As I doubt I'll be able to get out for a wander until midweek I went out after lunch today. No sooner had I stepped out the door than I felt rain. Quick change of jacket and off I went as the rain had stopped. There were three brief showers, two of which I managed to find shelter from. Not easy out on the moss. Sundays are quiet as far as field work going on. A different route from yesterday was required if I was to find anything fresh. With that in mind I went down the only track I've not walked so far because I wasn't sure if access was allowed with it going beside greenhouses. It is.
The greenhouses produce plants for gardeners rather than vegetables. This should really be a separate project I think, but there are pictures to be made, even from outside the glass.
The land behind the greenhouses is not as flat as most of the moss, which made for something a bit different.
I always struggle to decided where to focus for pictures like this, particularly as I'm not using a tripod and have to compromise on shutter speed and ISO. Still, display/print small enough and nobody will notice the shallow focus!
This track is lined with permanent irrigation outlets and is where some irrigation equipment is stored. I'll return one morning when the sun will be behind me to see what I can make of photographing it.
Reaching the end of the track I was back on yesterday's route so hurried along it to make another turn on to a track I don't visit often, stopping to photograph some well developed lettuces under fly netting.
By now it was brighter and warmer and it was back to geometric veg pics and the focus point problem before I'd had enough.
Thinking about this project this morning it occurred to me that when it comes to agricultural subjects photographers tend to be drawn to those which are seen as in danger of dying out, or are in some other way outliers from the mainstream. That can often be the case with other subjects. I think it's one reason Martin Parr has photographed the middle class when everyone else was pointing their lenses at the poor and marginal subcultures. While it is important to record what is passing or on the edge in some way it's just as important to record the centre ground, the average, the normal. In time it might become endangered and a record of it in its heyday would be valuable. Just a bit of rambling thinking for a Sunday evening!
All comments (on photos or words) welcome, as ever.