Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Day 332 - Centennial Park

(Click any photo to enlarge.)

***Scroll down to see my offer for Red Cross donations.***

The Fishing Tree
I finally learned the name of this
parasite. It's called Dodder.
I had business in Howard County today, so I chose Centennial Park for my walk.  I parked at the boat ramp, which allows canoers, kayakers, and boaters with electric motors to enjoy the waters.

There is a paved 2.4 mile loop around the lake, which passes natural areas preserved for wildlife and goes through an arboretum with marked trees.  There are picnic areas, benches to sit on for watching the water, and pavilions to rent for larger group events.

Ms. Mallard
Web Worms are in full force.
People were fishing, kayaking, and rowing boats on the lake.  Joggers, walkers, and bikers were all using the paved path.

Wildflowers were blooming along the edges of the lake, attracting butterflies and bees.  Occasional groups of geese and ducks could be seen in the water.  Large areas of the lake also had water lilies in bloom.

Enjoying the water
Black Swallotails on Milkweed
This park is a great local resource.  Lots of people were enjoying it today.  The 2.4 mile loop was just the right distance for my photo walk.  If I lived nearby, I'd visit it regularly, because it is a great resource for the local residents.




Father and Son


Save the date!  Monday, September 2, will be the last day of my year long photo walk project, and I'm planning a big celebration walk with anyone who wants to join me!  September 2 is also Labor Day, so many of you will have the day off.  The walk will be in downtown Frederick, around 9 a.m., followed by a brunch.  More details will be posted on my blog as they get confirmed.  But mark your calendars, grab your cameras, put on your walking shoes, and join me for my final Daily Photo Walk.  Let's jam the streets of Frederick with photo walkers! 


Click on any photo to enlarge it.
*************************************************
Forward me by email any receipt for an online donation made to the Red Cross for disaster relief, and I will send you a 5x7 print of your choice from any of my daily photo walks or from my website.  Offer good until September 2, 2013.

Visit my web site: camscamerashots.zenfolio.com
Follow me on Twitter: @camscamerashots
Email:  cam.miller@comcast.net

Cam's rules for the Daily Photo Walk:
  1. walk every day
  2. the walk must be in addition to any other planned activity for the day
  3. post a photo every day
  4. use whatever camera is easy and convenient for walking comfortably; always have a backup camera at the ready in case of mishaps (I use the Nikon Coolpix P7700)
  5. no weather excuses
  6. walk only where it is safe to do so

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Day 331 - National Shrine of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton

(Click any photo to enlarge.)

***Scroll down to see my offer for Red Cross donations.***

Visitor Center and Basilica
Seton Chapel
It was another perfect summer day, so I took the Hummingbird Feeder <aka my red convertible> to Emmitsburg to visit the beautiful campus of the National Shrine of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton.


There is much information online about the life and work and eventual beatification of the saint, who became known as Mother Seton.  I am not going to attempt to write it all in this blog, but in a nutshell, Elizabeth Ann Bayley was born in New York in 1774.  She was an Episcopalian, and after marriage to her husband William Seton, had five children.  After her husband's death from tuberculosis, she started a school for young ladies.  She converted to Catholicism and came to Emmitsburg in 1809, where she started the first free Catholic school for the poor in the United States and founded the Daughters and Sisters of Charity.  She was canonized in 1963.  Please do read more about her fascinating life.  She was only a Catholic for 16 years, but she accomplished so much. 

