Sunday night into Monday morning we had some snow fall. It began early in the afternoon on Sunday and called it quits very early Monday morning. I spent a good deal of time outside as I was working on an unrelated photo essay. Here are a few images from Sunday and Monday.
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Holyoke's First Snow
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Frozen Landscape and more.
On my way back to Holyoke from Northampton today, I spotted a really interesting piece of the landscape. On RT5 just before entering Holyoke, there is a section of the Oxbow Marina that usually ends up spilling off into the surrounding terrain. In the fall we had some heavy rain that caused a little bit of over flow in this piece of the land. This over flow started freezing before it could become saturated into the ground. What happened as a result of that ended up causing a large deposit and build up of ice. A few warm days and the ice melting caused the build up to drop in height. I have a few images I made of this piece of the landscape. I just had to pull over and pull my camera out for what I was seeing.
Earlier this week there was a terrible accident at the corner of Race and Dwight. One car came to a rest agains the building that is on the corner of the intersection. Speeding is through this intersection is a real issue.
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Holyoke High School Football: An Emotional Vicotry
An emotional victory. It is the title of the game, the meaning behind the win, the phrase that best describes their, near seconds to the end of the game victory. With two seconds on the clock, HHS brought the game to over time. This put them in the position to take back their field. Their home. Minutes remained in the over time. Minutes of intensity. High emotions. The crowd, a filled stadium, screaming, cheering, coaches clenching their hands in an intense display eagerness for their team, students, parents, friends, family, spectators; all, produced a sense of pride that coursed through everyone's fiber and took the cold right out of them. The Knight's took their field, that sense of pride that was pushing them down the field, and took the game and made it theirs. They owned the field for that moment and now own an overwhelming sense of self pride for their season. As coach Bob Lastowski stated very well walking off the field, drenched in pride and a coolers worth of water and ice, "they will be talking about this game for years to come".
To understand this statement, we must understand the historical pretenses that these two teams have. Holyoke and Chicopee are two teams stapled in a rivalry that creates these emotional wins. I am unsure of how far back this history goes. But, I will say that this rivalry has been something I have seen and heard about for most of my life. From family that has played for Chicopee, to my integration into Holyoke's history, I have seen both sides of this shared pride. I watch the game. Feel the game. Experience the game. See the emotion of the players and fans through the lens. I have captured the moments that made this game a piece of history.
I got to the field early. I was there to capture not only the game, but to make portraits of the players and their family's as they walked onto the field in their tradition of seniors giving flowers to the parents of the players. Today wasn't just about giving their parents a flower, it was about giving their all and more. It was very cold morning. It was only about 30 degrees outside when I got on the field and met with our photographer, Bob Gordon of True Resolution. I had a feeling today was going to be one of those days. The kind of day that was worth embarking the cold for. By the end of the game, this thought was a reality. As we were setting up our cameras and discussing what was going on for the day. Another photographer appeared and our conversation turned towards the game and what each other was on the field for. We had a common interest. Capture this game. The images below show the game, the emotion, and the strength of the team to pull forward and take their field and pride to state.