The title of today’s post is a reference to this regionally renowned writer. I might have become the next him, if I’d never been to Boston.
Last month, I set out on a rural, rolling New York state highway to fulfill a personal quest.
I was visiting my folks’ cottage on Keuka Lake for possibly the last time, after 30 years of summer visits. (My folks are considering ditching New York for a more competently run and intelligently financed state.)
So I brought a camera with me and spent several hours driving from Penn Yan south to Bath, taking pictures of (mostly mundane) sights and places I remember from all those years. If I wasn’t going to get back there, I was gonna get some stuff down on film, as a lasting record.
I had my grandfather — the ostensible subject of this blog — in mind the whole time, for two reasons.
First, I took most of my pictures with a Pentax K1000 film SLR that used to be his.
K1000s are brilliant machines, as simple and solid as straight razors. While my SLR skills are primitive (I’m not great with straight razors either), I plan to use mine until it is no longer cost-effective to operate, because I like what it is and what it does.
I also knew I was following in my grandpa’s footsteps in terms of subject matter.
About two weeks before I left for Keuka, I looked at a DVD of my grandfather’s old slides, scanned in by my dad. I was surprised to find that my grandfather, in the early 1980s, had already taken some of the pictures I planned to take to capture my Finger Lakes memories.
He took the hell out of ’em, too — he got a gorgeous day and he knew what to do with it. (The day I picked for my shooting journey was overcast, not that that’s any excuse for the pictures I ended up with.)
I tried not to take any picture exactly as my grandfather had. Instead, I tried to capture some images that would preserve my memories and bring the Keuka ambiance to mind.
I think he might have found a few of mine worth considering for the family scrapbook. Here are some of our best. You can click them to enlarge — and his, you’ll want to:

2011. I imagined this to be an old schoolhouse. I went up close to it and looked through the window; there was a wooden rowboat inside.

2011. You can almost smell the Queen Anne's lace ... if Queen Anne's lace actually smelled like anything, that is.

2011. Different dock at a different cottage; similar view. I took this one with a toy plastic camera, hence the vignetting and general lo-fi funk. His pictures are 30 years old and look timeless; mine are two weeks old and look 30.
I suspect I have accomplished little with this exercise except to convince my readers that I’m not a good enough photographer to hold my grandpa’s flashbulb.
Still, if anyone’s inclined to see it, the full photographic record of my Finger Lakes journey can be seen here. I think I’ve nailed down most of the captions so they explain why some of this boring stuff felt to me like it was worth photographing.
My grandfather didn’t need words to explain why he took pictures of something. It shone through when you looked at his prints.
In a world full of people with my grandfather’s talent, there would be no need for writers. Thankfully, only some people have that gift.
The rest of us aspire, and hunt, and peck.
Your grandfather would be proud! We looked at the whole slew of Keuka pics on your flickr account, and you have developed (or maybe even inherited to some degree) a fine eye for a photo.
There’s an analogy between your photos and my music. I’ve often said that great music needs no explanation, which explains why I talk so much at my concerts…
Great!
I could just scroll through these photographs forever… every composition is thoughtful and so beautifully executed. I love your site.
-Linda
Thank you.
[…] This is based on one of the Keuka Lake pix taken around 1983 and mentioned, but not included, in this post. […]
[…] inspiration, my grandpa took a bunch of landscape pix around the lake. Some others appeared in this long-ago post, if you want to see […]