Monthly Archives: August 2025

gate-implied fence

I can’t really decide if the presence of the gate implies a fence or if it’s the other way around. Or if it even matters.

But besides that philosophical situation, here’s a photo that captures the entirety of the town of Inez, New Mexico.

Inez, New Mexico
photographed 8.17.2025

fire/investigation

A house had burnt down. The only part still completely standing was the chimney, which was how I noticed the place initially. There was a fence but the gate was open, which I took as an invitation to pull off the road and have a look around.

On the south side of the house, away from the road, was a debris field. I saw an oven, a ladle, about a million nails, chunks of melted glass, ashes, bundles of burnt wire, and two cans of paint. There were photographs waiting to made everywhere I looked, and I did what I could to get them all.

near Milnesand, New Mexico
photographed 8.17.2025

roadside wings

The clouds seem to mirror the wings on the cross, like the spirit of the person has ascended skyward.

Bailey County, Texas
photographed 8.17.2025

life’s hard road

Like most photographers, I have certain scenes that I am attracted to, that are meaningful to me.

About 1997 I started photographing roadside crosses; it was an exceedingly odd thing for me to do, because I would never considered myself to be a photographer. But there was a voice in my head, a feeling in my soul that I *had* to do it. I tried to ignore it as long as I could but eventually that voice became too much to ignore. For a decade, I photographed these memorials, first using a point-and-shoot film camera, then moving on to a very basic digital camera; I almost never photographed anything except these sad memorials.

Then one day, I was done. With the project, and with photography.

Only of course I wasn’t: two years later I took up posting a daily image and here I still am, shooting and posting my way through.

And eleven days ago, I stopped at a roadside memorial. Some things just don’t relinquish their hold on you.

Bailey County, Texas
photographed 8.17.2025

hard times had landed

Here’s the latest entry in my long-running practice of shooting photos through dirty windows, just to see what’s inside.

The last time I posted one of these sorts of photos I commented that there is nearly always a water bottle somewhere in the scene. And just because I can’t see one here probably only means that it was there, but wasn’t visible…

Bledsoe, Texas
photographed 8.17.2025