Cornish-Windsor Bridge (A New Photograph)
I went out yesterday for a little bit of photography. Here's a photograph of the Cornish-Windsor Bridge. [I guess Vermonters call it the Windsor-Cornish Bridge, which actually has a nicer ring to my ear, but since I'm living in New Hampshire, I'll call it "Cornish-Windsor".]
What you see is the Connecticut River, not nearly frozen over, but covered with a lot of floating ice. The long horizontal thing is the bridge: the longest wooden bridge in the U.S. and the longest two-span covered bridge in the world. There's snow on the roof. In the background, I believe that's Mt. Ascutney (VT), but I could be wrong about that. I have no idea of what mountain it would be if it's not Ascutney, though.
As always, comments are welcomed and encouraged.
What you see is the Connecticut River, not nearly frozen over, but covered with a lot of floating ice. The long horizontal thing is the bridge: the longest wooden bridge in the U.S. and the longest two-span covered bridge in the world. There's snow on the roof. In the background, I believe that's Mt. Ascutney (VT), but I could be wrong about that. I have no idea of what mountain it would be if it's not Ascutney, though.
As always, comments are welcomed and encouraged.Labels: all, New Hampshire, photography, water
I ran, unsuccessfully, for the U.S. presidency in 2008.
If you are interested in reading my archived official campaign web site, you can find that archive at http://www.repealofgravity.com/Archive.





2 Comments:
Yep, it's Mt Ascutney! It has a road to near the top, from which there's an easy walk to the summit for an amazing view. I shot a panorama from a similar vantage as your photo, and used it for the graphic header of a website I originally designed: http://www.rvhra.org/
By
Ted Jerome, at 2/23/2008 12:34 AM
Ted,
Thanks for the confirmation. The scene certainly looks very much different in the winter than it does during the warmer months! I keep meaning to ask you whether you have a web site where I can see your photography, and I keep forgetting to ask. Shame on me.
By
Louis J. Cassorla, at 2/23/2008 8:16 PM
Post a Comment
Links to this post:
Create a Link
<< Home