Travel Obscura

Asticou Azalea Garden – Northeast Harbor, Maine – Part 113 min read time

On the last day of our week in Maine we spent the morning in Wonderland (part 10) and part of the afternoon at Asticou Azalea Garden in Northeast Harbor. We had passed it several times in our travels and finally had the chance to visit.

It is a public garden, owned and conserved by the Land & Garden Preserve.  We pulled into the tree lined parking lot, pulled out our cameras and

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On the last day of our week in Maine we spent the morning in Wonderland (part 10) and part of the afternoon at Asticou Azalea Garden in Northeast Harbor. We had passed it several times in our travels and finally had the chance to visit.

It is a public garden, owned and conserved by the Land & Garden Preserve.  We pulled into the tree lined parking lot, pulled out our cameras and

 split up, each following different paths through this peaceful and serene place.

Dogwood

Since I love to photograph flowers, this was a very interesting stop for me!   I walked along the paths and saw there were many plants that would have been flowering earlier in the year, yet there were still many flowers to see & shoot.

Info on the gardens from Wikipedia:

The Asticou Azalea Garden in Northeast Harbor, Maine, United States, is a popular visitor attraction. It was created by life long resident of the village, Charles Kenneth Savage, in 1956. Savage also created Reef Point Estate in nearby Bar Harbor. It was from Reef Point that several specimens, with the financial assistance of John D. Rockefeller, Jr., were moved, including the weeping hemlock, just north of the main bridge.

Located at the intersection of Route 198 and Route 3 (Peabody Drive), the 2.3-acre garden and its pond are open to the public during daylight hours from May 1 to October 31. It features a selection of rhododendrons and azaleas, including the Rhododendron canadense, Maine’s native azalea.  Styled after a Japanese stroll garden, the fine gravel paths are raked regularly in a manner that suggests flowing water. There is also a sand garden, where this effect is repeated but with the addition of stones, which are meant to represent islands.

After a few minutes, I found a bench on the shore of the large pond and sat down to enjoy the scene.  I realized that all the greenery would be perfect for infrared so I ran back out to the car to grab my Nikon D200 that was converted to infrared by Life Pixel.

The conversion installs a 590 nm filter in my camera, which they call Super Color InfraRed, since some color does come through along with the IR light.   The color in camera is very strange making the sky reddish, so you have to do some work on the image in Photoshop.

The huge trees with many branches are one of my favorite subjects for IR as the green leaves all go white and the intricate tree branches are much more visible than in a regular color image.

The Japanese-style garden was another great subject for IR.

With my Infrared camera the light green ferns & other plants were almost white, so I converted the image to Black & White highlighting the contrast that IR provides, versus converting a color image to B&W.

But I had to go back to the regular camera when I found these simple Anemones.  These are one of my favorite flowers!

A Japanese garden would not be complete without a Japanese Maple.  This one was just starting to turn red!

There were many plants that made amazing images like these ferns.  They were backlit and the repeating pattern caught my eye.

This Balloon Flower bud was a sign of more to come.  I wish I could see this garden in the spring!

If you are in the Bar Harbor/Acadia National Park area I recommend a stop at lovely Asticou Azalea Garden.  If you are a flower & plant person this place is not to be missed!  Check out their website for more info.

Other equipment I used at the garden: Nikon D 810, Nikon 105mm Macro lens, Benro Travel Tripod & Really Right Stuff Ballhead,

That is all for now!

Lynn

 

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Lynn Wiezycki

Come with Lynn as she travels around Florida & sometimes a bit farther to other states & countries. She is always on the lookout for interesting things, places, people and most of all, light, to photograph. So you never know what the next images will be through the The Illuminating Lens

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