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Saw this scene on Grey's Beach today, Happy New Year's everybody!
Same beach as the last image, this time frozen after the big blizzard.
A week ago I could walk out beyond that wall of posts, very high tide.
Usually the water is beyond that island which is normally a stand of trees in this flooded field, but here is what happens when freezing rain melts over a foot of snow after there was full moon. Merry Christmas!
Woke up to this after a night of 50mph winds, a very messy morning.
The other beach in Yarmouth Port, Grey's Beach, is iced up now too.
Saw 5 crows try to chase a hawk out of a tree but he wouldn't budge.
Some of this water is frozen, although the ocean is still warm.
That's tidal ice, not snow, on Yarmouth Port's officially frozen beach.
That's Hyannis, where the ferry home docks, in the distance, land ho!
One must fly or ferry to Nantucket, this is the Sound on my way home.
Rainy street in Nantucket, typical Cape houses, lots of cobblestones.
Nantucket harbor where I caught the ferry back home to the Cape.
Because Nantucket is an island, there are lots of seagulls and beaches.
Was on Nantucket for Thanksgiving, here's the oldest house there.
Discovered the Catholic cemetery in town, I love this fabulous old tree.
This working barn is across the road I live on and classic Cape style.
Grey's Beach again, another very noisy seagull stirring up a ruckus.
Gloomy day, gloomy beach, trees filled with noisy birds, invigorating.
Besides the two beaches here, there is also a lovely lake that ducks like.
Reeds on the moors, I may break out the watercolors and paint these.
Sun came out this morning, so I had to go to beach with my camera.
Love walking around over here, much like my beloved Hudson River.
Pretty trees and a rock wall on Main Street in my new neighborhood.
Have a job on the Cape, here's the view from the front store window.
The sun setting over the marsh along the road where I am now living.
This is my friend Sarah on the jetty the day after she drove me here.
Another shot from the walk in my new 'hood on the blustery Sunday.
Go back a few weeks to see this rock when the weather was warmer.
That's the Cape beyond the orange marshland I pass walking to work.
Dead tree on the beach, gorgeously blustery day, whitecaps rolling in.
Back, y'all. Much frantic activity the last 2 weeks, but I live here now!
Been crazy busy getting rid of all the assorted stuff I've collected in my NYC apartment that I don't want to take with me - next week I'll pack.
It's raining in New York, let's look at a Cape Cod daisy field instead.
Weird week in Manhattan, hailstorms and now UFOS, fascinating.
Another familiar scene on a gloomy Gotham evening, still interesting.
Gloomy afternoon, won't be seeing this familiar scene much longer.
Looks solid enough to walk on, but is actually quite marshy out there.
Almost there, sorting through junk in the studio, my college era today.
NY weather's been nasty, so here's a shot of my soon-to-be new hood.
Stuck in Bronx/Queens Expressway traffic on the bus from the Cape.
Still in Manhattan, threw so much out today, the super made me stop.
A little tidal action on the Cape, while in NYC I'm frantically packing.
On the road about 10 minutes from where I'm moving to next month.
One last shot in Brooklyn, from under the Manhattan Bridge again.
Winding down our DUMBO tour - big news, I'm moving to Cape Cod!
Construction scene going on near the foot of the Manhattan Bridge.
I've been told that although the East River is much shallower than the Hudson, one can drown in it faster because of the dangerous currents.
Next to the sign about Washington's Brooklyn escape is this image of an etching from that era of Manhattan from the same waterfront.
A turning point in the Revolutionary War was the night Washington's army slipped out of Brooklyn by crossing here to continue their fight.