Impassable
London, ON, October 2008 [Click image to embiggen]
I'm stretching things a bit with today's photo selection. This week's Thematic Photographic theme is autumn (click here to jump in now). This photo was taken the morning of Octtober 29th, when London awoke to a freak blizzard that dumped a huge amount of heavy, wet snow on trees that still retained a large proportion of their leaves. The result? Chaos. Everywhere.
The snow was pretty much gone after three days, but sidewalks and streets throughout the city remain littered with massive remnants of entire trees that were brought down. The kids, understandably, are quite upset at what's been lost.
So this is a perfect example of seasons not behaving as they should. Don't you hate when that happens?
Your turn: Three things, actually...
- There's still time to participate in last week's Thematic Photographic challenge. Click here to get all autumny.
- If you haven't submitted your caption for the latest Caption This, head over here.
- Start mulling over the next Thematic Photographic theme, rows. I'll post the first entry for the new theme at precisely 7:00 p.m. Eastern on Wednesday. But it's never too early to start thinking about how you'll tackle it, right?
I remember one fine April 15th (easy to remember the date, eh?) I was under my car in the parking lot of my apartment building working on one thing or another and suddenly noticed it was snowing. Now in London Ontario that might not be an especially surprising occurrence, but here in the Sunny South, it's virtually unheard of! In fact, I believe that's the latest I've ever known it to snow here. At least in this part of the state. It only came to about 6 inches, but it definitely surprised a bunch of people.
ReplyDeleteAhh! I feel rather silly for not making the connection between early snowfalls and the heavy leaves causing trees to buckle under the weight! Oh, but I do feel the kids' loss. I'm quite fond of trees. Ridiculously attached to them, even, and I often personify them when a branch or whole tree falls... attributing to them feelings of pain.
ReplyDeleteGeez, Mojo... I just sat here for almost a minute trying to figure out the significance of April 15th. And I'm American! I think I'm caffeine-deprived today.
See, and that's the kind of snowstorms we get in the mid-Atlantic all the time. not as much of the white stuff, maybe a touch more ice, but the outcome is about the same- it makes my parents start bitching that they haven't moved far enough away from Buffalo!
ReplyDeleteAutumn indeed!
Great pic!
Holy Crap! I remember one in April a couple yrs back, 23 inches in Northeast Ohio, but I don't ever recall anything like that in October! That's EARLY!
ReplyDeleteNice photo!
Me fail meteorology ?: thats unpassable !
ReplyDeleteBart Simpson
I blame it all on global warming! What have we done to our planet!
ReplyDeleteWe usually get a little snow here in the Houston, Texas, area about once every ten years.
Happy WW, thank you for your visit and nice comment. BTW, I don't use food deliveries.
..
I've seen snow fall at 40+ degrees. How's that for science?
ReplyDeleteHeya, Carmi. Good to see you're still doin' it. :)
It's 17 days earlier this year for our winter. I blame it to global warming too..sigh
ReplyDeleteNice shot!~Happy WW!
I'm not sure if my comment went through? Anyway, happy WW!
ReplyDeleteA seasonal ice storm will rip the trees apart, too.
ReplyDeleteA few years ago we had 70plus degrees on New Yrs Eve -- normal it is sub freezing.
This juxtaposition of beauty & destruction is awesome.
ReplyDeleteAs much as I love autumn, I can't help but adore a hearty snowstorm whenever it happens (though I could do without trees falling all over :( )
Wow! My friend experienced something similar in Oklahoma a year or two ago.
ReplyDeletePoor trees. My own kids would be consumed with envy at the sight of all that snow though, since it never snows here in TA. They live in hope each winter that we'll decided to do the three hour drive up to the Hermon so they can play in the snow for a few hours!
ReplyDeleteThey were actually in the States for not one but two blizzards years back, but they're too young to remember.
Amazing how dramatic black and white photography can be...well, I guess since snow is white, that would make sense.
ReplyDeleteWe had an late snowstorm in Oklahoma one year that brought down not only hundreds of trees but most of the power lines that ran around and under them. Usually the culprit is ice.
Nice photo. I enjoyed scrolling down to view your others.
This is my first visit to your site and I am amazed at your photos!! I am one of the odd folks who actually enjoys snowstorms and ice storms, because of the beauty they seem to bring out and the quiet right after them.
ReplyDeleteI am sorry to hear about the damage to the trees of course. The black and white made the photo that much more beautiful.
I plan to come back regularly, I am just an amateur but I can tell that just looking here will teach me things. Thank you so much for sharing your work with us!
Check out my offering this week at:
http://beingchronicallyillisapill.blogspot.com/2008/11/wordless-wednesday-falls-last-hurrah.html
Happy WW!
Maureen
Happy WW! I am glad you "stretched" it. My photo had too much lens flare on it so I had to go BW but it turned out to be a creative venture.
ReplyDeletehttp://pagesofourlife.blogspot.com/2008/11/wordless-wednesday-remembering-our.html
I have got to figure out how to link back over here when I post!
Thanks for all the photo and writing inspiration you are cultivating for all of us!
that is a striking shot. I've been through a couple of ice storms, so I know these types of scenes all too well. That is beautiful in B/W.
ReplyDeleteHappy WW. Check out my Scenes of Autumn (I'm participating in the Thematic Photographic, too. I also use your site for my ww prompts and participate if I can. So far so good.
I'm also asking for you and your readers to stop by page, check itout and Vote for me. I’m a finalist in a Blogging Scholarship. I'm a student and I need Financial Aid :)
Visit this link and select Danielle Lee.
Thank You very much.
Nice photo, I love the treatment & how it was converted into black & white.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if you might wanna join our Monochrome Friday meme, this Friday's theme is about Windows/Door.
We had a freak snowstorm like this once when I lived in Montana -- on June 4! There were tree limbs everywhere, and many crushed cars. I remember waking up to the sound of splintering wood and thinking that someone was breaking into the house. Then when I looked outside I saw what seemed like half a tree suddenly plummet to the ground. Because it was June the snow was gone by the next day, leaving downed branches everywhere.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful! Winter Wonderland in October!
ReplyDeleteWe had snow a couple of weeks ago locally. Some parts of my stat not too far from got pretty slammed by the storm. We only got a few wet flakes.
That's so heartbreaking to lose trees like that. That was a common occurrence in spring in our old neighborhood - heavy, wet snow taking down huge branches. You captured the chaos quite nicely. I like it in b&w.
ReplyDeletePoor trees -- but a great photo.
ReplyDeleteI love the (visual) effect of snow on trees -- surreal.
Nice shot. I really like the black and white mode.
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by :) And I'm working on it ;) I have a few submitted to a juried show. I'll keep you posted.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful shot. I like it. But you always take amazing pictures.
ReplyDeleteMy ww is up now at www.mytwoblessings.blogspot.com
Robin
Though a tree has been lost, this image is beautiful. In Arkansas, where I am, I haven't experience anything that bad yet. It snows like crazy here, but not too many trees fallen. It is one of those images that is beautifully sad. Great post.
ReplyDeleteHappy Wordless Wednesday!
Wow! A lot of snow! It is still a beautiful picture though!
ReplyDeleteThere's something that seems so desolate about this photo.
ReplyDeletewe had something like that happen one October about 10 years ago here in KS. It's sad to see all those trees down.
ReplyDelete