Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Little Bayou Pierre waterfall





This beautiful little waterfall is located on the Little Bayou Pierre off Barland Road in Claiborne County. I just thought the waterfall on Curtis-Luster Road that I posted about a few days ago was hard to find. This place is way down in southeast Claiborne County and takes quite a while to get to. Good thing it was worth it. I swear I am going to have to get me a video camera. The sound of this rushing water over the small fall was wonderful!

Little jewels like this is what makes photography exploring so rewarding.

Tomorrow, I am going to post a couple of other photos I found at the waterfall.
Friday, I will be posting photos of something that is surely disappearing from the modern landscape! Thank goodness!

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Sarepta Cemetery and more...




Sarepta Methodist Church also has a cemetery on its grounds. I loved the inscription on the tombstone pictured on the top.

MOTHER
NANNIE NOBLE
WIFE OF
ITALY NESMITH
REST MOTHER,
REST IN QUIET SLEEP,
WHILE FRIENDS IN SORROW
O'ER THEE WEEP

Notice anything else interesting about the tombstone? No dates. I don't see that too often.

Two other interesting tombstones in the cemetery are just large rocks placed at the head and foot of the graves. One of the larger headstones is pictured in the second photo. That is so intriguing. I wonder who they were? God knows, I bet.

The other two photos are of a little structure out in the woods along the dead-end road that leads to Sarepta Methodist Church. It is made of notched logs. No nails were used in its construction as far as I could see, except to put on the hinges. You just don't see this too much anymore. Mother Nature will soon reclaim these trees as her own once again.

Bear with me! We'll make it to the waterfall tomorrow!

Monday, April 13, 2009

Sarepta Methodist Church






I went exploring in Claiborne County again this past weekend looking for another waterfall, this one on the Little Bayou Pierre. But first I detoured to the Sarepta Methodist Church, a beautiful little country church. This present building dates from about 1850 and is the last of five structures to house the church body. It was originally built for the Pisgah congregation, located near Hermanville, but was moved to the Sarepta site sometimes after WWI when Pisgash ceased to exist. In the 1800s, the building also served as a community school. 

Don't try to find the Sarepta community in Claiborne County on any present-day map. Because it no longer exists, just like Pisgah. You can google Sarepta and Claiborne County to find out a few more details about the church. All I know is that it was quiet and peaceful inside this little sanctuary.

I am beginning to see a trend here. Little country churches are simple structures, opening their doors to one and all who venture by. Their message is one of come on in and find God. Modern churches nowadays have too much invested in their fancy sound systems and lighting and computers to allow the doors to stay open 24/7. It's something to think about.

Come back each day this week. I will eventually make it to that waterfall and it is a wonderful place!

Friday, April 10, 2009

Update on the Sprague





I've had a lot of comments and emails relating to my recent post about the Sprague, so I thought I would drop by the remains of the steamboat this weekend to record how another year has taken its toll on what is left of the historic vessel. The top three photos show the sternwheel, smokestacks and a boiler from the Sprague. The other two photos are miscellaneous hardware that is lying about. More rust is quite evident. A few more weeks and most of the remains will be hidden under the weeds and brush for the rest of the summer.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Going down





The piers holding up the Hwy. 80 bridge across the Mississipppi River bridge in Vicksburg are hollow, did you know that? I didn't until I was offered the chance by bridge superintendent Herman Smith to climb down into one. The photos you see here are of one of his employees going down the ladder to the bottom of the pier. At the bottom of the pier I climbed into is a bob the bridge crew uses to measure movement of the bridge. That's it in the second photo.
It's cramped down at the bottom. There is some murky water below the platform where you stand to observe the bob. It's also hot, hotter than I have been in quite a while. While we were down there, a towboat and a load of barges passed overhead. I just knew the thing was heading straight for the pier! It was so loud down there. I was glad to get back to the surface. Other photos here show the view from underneath the roadbed.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Trains on the Hwy. 80 bridge






I love trains. Could take pictures of them all day long. The top two photos are taken from the flag platform of the Hwy. 80 bridge. See post from yesterday for more details. The other photos are taken from another time I was allowed onto the road part of the old bridge and a train was coming across at the same time. 
You would think the road would be flat, but look at the curvature of the road and tracks in these photos. That's awesome!

Tomorrow: Let's head down into one of the piers of the bridge!

