Cedar Diamonds ... 1-21-12

Cedar Diamonds ... 1-21-12

This doesn't do justice to the sparkle that the Cedar Trees get after a rain, but it's the best I've been able to capture!!

I swear, right after it has rained and the sun first shines on the cedars, it's like a million diamonds sparkling in the trees. It almost blinds you! I just love it!!!

I'm using this photo mostly for the bokeh on Bokeh Wednesday!!

HBW Everyone!

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Uploaded on Jan 31, 2012

18 comments

Callaway Gardens Chapel ... 1-28-12

Callaway Gardens Chapel ... 1-28-12

Another trip to Callaway Gardens and of course I just can't pass up a chance to take photos of the Chapel we were married in.

It was a "free" weekend at the Gardens, so we went early Saturday, before the crowd got there!

It was a beautiful day and wonderful for walking. Not a lot to look at because of the time of year, but still beautiful and a perfect place to get out and enjoy the day.

Not much of a wind so the water was pretty still for the reflection.

The second photo is the front of the chapel with it's beautiful stained glass and huge stone with the wooden cross.

To the right of the alter is where the organist sits. He was playing it pretty loud. (A Whiter Shade of Pale) I love that song. www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_aASQOjej0&feature=related You could hear it all through the woods, where there is an area all the way around the chapel that is called the "Quiet" area...used for meditation or just enjoying nature and, or God's beauty.

The third photo is the entry into the chapel and the back of the chapel. As you can see, to the left of the photo, there are also stained glass, smaller windows. I couldn't get photos of them as there were people all lined up against them! I do like the reflections of the colors of the window on the floor!!!

The sun was shining from the back so the flash went off when I took the alter photo. Without the flash it was just too dark to see any details.

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Uploaded on Jan 30, 2012

22 comments

Callaway Gardens Chapel Alter ... 1-28-12

Callaway Gardens Chapel Alter ... 1-28-12

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Uploaded on Jan 30, 2012

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Callaway Gardens Chapel Entry ... 1-28-12

Callaway Gardens Chapel Entry ... 1-28-12

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Uploaded on Jan 30, 2012

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RED OAK CREEK COVERED BRIDGE ... 1-27-12

RED OAK CREEK COVERED BRIDGE ... 1-27-12

PLEASE view this in the ORIGINAL SIZE to get better details. I took so many photos that this was the easiest way to get them all in so you could appreciate this bridge! I'm in love with it and it's History. The Marker doesn't come close to giving the man that built this, the credit he deserves. So, I am putting an article from the Internet that does tell the history and gives credit where credit is due!! I'm sure you will find the information really interesting.

The Red Oak Creek Covered Bridge
sometimes called the Imlac Covered Bridge,
spans Red Oak Creek in the small
community of Imlac not far from Woodbury,
Georgia.

Only 12 miles north of Warm Springs, the old
bridge is a rare surviving example of the
ingenuity of famed bridge builder Horace
King. Including approaches, it stretches for
391 feet, making it the longest wooden
bridge in Georgia. The main span is 253 feet
long and is the state's oldest covered bridge.

Born into slavery in South Carolina in 1807,
Horace King was either set free or bought his
freedom from contractor John Godwin, who
encouraged and mentored King after it
became evident that he possessed an
intellect for engineering that can only be
described as genius. To allow King greater
rights to move about as needed and to own
property, the Alabama Legislature passed a
special act granting him full freedom in the
eyes of the law.

On his own, he supervised crews of slaves
that built bridges across Georgia, Alabama
and Mississippi. This was a remarkable
achievement for a freed slave of African
American and Catawba Indian descent
during the antebellum days of slavery in the
Deep South. Among his projects were a
number of bridges, including the long spans
over the Chattahoochee River destroyed by
Union troops during the Battle of Columbus.

Horace King also designed the spiral
staircase in the State Capitol Building in
Montgomery, Alabama. The sweeping
staircase is an architectural wonder, but King
was best known for his bridges. And there is
no disputing the statement that he was a
master builder of covered bridges. At one
time much of the Deep South moved on
bridges built by Horace King.

Of all the bridges he built, however, only one
remains in use today, the Red Oak Creek
Covered Bridge in Meriwether County,
Georgia.

Designed and built by King and possibly his
sons during the 1840s using the Town
Lattice Truss design, the covered bridge has
spanned Red Oak Creek for more than 170
years. It was repaired during the 1980s and
still carries cars and small trucks over the
creek today.

The Town Lattice Truss design allowed the
building of long wooden spans like the Red
Oak Creek Covered Bridge by using
criss-crossed beams that looked much like a
modern garden lattice. This design created
bridge trusses of great strength by
distributing weight across multiple timbers.
According to the Georgia Department of
Transportation, the main covered section of
the bridge is slightly shorter than that of the
Watson Mill Covered Bridge at Watson Mill
Bridge State Park. With the addition of its
wood approach, however, the Red Oak Creek
bridge is the longest wooden bridge in the
state. DOT also indicates that the central
span of the bridge, which measures 115 feet,
is thought to be the longest unsupported
span of any wooden bridge in the state.

The Red Oak Creek Covered Bridge is used
by light traffic daily, but Meriwether County
has built a pull off area at the western end of
the bridge so visitors can enjoy the beautiful
historic structure and also read the historical
marker detailing its history.

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Uploaded on Jan 28, 2012

2 notes / 21 comments

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