This post is short on words and shows off the fall colors viewed on recent walks in Mine Falls Park, a 325-acre park in Nashua, NH, that's close to the mill apartments. It is bordered on the North by the Nashua River and the south by the Mill Pond canal system. These images were taken on both canal and river sides of our walk. (None are AI generated.)
Photos were taken 2+ weeks ago, when there was still fall color in the park. Due to some recent windy days, most of the leaves are on the paths now.
Even when a tree is bare, it's still a beautiful sight. attested to by poet Alfred Joyce Kilmer, like ourselves, a NJ native. Kilmer (1886-1918), the fourth and youngest child in his family, was named after two priests at Christ Church in New Brunswick, NJ: the curate, Alfred R. Taylor, and the rector, the Rev. Dr. Elisha Brooks Kilmer's father, Dr. Frederick Barnett Kilmer, a physician and analytical chemist, who worked for the NJ-based Johnson and Johnson Company, is credited as inventing the company's famous baby powder.)
Joyce Kilmer (1908) |
I think that I shall never see
A poem lovely as a tree.
A tree whose hungry mouth is prest
Against the earth’s sweet flowing breast;
A tree that looks at God all day,
And lifts her leafy arms to pray;
A tree that may in Summer wear
A nest of robins in her hair;
Upon whose bosom snow has lain;
Who intimately lives with rain.
Poems are made by fools like me,
But only God can make a tree.
20 comments:
Wow! Those first two pictures look like AI images. Magnificent! You get a lot of orange leaves where you live.
Gosh, some spectacular scenes there. The leaves have only just started to change colour in Belfast. That's unusually late.
That poem is wonderful. Love it as much as your photos, Dorothy! Such a walk is good for the soul! Thank you for sharing!
One of the first poems I remember loving, and of course misunderstanding that Joyce Kilmer as a woman. I've been to the NC forest that is named for him several years ago, full of old growth poplar trees that are huge. Loved your brilliant photos of fall colors!
WOW!!! no words are really needed to describe those fall images. gorgeous...spectacular does not even do it justice. i can't even imagine seeing this with my eyes and camera!! a beautiful poem!!
Oh my -- your color is beyond spectacular. I missed peak here (and in England, where it hadn't even really started even when we left October 24). But I did see some leaves and some are still hanging on for dear life. But nothing like this. Fabulous, Dorothy!
The photos are a real treat. What a lovely part of the world you occupy. Ours are all on the ground, here in eastern Ontario, and my husband is on his way out to rake up under the oak close to the house. Muttering.
I don't think you could have timed that visit any better. 👍
Awesome fall colors! I really enjoyed seeing your photos hugs Kathy
What a lovely tribute to fall! Your photos of Mine Falls Park beautifully captured the season's charm. I love Kilmer's poem, too—it reminds us how lovely trees are, even when they're bare. Thanks for sharing this glimpse of autumn!
...these are fabulous, enjoy the color while you can!
Beautiful photos. I have not read the whole poem before this. I've only been aware of the first line.
What gorgeous photos! Thanks for sharing your beautiful autumn. Here in rural Tennessee it's 80 degrees and feels like spring. The trees are shedding quickly and the foliage was rather disappointing this season.
Trees was one of my mother's favorite poems.
Absolutely gorgeous pics!!
I assumed that sweet poem was written by a woman, too. Never assume. :)
These are totally STUNNING!!! I think you are a professional photographer. They should be in a magazine of calendar. Favorites are the first two.
Breath taking and stunning.. what more can I say?
I really think my favorite is the rippling reflections of the waters with the ducks enjoying the beauty too.
Sue
I love that poem because I feel the same way he did about trees. We had a dead tree, that was in our front yard as decoration for many years. it was gorgeous when green and bearing grapefruit and even prettier when it died. I cried when Irma the storm took it down and it was carried away. that said, there is something about the blaze of glory in your first few photos that calls out to my heart. I would like to have that place near by to take a walk in.. the recent hurricanes, 3 of them really made a mess of our Bray Park that we walk in on Sundays but the majority of the great oaks are still standing and it will be beautiful soon after clean up
Beautiful!
Great poem to go along with awesome photos.
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