Altar of Relics
Interior of the Basilica
I went first to the Visitor Center, where there is a short film and a museum with several exhibits.  I opted not to go to those, because I was more interested in walking the grounds.  I left the center and went into the Basilica, where I met Sister Pat, from Michigan.  She was a docent today, and we got to talking.  I mentioned photographing butterflies, and she launched into the most amazing story about her friend Irma, who recently died at age 60 from cancer.  Irma was sure she was going to heaven, and she told Sister Pat that she would come back after her death and visit her as a butterfly.  After Irma's death, Sister Pat came out of mass one day to find that there was a butterfly on her car.  She took pictures of it, and it flew to the handicapped parking sign, then returned to land on her chest.  Sister Pat talked to the butterfly, addressing her as Irma.  When she opened the door to her car, the butterfly flew inside.  Sister Pat drove to Irma's house to show Irma's husband the butterfly.  Butterfly Irma stayed inside the car, posing on the windows so that Sister Pat could take pictures.  Later, Sister Pat let the butterfly go free.  Sister Pat looked in a butterfly identification book and found that the butterfly was a Red Admiral.  When telling her chiropractor about this incident, he wrote down the name and then scrambled the letters.  He found "Irma Ladder" within the scramble.  Sister Pat believes that this butterfly was Irma's ladder to heaven.

"New" Cemetery
Mother Seton Memorial Garden
Now I have to tell you, I am not a Catholic, nor am I a regular churchgoer, but it is stories like this that confirm my belief that there is a higher power, and that one only needs to look as far as nature for evidence.  OK, enough of my soapbox.

After her moving story, which made a lump in my throat, Sister Pat told me about the construction of the Basilica.  It was started in 1961 and finished in 1965.  Nearly the entire structure is of marble.  There are beautiful stained glass windows, made in Germany, and an altar holds the relic remains of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton.

The Stone House
The Old Cemetery and Mortuary
I left the Basilica to find the Stone House, which housed the first 16 Sisters of Charity in four rooms, and then the memorial garden, with a beautiful statue of Mother Seton with two children.  I continued to the White House, which was built for Mother Seton and the Sisters of Charity, and then walked to the first cemetery and mortuary.  Mother Seton's remains were first in this cemetery, along with some of her children and relatives; later her remains were moved to the Basilica.  This beautiful old cemetery is surrounded by native stone walls, into which are placed the 14 Stations of the Cross.

Also on this beautiful campus is housing for the nuns who live and work there today, as well as a new cemetery for  those who have died in service.  It is a peaceful, beautiful place.


At the Cross
I recommend that anyone who is devout or who is primarily spiritual like me, make a visit to the Grotto, find lunch in Emmitsburg, and then finish with a visit to the shrine.  Of course, Catholics will get the most out of this trip, but for anyone who appreciates communing with nature and history and beauty, it is a thoroughly worthwhile trip.



Save the date!  Monday, September 2, will be the last day of my year long photo walk project, and I'm planning a big celebration walk with anyone who wants to join me!  September 2 is also Labor Day, so many of you will have the day off.  The walk will be in downtown Frederick, around 9 a.m., followed by a brunch.  More details will be posted on my blog as they get confirmed.  But mark your calendars, grab your cameras, put on your walking shoes, and join me for my final Daily Photo Walk.  Let's jam the streets of Frederick with photo walkers! 


Click on any photo to enlarge it.
*************************************************
Forward me by email any receipt for an online donation made to the Red Cross for disaster relief, and I will send you a 5x7 print of your choice from any of my daily photo walks or from my website.  Offer good until September 2, 2013.

Visit my web site: camscamerashots.zenfolio.com
Follow me on Twitter: @camscamerashots
Email:  cam.miller@comcast.net

Cam's rules for the Daily Photo Walk:
  1. walk every day
  2. the walk must be in addition to any other planned activity for the day
  3. post a photo every day
  4. use whatever camera is easy and convenient for walking comfortably; always have a backup camera at the ready in case of mishaps (I use the Nikon Coolpix P7700)
  5. no weather excuses
  6. walk only where it is safe to do so

Monday, July 29, 2013

Day 330 - Audrey Carroll Audubon Sanctuary

(Click any photo to enlarge.)

