Galveston’s Tree Carvings – post Hurricane Ike

In September 2008, Hurricane Ike made landfall very near Galveston Island, Texas. This storm created a substantial storm surge (approaching 5 meters of sea water) which had drastic ramifications – personal, financial, and ecological – on the surrounding area, including the historic city of Galveston, TX.

Thousands of trees, primarily oak, died as a result of the salt water inundation. Several of the local property owners and Galveston’s Citizen Tree Committee commissioned “chainsaw artists” to carve and chisel their dead trees into sculptures. Here is but a sampling of the numerous and varied carvings.

 

Lost Oaks Memorial 2AM-113926_7D_blog

Lost Oaks Memorial 2AM-113926
© Andrew McInnes/2AM Photography. All rights reserved.

 

Flock of Birds 2AM-114725_7D_blog

Flock of Birds 2AM-114725
© Andrew McInnes/2AM Photography. All rights reserved.

 

Flock of Birds 2AM-114753_7D_blog

Flock of Birds 2AM-114753
© Andrew McInnes/2AM Photography. All rights reserved.

 

Geisha 2AM-113917_7D_blog

Geisha 2AM-113917
© Andrew McInnes/2AM Photography. All rights reserved.

 

Squirrel with Acorn 2AM-114497_7D_blog

Squirrel with Acorn 2AM-114497
© Andrew McInnes/2AM Photography. All rights reserved.

 

Details on Dolphin_Dorado_Moray Eel 2AM-114504_7D_blog

Details on Dolphin_Dorado_Moray Eel 2AM-114504
© Andrew McInnes/2AM Photography. All rights reserved.

 

Firehouse Dalmatian 2AM-114437_7D_blog

Firehouse Dalmatian 2AM-114437
© Andrew McInnes/2AM Photography. All rights reserved.

 

Firehouse Dalmatian 2AM-114946_7D_edited_blog

Firehouse Dalmatian 2AM-114946
© Andrew McInnes/2AM Photography. All rights reserved.

 

Mermaid 2AM-114489_7D_blog

Mermaid 2AM-114489
© Andrew McInnes/2AM Photography. All rights reserved.

 

Tin Woodsman 2AM-113921_7D_blog

Tin Woodsman 2AM-113921
© Andrew McInnes/2AM Photography. All rights reserved.

 

Tin Woodsman 2AM-114390_7D_blog

Tin Woodsman 2AM-114390
© Andrew McInnes/2AM Photography. All rights reserved.

 

Lost Oaks Memorial 2AM-113927_7D_blog

Lost Oaks Memorial 2AM-113927
© Andrew McInnes/2AM Photography. All rights reserved.

 

 

 

The “Roaring Lion” (Brazos River) is dry!

A southern plains dawn - radiating radiation above a wheat field abutting the Brazos riparian zone.


As the sun awakes
 and pokes its head out from under its bedcovers, caressing me with a startling, crisp, and clear light, I ponder and reflect on open spaces, friends, dreams, and the joy of a life intimately shared.

I recently travelled up to the upper section of the Brazos River to photograph it in its current very-low-flow regime. My host and guide was the fabulous photographer, and Texas treasure, Wyman Meinzer. This sunrise image was taken on our last morning shoot. I was very fortunate to test my latest lens, the Canon EF-S 10-22mm f/3.5-4.5 USM autofocus lens for my 7D camera – I am delighted with it!

The following images are a sample through which the severity of this historic drought can be partially comprehended. Seeing the river in this state illustrated that these natural systems are indeed “living”, and not a static, benign, undepletable featureless feature.

Please note: the water shown in these photos are actually isolated, shallow, and unconnected “pockets” of very hot, highly saline, and by my estimation hypoxic/anoxic stagnant water. The river no-longer (for now at least) cuts a swath through this gorgeous red land. Instead of a red load we see a red-bed caked and crusted with concentrations of organics and crystals of salt – this is gypsum country.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Despite the dry
I am reminded that nature possesses a resounding resilience; natural processes and time, along with selection pressures and genetic diversity, allow adaptability, specialists and generalists, transition, recolonization, and succession – the river system still sustains life.

 

 

 


Someday
(hopefully very soon as many fine hard-working folks, along with flora and fauna, are enduring challenging times) the Brazos will rear up and roar again; at that time the rust colored strata will cease to be dust, instead, renewed by glistening life-flows, the southern plains shall be resuscitated and exuberant in the water of life.