a little, from the flood to the Bob Marshall, when you’re heading into the Bob Marshall Wilderness from this trail head, the trail goes around the house, and up the ridge. It’s a steep trail and it has the respect of all who ride it’s face on horseback. In fact, it makes you think a time or two when you hike the cliff face on foot. It’s steep and the trail is narrow.

After you climb the face of the cliff, you cross this windswept area above the dam.

My uncle never bothered to take the cliff trail around the dam, he always crossed this rock face you see here. I walked that trail once, but there’s no horse alive I’d trust to carry me over the trail he and his horse Chili always traveled.

As you go back around the dam on the south side, you cross those granite ridges of solid rock. I remember the horses scrambling up one side, and sliding down the other. We came out of the Bob in a rain storm and the hills were slick in places. Iron shoes on granite aren’t always the best thing.

Once you’re behind Swift Dam, the trail evens out until you cross a rock slide above the Gorge. The sight is beautiful, and if you ever see it, you’ll not be sorry you took the time to go there. But crossing the rock slide is another place where you’ll have to trust your horse to carry you through.

There are times when I think I love this country so much, just because it’s where I grew up and it’s familiar to me, there are other times when I think any person, anywhere, would love this country for it’s sheer beauty.

It’s not an easy country for the wind blows hard, and winter’s are tough, but it’s a wonderful country for those who love it.

Donna Ridgway

More stories about this area. Including some of my own that pop up!

More reading about the Rocky Mountain Front near Dupuyer, Mt.

©Copyright 2008 by Donna Ridgway. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Donna Ridgway’s website.

Mountain pass, trip on four wheelers, near Swift Dam.

We decided to take the trail behind Swift Dam Reservoir, near Dupuyer, Montana. to the top of the mountain. When we left home, we were going to the top, and then taking the same trail back down. This is an easy part of the trail where I could stop to take a picture back at my cousin and Robert coming up the trail behind me.

At this point, the trail is a road a pickup can travel.

We stopped half way up the pass to take some pictures. From here, we’re looking down into the Bob Marshall Wilderness.

This mountain slope looked like it had a crown on it. The end of the photo to your right, is the point where we crossed the mountain top and headed down.

The fires of 1910 came through the mountains here. In a little over one hundred years, the vegetation here is still sparse to non existent in areas where the flames swept through.

I love the swoop of the mountains in this area. So many of them have that graceful curve, dropping off to a high cliff at their front. And amazingly enough! There’s still snow in the mountains! We haven’t seen that in Montana for several years, snow in August!

This part of the Rocky Mountain Front is most beautiful to me.

When we were nearing the top of the mountain, this is what it looked like. The wind has swept this ridge bare of most vegetation. I imagine there are many days you could come here and the wind would sweep you off the edge of the mountain. At this point, we could see two four wheelers ahead of us-that’s the little dot you see that’s darker than everything else. I wanted to include this photo to give you a feeling for the vastness of this place. I’m using a 300mm lens on my camera.

This is Mount Richmond, don’t you love that hole in the mountain? When I see things like this hole in a mountain, I’m awed to think of the forces that created this just so I could see it, many years later.

Here’s the tip of that crown I showed you in the earlier photos. Once again, the trail dropping off the east side of the mountain is at the furthest right point of this photo.

From the top, you look down on Heart Butte. I never in my life thought I’d have a chance to get high enough to look down on Heart Butte! Elevation 6821 feet. more info about this area.

When the air is clearer, you can see the Sweet Grass Hills from this point. They’re over a hundred miles from the top of this mountain. Whenever I’m riding four wheelers with someone, if they suggest turning back, I always say, but I wonder what’s over this next hill? People hate coming with me for that reason…they make me promise before we go, that I won’t do that to them. Where’s their spirit of adventure?

Well, on this trip, there was no next hilltop! So my cousin and Robert knew they’d get to go home once we were at the top. :)

Here’s looking back at the trail from the west side of the slope.

