© Cindy Dyer. All rights reserved. iPhone 6s / Snapseed app border
iPhoneography: Splendid fall
9 12 2017Comments : Leave a Comment »
Tags: fall, fall foliage, fall leaves, iphone photography, iPhoneography, leaves, Snapseed app, trees
Categories : iPhone 6, iPhone photography, iPhoneography, Landscape Photography, leaves, nature, nature photography, Photography, tree
Blandy Experimental Farm Ginkgo Grove
7 12 2016© Cindy Dyer. All rights reserved.
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Tags: Blandy Experimental Farm, Blandy Ginkgo Grove, fall foliage, garden, garden photography, ginkgo biloba
Categories : garden photography, Photography
Fall comes to Kingstowne Lake
4 11 2013Storm clouds on one side of the lake, sunlight from behind me illuminating the foliage…what a beautiful mix! I photographed this shot at Kingstowne Lake yesterday afternoon on a field photography trip with my friend Michael Powell.
© Cindy Dyer. All rights reserved.
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Tags: fall foliage, Kingstowne Lake, landscape photography, leaves, Nikkor 80-400mm VR lens, Nikon D800, trees, virginia
Categories : Landscape Photography, nature, Photography
Origami cranes?
3 11 2013Comments : Leave a Comment »
Tags: fall foliage, leaves, nature photography, Nikkor 80-200mm f2.8, Nikon D800, origami cranes, tree
Categories : Landscape Photography, nature, Photography
Signs of fall
3 11 2013Comments : 1 Comment »
Tags: fall foliage, leaves, nature photography, Nikkor 80-200mm VR, Nikon D800, trees
Categories : Landscape Photography, nature, Photography
A cornucopia of colors
3 11 2013Comments : 1 Comment »
Tags: fall foliage, Kingstowne Lake, landscape photography, nature photography, Nikkor 80-400mm VR, Nikon D800, virginia
Categories : Landscape Photography, nature, Photography
Photo Posse
27 10 2013Thanks to my friend, F.T. Eyre, for naming our little photography group this morning! The five of us headed out to the Blandy Experimental Farm and State Arboretum in Boyce, VA yesterday morning to photograph the Ginkgo grove. Nice and cool fall weather, impossibly clear blue sky and bright yellow leaves everywhere! Heather (my SFAM—sister from another mother) and I especially enjoyed singing blue-themed songs such as Michael Johnson’s 1978 “Bluer than Blue” (we knew all the lyrics—does that show our ages?) while on our backs photographing the leaves against the sky. Way fun morning with way fun friends!
Founding members of the Photo Posse are shown below, from left to right: Michael Schwehr, Michael Powell, Heather Callin and F.T. Eyre. Applications welcomed. 😉
© Cindy Dyer. All rights reserved.
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Tags: Blandy Ginkgo Grove, fall foliage, ginkgo biloba, nature photography, Nikon D7000, Nikon D800, photography
Categories : Landscape Photography, nature, Photography
Re-post: Fall in Virginia
25 10 2013We’ll be heading out to Boyce, Virginia to the Blandy Experimental Farm to check out the Ginkgo grove this coming Saturday, so maybe I’ll have new fall photos to post!
Originally posted in October, 2010
Since I haven’t been able to get my bounty of fall photos this year, I’ve made a collage of my favorite images from the past three years. These were all shot in various parts of Virginia, including my own neighborhood. Enjoy!
© Cindy Dyer. All rights reserved.
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Tags: Blandy Experimental Farm, fall foliage, Ginkgo grove, landscape photography, nature photography, Nikon D300, trees
Categories : nature, Photography, wildlife
A few more Ginkgo photos
27 10 2012Learn more about the beautiful Ginkgo grove at the Blandy Experimental Farm here.
The following narrative is excerpted from the brochure, “A Guide to the Ginkgo Grove,” published by the State Arboretum of Virginia at the University of Virginia’s Historic Blandy Experimental Farm.