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

How I overcame my fear of heights






For most of my life, I have been afraid of heights. It goes way back to when I was little. My dad was a forester with the Mississippi Forestry Commission and he took us up firetowers a lot. My brother and I spent most of that time up there pretending like we were going to push the other over the edge. Neither of us ever succeeded, but the thought of falling from a high structure always gave me the heebie-jeebies.

A couple of years ago, I went to Herman Smith, superintendent of the Hwy. 80 bridge over the Mississippi River and told him that  I wanted to go below the bridge and shoot some photos. He told me, "You don't want to go down to take pictures, you want to go up." He then offered me the chance to climb to the flag platform of the old bridge to take some photos. I laughed in his face.

But later that night, I thought some more about it and realized that I would probably never have the opportunity to climb up there again, so I called him the next day and took him up on his offer.

So, up I went. You have to climb a ladder on the outside of the bridge. Look for it the next time you drive across the I-20 bridge. The bridge is 90 feet above the water and the flag platform is 110 feet above the roadbed. It's a long way up, believe me. Herman shimmied up the thing like he was just taking a walk in his backyard. I, on the other, came as close to sweating blood as I have ever come in my life. But I finally made it and the photos show some of the views.

But the hard part was yet to come. I was content to take pictures from the flag platform, but Herman said the best photos could be had by walking across the little catwalk you see him traversing in the second photo. It's tiny. And the only way across is to hook up lifeline onto that small cable and scoot across. I did it, but I thought I was going to die in the process. My heart has never — and probably never will — beat as hard as it did on that walk across that little piece of metal. Herman just skip-to-my-Lou'd right across the thing. 

But he was right. The view was spectacular. And Herman let me take photos until my heart was content. That's when I realized that the only way I was going to get off the top of that bridge was to make that same heart-thumping walk one more time. Brother, I was just about sick to my stomach with the thought of doing that again. 

But you know the rest of the story because I survived the trek back across and then down that ladder hanging over the water. When my feet hit the pavement, I was invincible! I could do anything! And that feeling has stayed with me today. I no longer hesitate to go somewhere high. 

My respect and admiration for Herman and his crew also knows no bounds. They climb all over that bridge. It's  a job only a few people can do. I am glad it is them, however, and not me.

Tomorrow: Trains going across the bridge — shot from above

Monday, April 6, 2009

Rambling





Here are some shots I took this weekend while rambling through the Vicksburg National Military Park and along some railroad tracks that run along Washington Street.

I have to tell you this: I have taken some pretty photos in my time, but nothing can compare to the beauty God created in one little bluebird. I love the simplicity of these shots and the vividness of the feathers of the bird as he sat upon the wheel of a cannon in the park. I will take a bunch more photos in my time on this earth, but I will never come across something that is more beautiful than this little fellow. What a sight!

I love the photos of the banged-up buckets holding railroad spikes that I stumbled across. And the Illinois Memorial was beautiful in the morning light. The golden glow of the eagle atop the memorial really made the bottom photo, too.

Friday, April 3, 2009

Freeland Cemetery




Tom Freeland, an attorney from Oxford, emailed me last week. He writes a blog called NMissCommentor,  http://nmisscommentor, and had linked to my blog post about the Sprague.  The photos above are from the Freeland Cemetery located on his family land near Windsor Ruins in Claiborne County. The cemetery is in the woods on top of an old Indian Mound and the builder of Windor is buried here. On the day I visited, it had started raining right before my fellow photographer friend Jerry Rushing and I got there. And I am so glad it did! It certainly made the colors of the old brick wall and leaves come alive! (Can I say that about a cemetery?) Anyhow, it's a beautiful place with history galore.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Rocky Springs






I always love visiting Rocky Springs. The church and cemetery are so beautiful. It's hard for me to shoot new photos there, but I always try when I go. I love the second photo of the morning sun flooding the floor for that is the first thing I saw when I walked into the church. The symmetry of the window panes just appeals to me.

I'll also admit that I did something inside the church that I usually don't do when I visit old churches. I sang. With robustness. Amazing Grace. God was my only audience. And I sang to Him. The song resonated wonderfully in the empty church. It was a reverent moment. I am glad no one else walked in while I was doing so. I hesitate to tell you about it. But you gotta sing when you gotta sing. And on this day, I did. It was my prayer to Him for on this day He had blessed me with some wonderful sights as He directed my path through the country roads of Claiborne County.

On Friday, I will post some photos from a trip to Claiborne County in 2008 of an old cemetery way out in the woods near Windsor Ruins. Join me, won't you?