While we were at the top, we started visiting with the two men and the lady who were at the top before us, remember the dot that was four wheelers in the one photo? As we were visiting, they told us about the trail coming down the mountain. They made the comment we shouldn’t take it, because they didn’t think we could make it down. They continued by saying, if we did make it down, we’d probably never find our way back to Swift Dam and my cousin’s house!

You might as well wave a red flag in front of a bull and see what’s going to happen! The moment those words were out of that guy’s mouth, I knew we would be going down the other side of the mountain. We waited until they were out of sight, and we watched where they picked up what was left of the downward trail, and we jumped off the mountain.

Here we are at the top, left to right, my cousin, me, and my Robert.

Starting off the mountain, looking back, I saw this picture and had to stop to take it. I don’t have brakes on my four wheeler, so stopping on this slope wasn’t easy. I didn’t get near the pictures I wanted to coming down, my hands were to full with driving and keeping upright.

Here’s some more of the mountain on the way down. It never looks as steep in pictures as it was in real life. :)

Here’s Feather Woman peeking over the hill at us. She’s a beautiful mountain. You can see a little of how steep the hill was coming down in this photo.

A close up of a portion of Heart Butte.

Here we are celebrating we made it down all in one piece! When we got back to the dam house, and were talking to my cousin’s boyfriend (who didn’t make the trip with us) Robert told him, “I came down the mountain with two insane women!” It was so funny.

Most of the road down the hill had been washed into deep ruts by spring runoff. So we had many places we slid through. It was hard choosing the correct path to take, for if there was a bend in the road to where you couldn’t see the trail ahead, you had to guess which way the water washed the ruts, and pick the trail accordingly or you’d be on such a side hill, you’d tip over. I don’t know why, but I get chosen to be the fearless leader so all the responsibility of finding the trail was on my shoulders… But I did it!

From this point, we’re five miles from home, but have no idea which trail will get us there. In my years of roaming the mountains on horse back or four wheelers, I know if you head in the direction you want to go, and if you keep heading down hill from the top, you’ll get there sooner or later. So after we did our little happy dance, we headed across the foothills for the house.

I’ll add some photos of the remainder of our trip to the next post…
Donna Ridgway

Email Me if you have questions, or want to inquire about purchasing a painting.

Remember, you can find horse art , Western art, Mule and Donkey art
wildlife art, cow art, and animal paintings, my reference photosfor sale on my website.

©Copyright 2008 by Donna Ridgway. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Donna Ridgway’s website.

Horse photos from a week at the ranch.

Photo of a horse's butt copyright Donna Ridgway, all rights reserved.

Photograph of horses in Montana crossing a ridge with clouds in background copyright Donna Ridgway, all rights reserved.

Photograph of a horse's head against the sky, copyright Donna Ridgway, all rights reserved.

Close-up photo of a horse's eye, copyright Donna Ridgway, all rights reserved.

Close-up photo of a horse, copyright Donna Ridgway, all rights reserved.

When I lived on the ranch, and worked everyday, I barely noticed the way the light plays over the form of a horse. If you need your horse in a hurry, and you see scenes like this, they’re so fleeting. You don’t have time to really see the beauty around you.

So I’ve posted these horse photos so we can take a moment to reflect on how wonderful our equines are. I hope you experience a feeling of peace and harmony when you see these photos, the same as I did when I took them.

You can purchase these horse photos as prints on my Red Bubble site below. There are many options in pricing and size, canvas and paper. Something for every budget! Place your order today.
Donna Ridgway

Buy my art

©Copyright 2008 by Donna Ridgway. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Donna Ridgway’s website.

Peruvian school teacher, Montana Shepard

Photo of sheep grazing in Montana copyright Donna Ridgway, all rights reserved.

If you think of sheep as passive, humble, or lowly…think again. Their reputation has risen to warrior status as they wage war on weeds that rob livestock and wildlife of much needed pasture. The sheep are a great aide in fire control as they clear out brush and low lying shrubbery that spreads a blaze.