***Scroll down to see my offer for Red Cross donations.***

Queen Anne's Lace with Pink Edges
Goldenrod signals fall allergies!
What a beautiful day it was!  Because the humidity was down, the skies were blue, and the temps were in the mid-70's, I knew that today's walk would have to be about the walk.  Some days, these walks are more about the place or the potential photos; other days, it's about the walk.  And because this was one of those days, I chose the Audrey Carroll Audubon Sanctuary to visit.  I wanted to enjoy the beautiful day and commune with nature out in the sun, so this was the perfect place.

Reaching for the Sky!
Thistle Seeds
The wide open paths between natural areas of tall grasses are also populated with milkweed, Queen Anne's Lace, and a host of other natural plants I don't know the names of.  Winding in among the plants are also bindweed (they look like morning glories), honeysuckle, Virginia Creeper, and lots of poison ivy.

This is the same sanctuary that has the old dairy farm house and buildings, but they are in the woods, and because I was alone, I decided not to venture that way.  I think the whole thing with the abandonment and the ghostly figures painted on the barn walls is sort of creepy.

Yellow Swallowtails
Black-Eyed Susans
I walked for about 45 minutes, enjoying the weather, when I found a butterfly garden.  It was the Eagle Scout project of Zachary Dowell in 2009.  Yellow swallowtails were having a great feast on the purple butterfly bush.

When I got home to look at my photos, I was pleasantly surprised by the fact that I had taken 45 on my walk, and there were plenty for the blog today.  Sometimes, the walk that is just for the walk also turns out to be for the photos, as well!

 Save the date!  Monday, September 2, will be the last day of my year long photo walk project, and I'm planning a big celebration walk with anyone who wants to join me!  September 2 is also Labor Day, so many of you will have the day off.  The walk will be in downtown Frederick, around 9 a.m., followed by a brunch.  More details will be posted on my blog as they get confirmed.  But mark your calendars, grab your cameras, put on your walking shoes, and join me for my final Daily Photo Walk.  Let's jam the streets of Frederick with photo walkers! 

Click on any photo to enlarge it.
*************************************************
Forward me by email any receipt for an online donation made to the Red Cross for disaster relief, and I will send you a 5x7 print of your choice from any of my daily photo walks or from my website.  Offer good until September 2, 2013.

Visit my web site: camscamerashots.zenfolio.com
Follow me on Twitter: @camscamerashots
Email:  cam.miller@comcast.net

Cam's rules for the Daily Photo Walk:
  1. walk every day
  2. the walk must be in addition to any other planned activity for the day
  3. post a photo every day
  4. use whatever camera is easy and convenient for walking comfortably; always have a backup camera at the ready in case of mishaps (I use the Nikon Coolpix P7700)
  5. no weather excuses
  6. walk only where it is safe to do so

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Day 329 - Hampstead, MD

(Click any photo to enlarge.)

***Scroll down to see my offer for Red Cross donations.***

Do they really need
"enter" and "exit" signs?
Police station in an old bank
As is true with most of the small Maryland towns I have visited, commerce seems to have left the center of town and settled on the ends.  You'll find the grocery stores, the fast food chains, and the gas stations clustered at the far ends of the main drag.  Of course that makes sense, seeing as how most of the modern businesses need parking space and square footage for their stores.  However, in some of the small towns, there is still a commercial center, where antique shops, a cafe, a hair salon, and a bookstore/gift shop draw visitors to the center of the "old" downtown.


Do you think this sign needs updating?
In Hampstead, the town is long, spread for about a mile on either side of Rt. 30, also known as the Hanover Pike.  There are older homes that have been converted to businesses such as tax preparation, a barber shop, a hair salon, a florist, and a carpet cleaning business, mixed in with residences and small commercial areas with a bank, a laundromat, a diner, and an auto parts business.  There does not seem to be a cluster of businesses, such as in downtown Berlin or Westminster.  It is definitely spread out over the length of the pike.

Rotting tree stump makes great fungi
Have the hydrangea been extra pretty this year?
Although there is more to Hampstead than meets the eye, with businesses and industry located both north and south of the town, my walk today found it to be a relatively quiet place, with the exception of fairly regular traffic moving along Rt. 30, aka Main Street.