The Story of the Blandy Ginkgo Grove
The Blandy ginkgo grove is one of the largest collections of ginkgos outside the tree’s native China. Given their autumnal glory, a visitor might assume that Blandy’s ginkgos were planted solely for their beauty. But this grove is the happy result of a scientific experiment.
Dr. Orland E. White, Blandy Experimental Farm’s first Director, began collecting ginkgo seeds in 1929 from a single “mother tree” on the University of Virginia grounds in Charlottesville. After these seeds germinated, Dr. White’s students planted over 600 ginkgo saplings to determine the sex ratio of this tree. Most plants are both male and female, but like holly, persimmon, and other species, ginkgo is dioecious, meaning a tree is male or female, but not both. Dr. White hypothesized the sex ratio would be 1:1. He did not live long enough to find out if he was right, but of the 301 trees that survived to maturity and for which gender could be determined, 157 were female and 144 were male. Statistically speaking, this does not deviate significantly from 1:1.
A Living Fossil
Ginkgo biloba is often described as a “living fossil.” It is one of the most primitive seed plants found today, and it’s the only surviving representative of its plant family (Ginkgoaceae) and order (Ginkgoales).
The earliest ginkgo leaf fossils date from 270 million years ago. During the Jurassic (200-145 million years ago), the era of dinosaurs, ginkgos were already widespread. And by the Cretaceous (145-65 million years ago), ginkgos grew in what is now Asia, Europe and North America.
Ginkgos disappear from the North American fossil record about 7 million years ago, and from the European record about 4.5 million years later.
Western scientists first learned of the ginkgo in the late 1600s, when living trees were found growing in cultivation near Buddhist temples in China. Thus, the sole remaining member of what was once a dominant plant group remains a link between the present and our geological past.
The Silver Apricot
The word “ginkgo” originates from a Chinese word meaning “silver apricot.” When mature the fleshy ginkgo seed—ginkgos don’t form fruits—has roughly the size and appearance of a small apricot. Historians trace the earliest documented use of ginkgo as a food and herbal medicine to 11th century China, and it is still widely used in traditional Chinese and Japanese medicine. It’s important to remember that if eaten raw, gingko’s fleshy seeds are poisonous, and we ask visitors not to collect ginkgo leaves or seeds for this or any other use.
Research shows ginkgo extract has three important actions on the body: it improves blood flow to most tissues and organs; it is an antioxidant which protects against cell damage; and it blocks many of the effects of blood clotting that have been related to a number of disorders. Western medicine has recently focused on Ginkgo biloba to protect against memory loss, but clinical trials have not confirmed this.
Photos © Cindy Dyer. All rights reserved.
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Tags: Blandy Experimental Farm, Blandy Ginkgo Grove, China, Dr. Orland E. White, fall foliage, ginkgo biloba, Ginkgo grove, ginkgo saplings, Ginkgoaceae, Ginkgoales, horticulture, landscape photography, nature photography, Nikon D300, State Arboretum of Virginia
Categories : gardening, Landscape Photography, nature, Photography, Travel
Some of my favorite fall photos….
23 10 2012These were taken at Lake Land’Or back in 2008. The shot of the dock with the cloud reflections is one of my all-time favorites of this place!
© Cindy Dyer. All rights reserved.
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Tags: fall foliage, Lake Land'Or, landscape photography, nature photography, Nikon D300, reflections, Travel
Categories : Landscape Photography, nature, Photography, Travel, weather
Happy Thanksgiving!
24 11 2011We’re heading down to Lake Land’Or in central Virginia (just an hour away) to spend Thanksgiving with my friend Karen, her aunt and a friend who are visiting from Wilmington, N.C. Here are some photos of the view from Karen’s lakehouse; originally posted 11.12.2008.
© Cindy Dyer. All rights reserved.
Comments : 11 Comments »
Tags: fall foliage, Lake Land'Or, Nikon D300, photography, virginia
Categories : Landscape Photography, nature, Photography, Travel
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