Photograph of sheep grazing in Montana mountains copyright Donna Ridgway, all rights reserved.

As sheep graze, they eat weeds before they eat grass, it’s their nourishment of choice! We saw this band of 1400 ewes and lambs near Lincoln, Montana.

Photo of sheepherder's camp in Montana copyright Donna Ridgway, all rights reserved.

When we spotted the sheep, we hoped there would be a sheepherder near by. We saw the camp trailer in the trees, snuggled up under some shade. The road was a little rough but the Yukon we drive made it into camp just fine.

Photograph of sheepherder and horse in Montana mountains copyright Donna Ridgway, all rights reserved.
Meet Roberto Ninahuanca Tocas! Luckily for us, he was home! I can’t tell you how interesting it was to meet him… His home is in Peru, where he teaches Spanish to the kids. He came to America to herd sheep to make more money for his family.

A couple of months ago, we were coming home from Helena, Mt when we saw a band of perhaps 3 or 4000 sheep and goats headed straight up the mountain… We stopped to wave at the sheepherder that day. Come to find out, that herder is Roberto’s cousin, he also came from Peru to herd sheep in America.

Roberto told us his cousin spends a lot of time alone, as he herds sheep into extremely remote areas. Roberto’s sheep were closer to the highway when we saw them and he said he has more contact with people than his cousin does, although he spends many days alone with the animals.

Roberto has a family in Peru, a wife and two children, a girl and a boy. He said his English isn’t very good, but he tries hard to speak it correctly. We didn’t have any trouble visiting with him at all, we thought his English was great.

He has a laptop computer in his little camper home, and it runs off batteries, but he didn’t have internet. He did have a cell phone, but he didn’t have a signal a lot of the time, as he’s in the mountains. He told us he takes three months off each year. November, December and January are the months he spends with his family.

I asked him if he had trouble with bears, coyotes or wolves. He said a mountain lion killed six lambs a few days ago. He called the government trapper to come in and find the lion but the hunt was unsuccessful.

His sheep have a schedule. He told us they lay down for a nap around noon and rest until about 4 pm. After that, they get up and head up the mountain. Once they’re on top, they spend the night there. Roberto gets up early, and with his horse and his dogs, he heads up the mountain to bring the sheep down for water, salt and mineral.

His dogs respond to whistled commands. They’re lean and fit…not an ounce of fat….all muscle…from climbing the mountain each day to bring the sheep down. Roberto told us much of the time, the dogs work the sheep by noticing which way he or his horse happens to be facing. If he turns his horse to the left, the dogs automatically herd the sheep ahead of him turning toward the left.

His boss brings him supplies as he needs them. He also has two horses, and when the present horse is worn out, the boss brings a fresh one.

We’re going to email pictures of Roberto to his wife. I will never in my life get over how the internet and digital cameras have changed the world. Isn’t it amazing we could meet a teacher from Peru, who’s herding sheep in Montana? And in no time at all, we can email photos of him to his wife and family?

Photograph of sheepherder's sheep dog in Montana mountains copyright Donna Ridgway, all rights reserved.

This is one of the sheep herding dogs who works with Roberto, he was smiling at me.

If you’d like to read more about the way sheep control weeds in Montana, I’ve included a link to an article from the Montana Standard below….

Another article about sheep waging war on weeds.

We hope we see Roberto again!

Donna Ridgway

©Copyright 2008 by Donna Ridgway. See original post here.

To learn more about this artist, visit Donna Ridgway’s website.

Daisy donkey, the mechanic.

Big day for Daisy, not only did she get her teeth brushed, she had to help Robert work on the Bobcat. She can’t stand to let him work alone.

Daisy the donkey and part-time Bobcat mechanic. Photo copyright Donna Ridgway, all rights reserved.

Daisy the donkey pulls a hammer out of Robert's hand. Photo copyright Donna Ridgway, all rights reserved.

When she grabbed the hammer out of his hand, she didn’t quite know what to do with it as it was heavy on one end and about tipped her head over. She dropped it in a hurry. That was to much work!