"Recycled" school building
I parked at one end of town and walked along the sidewalks, which were in good shape for a relatively "old" town, thanks to a recent Main Street Revitalization program.  I always appreciate when there are push-buttons at crosswalks and fewer trip hazards due replaced sections where trees have uprooted the sidewalk joints.

Patriotism is a common theme
in small towns
One building I especially took note of was the old Hampstead School, which was been renovated into senior housing.  The beautiful brick building is on the National Register of Historic Places.  I always appreciate when historic buildings are put to a modern use.

Hampstead is yet one more Maryland town I can cross off my list.  The days are flying by so fast.  There are only 35 more days in this year of daily photo walking.  If you have any special places you would like to see featured, please let me know by leaving me a comment or emailing me (address below).  I have the time and the means, and I'd love to make my readers happy!

Save the date!  Monday, September 2, will be the last day of my year long photo walk project, and I'm planning a big celebration walk with anyone who wants to join me!  September 2 is also Labor Day, so many of you will have the day off.  The walk will be in downtown Frederick, around 9 a.m., followed by a brunch.  More details will be posted on my blog as they get confirmed.  But mark your calendars, grab your cameras, put on your walking shoes, and join me for my final Daily Photo Walk.  Let's jam the streets of Frederick with photo walkers! 


Click on any photo to enlarge it.
*************************************************
Forward me by email any receipt for an online donation made to the Red Cross for disaster relief, and I will send you a 5x7 print of your choice from any of my daily photo walks or from my website.  Offer good until September 2, 2013.

Visit my web site: camscamerashots.zenfolio.com
Follow me on Twitter: @camscamerashots
Email:  cam.miller@comcast.net

Cam's rules for the Daily Photo Walk:
  1. walk every day
  2. the walk must be in addition to any other planned activity for the day
  3. post a photo every day
  4. use whatever camera is easy and convenient for walking comfortably; always have a backup camera at the ready in case of mishaps (I use the Nikon Coolpix P7700)
  5. no weather excuses
  6. walk only where it is safe to do so

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Day 328 - Back to the Sunflowers

(Click any photo to enlarge.)

***Scroll down to see my offer for Red Cross donations.***

Watch out for the bees!
Sunflower Dreaming
The young woman who lives with me for one more month, Veronica, twisted my arm to take her to the sunflower fields at McKee-Beshers Wildlife Management Area.  Norma wanted to go, too, so we loaded up the car and went to the field.

Veronica said that one of her dreams has always been to run through a field of sunflowers.  Well, the sunflowers were a little past their peak, and most of them had their heads drooped down, under the weight of their own seed heads.  But I asked her if she would agree to be my model for a photo shoot, and of course she said yes.  We had fun figuring out different poses and how to deal with the sometimes bright sun.  After our photo shoot session, Veronica did run up and down one of the rows, but there were tall weeds in places, and plenty of bees, so it was a fairly cautious run. 

The backsides are beautiful, too.
Sunflower and Chicory
We walked around the big field and down to the smaller one.  l also experimented with some multiple exposure shots.  All in all, we had a good morning.

Veronica and Norma took naps when they got home.  Me?  Blog writing and photo processing.

Multiple Exposure
One of my favs from today's session.
Thanks, Veronica, for a great modeling session and a great walk!








Save the date!  Monday, September 2, will be the last day of my year long photo walk project, and I'm planning a big celebration walk with anyone who wants to join me!  September 2 is also Labor Day, so many of you will have the day off.  The walk will be in downtown Frederick, around 9 a.m., followed by a brunch.  More details will be posted on my blog as they get confirmed.  But mark your calendars, grab your cameras, put on your walking shoes, and join me for my final Daily Photo Walk.  Let's jam the streets of Frederick with photo walkers! 


