WINDCARVED | Tomhannock
Long Exposure
The powerful winter storm has moved on, but in its wake, an invading tide of wind remains, surging across the landscape. It slips through the narrowest cracks, burrows into jacket cuffs, and presses against windows with an insistent, restless energy. It rattles rooftops and hums through wires stretched taut between poles, a low, unceasing howl.
Anything not anchored by weight or gravity is at its mercy. Trash barrels tumble, snow lifts from rooftops in swirling plumes, and forgotten objects are sent tumbling across frozen ground. Tree limbs bow and snap, crashing onto power lines and leaving homes in darkness. The wind does not discriminate—it reminds us how delicate the systems we rely on truly are.
Yet, for all its menace, the wind is also an artist. On the Tomhannock, it has sculpted the ice into intricate ridges and wind-swept formations, tracing ephemeral patterns like frozen waves caught mid-motion. Snow, carried in the wind, gathers in sweeping arcs along the shoreline, reshaping the land with each passing gust. It is a fleeting kind of beauty, ever-changing, erased, and rewritten by the next gust.
This is nature’s paradox—chaos and creation intertwined. The wind that shatters also shapes, leaving behind a landscape both fierce and fragile, waiting for the next storm to begin again.
© 2025 John Bulmer Photography, John Bulmer Media, and Nor'easter Films
www.bulmerphotography.com
www.johnbulmermedia.com
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www.bulmerphotography.com
www.johnbulmermedia.com
www.noreasterfilms.com
All Rights Reserved