There’s never a time he’s doing work, she isn’t right there with him. She has to see everything he does. Daisy is very interactive!


Every time Daisy moves from one side of Robert to the other, she trips over his feet. It’s enough to get you rolling on the ground laughing. She never steps on him, she just trips over him.

Daisy the donkey playing mechanic. Photo copyright Donna Ridgway, all rights reserved.
Daisy the donkey and part-time Bobcat mechanic. Photo copyright Donna Ridgway, all rights reserved.

Everyone should have a donkey or two, there’s no doubt about it!

Donna Ridgway

©Copyright 2008 by Donna Ridgway. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Donna Ridgway’s website.

Chestnuts Only, Please!

Young Thoroughbreds. Copyright Linda Shantz.
Last night I finally got around to popping over to a nearby Thoroughbred breeding farm I used to work at to take some photos. This time of year they’ve started turning out at night, and I just love the light in the early evening. Most of the mares and babies are back from Kentucky now, and sales prep is in full swing, with the first bunch leaving earlier this week for Fasig-Tipton Kentucky.

I took a few hundred photos (what else is new?) so just a small selection here. Honestly, there are more than chestnuts on this farm! Maybe I’m just feeling a little chestnut horse-deprived after taking Jay over to start back training on Wednesday. I still have Gracie and Peaker here, of course, but Jay has enough personality for half a dozen horses, so his absence leaves a big hole! The bunch in the first photo are some of this year’s colts. Half of the group came over right away when they saw me, but these four stayed up on the hill grazing until I was about to move on to the next pasture. At that point, in true Thoroughbred fashion, these four came tearing across to see what was going on.


On the way to the fillies’ paddock, I took a few pics of the yearling colts. This boy is out of a mare called Heavenly Tears (aka Millie), and Heavenly Tears is a half sister to Monster’s dad, Tejabo. So this handsome goof is a relative of my silly mare!

Chestnut foal with a white blaze. Copyright Linda Shantz.
I can’t keep up with who’s who on the farm anymore – I still know some of the mares, but can’t keep up with all the fashionable stallions these foals are by! My retention just isn’t that good! I need to take notes!

©Copyright 2008 by Linda Shantz. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Linda Shantz’s website.

Reference Photos for Artists

Photo of a Lipizzan horse for artists. Copyright Juliette Harrison.

One of my newest adventures has been the acquisition of a digital camera body. No….I do not intend to EVER give up my B&W film work. That is where my heart and artistic intentions lay. But, in an effort to challenge myself, I have started taking more color images. The things in the frame become more glaringly apparent in color. Thus I have to be more observant and that is a great exercise for me. As a result had all of these color images and nothing to do with them. I have decided to market them to my fellow artists as reference images. You can find these pictures that I have mostly left uncropped and unaltered at http://www.julietharrisonphotography.smugmug.com/ . If you are an artist and have any special image needs, feel free to contact me at juliet@lechevalthehorse.com .

©Copyright 2008 by Juliet Harrison. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Juliet Harrison’s website.

A Month of Anniversaries

Now that June is over and I have a bit of time to reflect……I realized what a difficult month it has been. For me, it was a month of Anniversaries.

The most simple ones are the anniversary of my birth (50 years), my sons birth (14 years) and that of my marriage (20 years).

More subtle anniversaries were things like, it has been a year since my mom passed away. That made my big birthday very bittersweet, not having her there to share the day with me. The last time I heard her voice was on an answering machine last year when she called from the ICU to wish my son happy 13th birthday. I heard she really gave the nurses a hard time that day insisting that she be able to call. So Jackson’s birthday also served this year as a reminder of her absence.

Other anniversaries were celebrated……it was 10 years ago, for my 40th birthday, that I returned to riding after a 27 year hiatus from horses. Along with that came my focus on photographing horses. And 7 years ago in June, I bought my first horse Tony. Tony has answered my childhood dream and been a great companion and teacher.