Click on any photo to enlarge it.
*************************************************
Forward me by email any receipt for an online donation made to the Red Cross for disaster relief, and I will send you a 5x7 print of your choice from any of my daily photo walks or from my website.  Offer good until September 2, 2013.

Visit my web site: camscamerashots.zenfolio.com
Follow me on Twitter: @camscamerashots
Email:  cam.miller@comcast.net

Cam's rules for the Daily Photo Walk:
  1. walk every day
  2. the walk must be in addition to any other planned activity for the day
  3. post a photo every day
  4. use whatever camera is easy and convenient for walking comfortably; always have a backup camera at the ready in case of mishaps (I use the Nikon Coolpix P7700)
  5. no weather excuses
  6. walk only where it is safe to do so

Friday, July 26, 2013

Day 327 - Larriland

(Click any photo to enlarge.)

***Scroll down to see my offer for Red Cross donations.***

Mr. Larri Himself?
Sunflowers galore!
I've been saving a walk at Larriland for when it was a perfect summer day.  Cooler temps, blue sky, plentiful summer crops -- today fit the bill. 

This big Farm/U-Pick operation is located near Lisbon, MD.  I parked at the barn where fruits and vegetables already picked can be purchased, and first I walked among the "cut your own" flowers.  They had sunflowers, zinnias, marigolds, and more.  Butterflies and bees were at work on the blossoms.

Perfect Day on the Farm
Beets Await Picking
Next I walked down the brown gravel lanes, leading behind the red barn, around the lake, to the distant raspberry, blueberry, and beet fields.  The lake was reflecting the blue sky and puffy white clouds.  A few Canada geese were swimming at the far edge.

The many hues of raspberries.
As I rounded the curve to the raspberry fields, the beet field was in front.  The greens were pretty well dying off, and thousands of large beets were practically lying on top of the soil. 

Someone else's hard work.
I continued up the hill and into the rows of raspberries.  As was true with the Christmas trees when I was walking those farms in December, the best ones are at the farthest ends of the rows.  The berries were pretty well finished, but tucked in here and there I found some ripe ones that had been overlooked, so of course I had to sample a few.

I didn't eat them all...
After the raspberry fields, I walked the rows of blueberry bushes.  There were lots of berries here to choose from, some in varying stages of ripeness; there should be good picking for the next few weeks.

I walked back along the lanes to the barn again, fully intending to return with the car to the blueberry field to pick some, but I found a huge bag of 20 peaches labeled "seconds," for only $8.00.  I hauled it to the register and paid, deciding to make peach crisp tonight, with vanilla ice cream.  Yum! 

The blueberries might have to wait until next week.



Save the date!  Monday, September 2, will be the last day of my year long photo walk project, and I'm planning a big celebration walk with anyone who wants to join me!  September 2 is also Labor Day, so many of you will have the day off.  The walk will be in downtown Frederick, around 9 a.m., followed by a brunch.  More details will be posted on my blog as they get confirmed.  But mark your calendars, grab your cameras, put on your walking shoes, and join me for my final Daily Photo Walk.  Let's jam the streets of Frederick with photo walkers! 


Click on any photo to enlarge it.
*************************************************
Forward me by email any receipt for an online donation made to the Red Cross for disaster relief, and I will send you a 5x7 print of your choice from any of my daily photo walks or from my website.  Offer good until September 2, 2013.

Visit my web site: camscamerashots.zenfolio.com
Follow me on Twitter: @camscamerashots
Email:  cam.miller@comcast.net

Cam's rules for the Daily Photo Walk:
  1. walk every day
  2. the walk must be in addition to any other planned activity for the day
  3. post a photo every day
  4. use whatever camera is easy and convenient for walking comfortably; always have a backup camera at the ready in case of mishaps (I use the Nikon Coolpix P7700)
  5. no weather excuses
  6. walk only where it is safe to do so

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Day 326 - The Kentlands

(Click any photo to enlarge.)

