Author Topic: Back gate  (Read 2328 times)

David Paterson

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Back gate
« on: July 15, 2015, 13:48:09 »
Our weather continues cool and changeable but it's possible to see that summer is here. This is the gate from our garden into a small field which we keep as a wildflower meadow.

elsa hoffmann

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Re: Back gate
« Reply #1 on: July 15, 2015, 15:03:16 »
Beautiful place to live
Is there a chance you could include the botton of the gate and fence also? Seems a bit short
"You don’t take a photograph – you make it” – Ansel Adams. Thats why I use photoshop.
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Bjørn J

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Re: Back gate
« Reply #2 on: July 15, 2015, 15:06:12 »
Lovely atmosphere, I want to walk through the gate into the meadow.
Bjørn Jørgensen

Mike G

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Re: Back gate
« Reply #3 on: July 15, 2015, 16:10:37 »
Very nicely done Dave. You're not having the best of weather up there are you!

Bjørn Rørslett

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Re: Back gate
« Reply #4 on: July 15, 2015, 16:12:16 »
Dave, is your meadow allowed to grow unmanaged or is the grass cut in summer?

David Paterson

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Re: Back gate
« Reply #5 on: July 15, 2015, 16:55:40 »
Thank you all for your kind comments.

Elsa - I did also shoot it as you suggest, but I preferred being closer in on the honeysuckle.

Mike - if 14degC, cloudy with occasional rain makes a summer day, then we've had a glorious summer.

Bjørn J - you are welcome to come and walk through that gate any time you like!

Bjørn R - the field is managed - cut once a year, at the end of August. We have experimented with non-management and with burning off the dry grass in very early spring. Of the three alternatives, non-management is least satisfactory; burning is best but the field is bounded by blackthorn hedges approx. 6-8m tall and 10-15m deep, and we were in some danger of losing those when we tried burning. To burn successfully, we need a dry spell of at least 5 days, in March; some wind - not too strong - in the quadrant NW to NE; and about half-a-dozen helpers, armed with brooms, to protect those hedges. It's too tall an order, however if you have an alternative strategy in mind, I'd be interested.

Gary

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Re: Back gate
« Reply #6 on: July 15, 2015, 17:27:35 »
A very pleasing gate and a well captured shot. To my eye it is all about the gate and vine ... I think a tighter, square-ish might crop work well. (But I'm into tight images.)

As to management ... how about goats once or twice a year? (Out here you can rent a flock of goats for "weeding".)
"Everywhere you look there are photographs, it is the call of photographers to see and capture them."- Gary Ayala
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Critiquing my snaps are always welcomed and appreciated.

Bjørn J

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Re: Back gate
« Reply #7 on: July 15, 2015, 17:39:01 »
Thank you all for your kind comments.


Bjørn J - you are welcome to come and walk through that gate any time you like!


Thanks Dave, Scotland is one of the places I have always wanted to visit. Including Skye. And the Hebrides. And maybe the remote St. Kilda :)
Bjørn Jørgensen