So, now that June has ended, I can finish reflecting on the past and move again towards the future which includes exhibitions of my work at the HITS Artists and Exhibitors Gala on July 24th. Culminating in the display of work on the HITS showgrounds in Saugerties, NY through mid August. In addition, my work will again this year be at Terry Lindsay’s Equidae Gallery at the Holiday Inn in Saratoga Springs, NY from July 25th through September 1st. If you can get up to enjoy a race day be sure to stop by the gallery.

©Copyright 2008 by Juliet Harrison. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Juliet Harrison’s website.

Yellow warbler and other photos.

Foals playing. Photo copyroght Donna Ridgway.

Black bear cub. Copyright Donna Ridgway.
This bear hung out above our camp, digging in the hillside. He dug dirt until he had a dust cloud around him, then, he’d get tired and plop down in a hollow spot to rest. After a while of watching the camp, he’d begin to dig again. He was so much fun to watch.
Yellow Warbler bird. Copyright Donna Ridgway.
Nothing’s sweeter than the song of these little yellow warblers. The swamp was full of them and we all enjoyed their company.
donna

©Copyright 2008 by Donna Ridgway. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Donna Ridgway’s website.

When Worlds Collide

Western horse riders cowboys. Copyright Judy Wood
Western riders cowboys. Copyright Judy Wood
Cowboy. Copyright Judy Wood
Horses taking a break. Copyright Judy Wood

This weekend was one of those interesting ones that I particularly enjoy, when two quite different parts of the “worlds” I inhabit come together for photo ops. The world of horses is a varied one, and with a few exceptions, I’m pretty keen on all of them.
The first of the Ebon Stables dressage shows happened this weekend, and as a dressage rider and enthusiast, I’m generally on the spot for these shows, camera in hand, and list of riders who want show photos firmly in my head.
This year, though, there was a timing conflict, as I had heard about a working cowboy camp that sounded way too good to pass up for enhancing my collection of western themed photos. Once I learned that the camp was being held at the ranch of Dale and Teri Clearwater, where I have done photos before, I knew I had to take in this event as well.
I met the Clearwaters last fall through a mutual acquaintance. I phoned them to say I had heard about them and would love to come to their place to do some photography, and they kindly agreed to my request. When I got out there for the first time, I was just blown away by the landscape and by the type of operation they run. This is classic working ranch stuff of the sort I didn’t know existed less than an hour’s drive from my place. Dale and Teri have only owned the ranch for a few years but have turned it into a functional and well maintained horse training facility, with the bonus of a lot of cattle on the side. They embody the solid character and strong work ethic that epitomizes the best of ranch life, and Dale has a well-earned reputation as a skilled trainer of working cowhorses and of cutting horses. Bonus for me is he and his operation are as classic in look and style as he is in his working methods, so for the purposes of my photography, it doesn’t get much better than that.
Dale and Teri are also very accommodating in humouring me with my sometimes odd ideas of what I want to photograph around their place. I’m used to being mostly ignored when I’m out getting shots, and sometimes just barely tolerated, but the Clearwaters are positively co-operative and welcoming about having me lurking in the background with a big lens, which is a really nice change. I do my best to stay out of trouble and not get in the way too much, but at bottom I’m a city person and there’s a lot I don’t know when it comes to ranch life.
I was able to get to the ranch for the Saturday afternoon session, which was calf roping. There were a lot of participants in this clinic, all working cowboys/girls with their own horses, and four guest instructors besides Dale. There was also a camera crew filming for the Cowboy Country television show, which was my first hint that this was a fairly big deal. The level of organization that must have gone into putting this event on was impressive, as they were handling not only the clinics for the participants, but also providing camping facilities, a grand Saturday night dinner, live entertainment, and a Sunday morning church service in addition. Many of the participants came with their families for the weekend, and there were swarms of little kids zipping about, being ably cared for and entertained by helpers. Mercifully the weather was decent, as the pouring rain we had earlier in the month would have meant trouble for this event. Mind you, Saturday was darn hot and it was stressful for all concerned in the clinic–instructors, participants, horses and calves, but this is a cowboy operation and they are all used to functioning in whatever extremes nature chooses to throw at them.
I learned a bit about the ins and outs of roping and handling the cattle as I watched and did my photos, and I was impressed that all the instructors emphasized ways of working with the horses and cattle that were the most efficient, safe, and least stressful for the animals. Just get in, do the job right, and get out. No carrying on, no dramatics, no grandstanding. It’s always a pleasure to watch professionals do what they do best, and here I’m referring to both the human and the equine participants.
So of course I can’t pick just two shots for this post, and none of them is going to be of the dressage show. There’s another dressage show coming up in a couple of weeks, and I’ll get yet more shots at that one, maybe some I can post here.
The first shot shows some of the guest instructors waiting for the afternoon’s work to begin. They were just hanging out and visiting, with Dale’s beautiful hundred year old barn in the background.
In shot number two they are heading in from having brought the calves in from the pasture. Here they have been joined by Dale, who is second from the right. When I got this shot the border collie had momentarily taken over herd wrangling from the riders.
Shot three shows Dale organizing his rope in the nice new large round pen he has constructed since I was last there. It’s a great work area to contain horses and cattle safely while they are being worked with.
Shot four is of a couple of the women riders and their horses taking a break from the heat in the relative coolness of the tree-lined approach to the house. I did a little bit of Photoshop work with this one–will do more when I get the time to make it look more like a painting.
Dale and Teri have their own website up now. You can check it out and learn more about them by following this link http://justaboutaranch.com/
Next weekend, weather permitting, I have two more horse events to photograph–a heavy horse ploughing competition on Saturday, and a combined driving event on Sunday. There seems to be something (or several somethings) every weekend once summer hits. I really think the federal government needs to deal with this by legislating extra weekends over the summer months so we can fit everything in.