***Scroll down to see my offer for Red Cross donations.***

The Arts Barn
The Kentlands Mansion
I must admit, I have not been aware until now of what "new urbanism" is, but today I found out.  The Kentlands, in Gaithersburg, Maryland, serves as a model for this concept.  According to Wikipedia, "New Urbanism is an urban design movement which promotes walkable neighborhoods containing a range of housing and job types."  I can easily see why The Kentlands fits this definition.

Pink on blue
My GPS, however, does not truly understand the layout of the roads in The Kentlands.  I had set it to find the Arts Barn by the Kentlands Mansion, and after several wrong turns and missed turns on roundabouts, I saw a sign for the mansion and elected to follow it.  On my way there, though, I passed shopping plazas without large parking lots, cafes, professional offices, and lots of varied housing types:  townhouses, duplexes, apartment/condo buildings, and single family homes.  The streets are tree lined, and the homes have a colonial feel:  lots of brick, dormer windows, cedar shingled roofs covered in moss, and shaded sidewalks.

Cattails and Lotus
I parked at the mansion and walked across a large, green common area with benches, to the Arts Barn.  This brick barn, once part of the mansion grounds, is now an art gallery and performing arts center.  Summer classes were going on there.

I continued along the road to the front of the brick mansion.  It is flanked by large, white crape myrtles on either side of the front door.  The acreage upon which the mansion sits is now developed into the community known as The Kentlands, but the mansion and barn are owned by the city of Gaithersburg.  Mr. Kent, who purchased the mansion and property in 1942 from Frederick Tschiffley, Jr., had a vision for the 1892 brick home and the property upon which it sat.  He built ponds, dams, and lakes as wildlife habitat.  He built the many outbuildings, some of which I saw today, such as a firehouse, to protect his holdings.  The story of how this property became today's Kentlands is here.  Today the mansion itself, surrounded by the development of this "new urban" community, is used for weddings, and arts and special events.

These geese own the walking path!
In front of the mansion, paths lead to a large lake.  The lake has numerous Canada Geese, some of which would not step out of the way on the paved pathways when walkers approached.  One end of the lake had lotus in bloom.  There was an upper path and a lower path surrounding the lake.  I chose the lower, which was unpaved in portions, but went through wooded sections, providing nice shade.  The people who occasionally joined me on the path were primarily mothers with children in strollers or exercise walkers/joggers.

Backlit Leaves
I love to make stars with the sun!
I can understand the appeal of The Kentlands.  However, the main criticism I have is with the large numbers of cars parked along the roads.  Some of the homes had rear access garages, but most of the streets had parked cars along one or more sides of the street.  When driving along one of these streets, it feels very tight, especially when passing another car coming in the opposite direction.  I can just see all of these parked cars getting blocked in by snow plows.  So, in a community built for walkability, the reality is that most households there probably have two cars; I think better planning should have been done for accommodating that urban need.


Save the date!  Monday, September 2, will be the last day of my year long photo walk project, and I'm planning a big celebration walk with anyone who wants to join me!  September 2 is also Labor Day, so many of you will have the day off.  The walk will be in downtown Frederick, around 9 a.m., followed by a brunch.  More details will be posted on my blog as they get confirmed.  But mark your calendars, grab your cameras, put on your walking shoes, and join me for my final Daily Photo Walk.  Let's jam the streets of Frederick with photo walkers! 


Click on any photo to enlarge it.
*************************************************
Forward me by email any receipt for an online donation made to the Red Cross for disaster relief, and I will send you a 5x7 print of your choice from any of my daily photo walks or from my website.  Offer good until September 2, 2013.

Visit my web site: camscamerashots.zenfolio.com
Follow me on Twitter: @camscamerashots
Email:  cam.miller@comcast.net

Cam's rules for the Daily Photo Walk:
  1. walk every day
  2. the walk must be in addition to any other planned activity for the day
  3. post a photo every day
  4. use whatever camera is easy and convenient for walking comfortably; always have a backup camera at the ready in case of mishaps (I use the Nikon Coolpix P7700)
  5. no weather excuses
  6. walk only where it is safe to do so

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Day 325 - Keedysville, MD

(Click any photo to enlarge.)

