Showing posts with label Camden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Camden. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

imagine Camden

Had the Penobscot Abenaki Indians had their way, Megunticook would have been the name for Camden, a town in Maine. But now with its English and less tongue-twisting name, Camden still stands out. It does not look commonplace and generic at all. Its history of economic prosperity provided Camden with a swath of picturesque 19th century houses, storefronts and churches amidst perched hills, pine woodlands, mineral rivers and jagged coast.

water rush
a river cascades into the public port
Canon EOS 350D, 15s, f/14, 18mm, ISO 100


Chestnut Street Baptist Church
the Chestnut Street Baptist Church of Camden
Canon EOS 350D Digital, 1.3s, f/10, 18mm, ISO 100, +1/3EV


Some seventeen summers ago, a good friend invited me on a boat trip in Camden and since then, irrevocably, I have an affection to its scenic coast. Over the years, complaints have been widespread that the old-fashioned quaint village has been transformed into a commercial haven serving the vacationers and its public landing more like a marina for the moneyed jetsetters for their yachts, schooners and boats.

old St Thomas Church
Canon PowerShot S40, 1/500s, f/2.8, 7.1 mm


Chestnut street
the street leading to the public landing
Canon EOS 350D Digital, 10s, f/22, 18mm, ISO 100, -1/3 EV


Notwithstanding the changes, Camden should still capture anyone’s imagination. My favorite place remains the public landing. Fronted by a dense network of public storehouses, bookshops, restaurants and boutique galleries, the marina is a treat to the eyes. Food is no slouch either and I’ve tried more than my share of its seafood restaurants and a local pub and they were no disappointment. For the photographer in you, there is even a wide stream that bisects the cape and pouring fresh potable water directly into the pier.

falling
a river cascade at the public landing
Canon EOS 350D Digital, 25s, f/11,18mm, ISO 100



6AM sunrise at the marina, Camden, Maine
6AM sunrise at the marina
Canon PowerShot S40, 1/40s, f/5.6, 7.1mm, +2/3 EV


Whatever time you visit, whether it is twilight, noon or even early dawn as I often did, Camden is not bereft of postcard possibilities. Rife is more like it.

public landing
dawn at the public landing
Canon PowerShot S40, 1/30s, f/5.6, 7.1mm



docked
boats rocking silently at dusk (winter)
Canon EOS 350D Digital, 30s, f/4.5, 18mm, ISO 100, +2/3 EV


summer twilight
twilight in the marina (summer)
Canon PowerShot S40, 1/500s, f/2.8, 7.1mm, +2/3EV

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