©Copyright 2008 by Judy Wood. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Judy Wood’s website.

The Morning Line

Ginger Brew copyright Linda Shantz

Plate morning! There’s always a special feel around the backstretch, whether you’re running in the big race or not. I remember we always made sure the shed was leveled and raked even more carefully than on normal days, and the apron and lawn outside was particularly clean. We even polished the brass on the halters. Being stabled close to the receiving barn, we witnessed the arrival of the horse guards first-hand, something that was sure to set my dear girl Petunia over the edge! Not her favourite morning, that’s for sure.

Colt bucking photo copyright Linda Shantz
When I turned the foals out this morning, they spent the first five minutes running and playing. It was probably inspired by the cool, damp air, but I entertained that they just know it’s Plate Day! Gracie is backing Ginger Brew, because, of course, chestnut fillies rule. Billy’s dad Mobil ran second in the Plate, and Gracie pointed out that it was a chestnut that beat him (stablemate Wando, 2003). Billy kind of likes Not Bourbon today, being Ontario-sired and all, but he let on that he’ll be rooting for Uncle Jerry and Deputiformer. Nothing wrong with picking a longshot! Just ask Monster…her dad Tejabo sired a whopper in TJ’s Lucky Moon back in 2002.

Filly bucking photo copyright Linda Shantz


Woodbine Entertainment and LongRun Thoroughbred Retirement are having a neat fundraiser after this year’s Plate. The saddle cloths of all the starters will be auctioned on eBay this week to raise money for LongRun. I’ll post a link to the auctions as soon as I have it so you can check it out.

Painting in progress of Mike Fox by artist Linda Shantz
Okay, so I’m hoping I’ve distracted you from asking about the Mike Fox painting. All right, I admit it, it’s not done. So I came up short. It’s getting very close though. At this stage I’m working on a lot of nit-picky stuff, so progress is a lot slower. Won’t be long now! And maybe I’ll start on this year’s winner a little earlier! Hope that grey sky brightens a little by post time!

©Copyright 2008 by Linda Shantz. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Linda Shantz’s website.

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