***Scroll down to see my offer for Red Cross donations.***

Taylor Park
Flag bedecked stoop
"Are you a Keedysvillian?" asked the woman who was scrubbing her wooden fence with a strong scented pine soap. 

"No," I answered.  "I'm a tourist."

"We don't get many tourists in Keedysville," she said. 

And truly, I can understand why.  Tucked away on the "old" road, halfway between Boonsboro and Sharpsburg, the village of Keedysville is well out of sight of the "normal" tourists who are on their way to the Antietam National Battlefield.  The quiet village of today is not usually on anyone's radar, except this intrepid photowalker's.  As is true with many of the old towns I have visited, Keedysville was once a bustling place, with a railroad depot, mills, carriage builder, a creamery, a shoe shop, and more.  Today, however, there was not one commercial establishment along Main Street, unless you can count the post office.

Country Style Patriotism
Another Patriotic Home
I left my mother at the Red Byrd Restaurant, which is located on Rt. 34, also known as the Shepherdstown Pike, so that she could sip a cool drink and read while I did my walk.  I left the restaurant and walked to the area behind it, which connected to Taylor Park, the public park that is located on Main Street.  The park, built in 1940 as a WPA project, has the usual playground and pavilion, but at the front, there are several war memorials. 

Bank turned Town Hall
I walked along Main Street, which goes for quite a distance end to end, passing old brick and stone  homes that line both sides of the street, typical of old pre-Civil War towns.  The sidewalks in town are a mix of new pavement, old broken pavement, large flat limestones, black asphalt, or bricks. 

Former Hotel
At the center of town, the highest point, there was evidence of an old railroad.  A large brick building at the corner by the old railroad suggested it was once a hotel for travelers.  The fence washer confirmed my theory.

There are three churches in town, and the old school house has been turned into a community center.  The old bank is now the town hall.

School turned Community Center
An historical marker in town noted that the German Reformed Church in Keedysville was the headquarters of General McClellan during the Civil War.  After the battle of Antietam, the entire town of Keedysville became a Union hospital for the wounded.  Of the three churches I saw today in Keedysville, none of them looked like the drawing of the German Reformed that I saw on the historical marker, so I suppose it is not still in existence.

As is true with so many of the small Maryland towns I walk in, patriotism is evident everywhere, from the numerous American flags flying on homes, small flags stuck into planter boxes, or bunting hung from porch rails.  Keedysville is proud of its heritage.  Perhaps more tourists should visit.  As the fence washer told me, "We can use all the publicity we can get.  I'd love to see some businesses open again in town."


 Save the date!  Monday, September 2, will be the last day of my year long photo walk project, and I'm planning a big celebration walk with anyone who wants to join me!  September 2 is also Labor Day, so many of you will have the day off.  The walk will be in downtown Frederick, around 9 a.m., followed by a brunch.  More details will be posted on my blog as they get confirmed.  But mark your calendars, grab your cameras, put on your walking shoes, and join me for my final Daily Photo Walk.  Let's jam the streets of Frederick with photo walkers! 

Click on any photo to enlarge it.
*************************************************
Forward me by email any receipt for an online donation made to the Red Cross for disaster relief, and I will send you a 5x7 print of your choice from any of my daily photo walks or from my website.  Offer good until September 2, 2013.

Visit my web site: camscamerashots.zenfolio.com
Follow me on Twitter: @camscamerashots
Email:  cam.miller@comcast.net

Cam's rules for the Daily Photo Walk:
  1. walk every day
  2. the walk must be in addition to any other planned activity for the day
  3. post a photo every day
  4. use whatever camera is easy and convenient for walking comfortably; always have a backup camera at the ready in case of mishaps (I use the Nikon Coolpix P7700)
  5. no weather excuses
  6. walk only where it is safe to do so