Last weekend, the rain held off long enough for a nice backyard wedding I photographed in Brandon, Vt. More photos can be seen on my Facebook page.






Last weekend, the rain held off long enough for a nice backyard wedding I photographed in Brandon, Vt. More photos can be seen on my Facebook page.






I feel fortunate to be a photographer in New England; there are so many picturesque places for weddings. For example, Anne and Mike’s wedding last weekend was held at the Calvin Coolidge State Historic Site in Plymouth, Vt., and was followed by a reception at Simon Pearce in Quechee, Vt. More photos can be seen on my Facebook page.







I enjoyed wandering around with my camera during my hometown’s Memorial Day activities — it’s one of the best small-town experiences I know of. And it was great to see so many familiar faces! My daughter and I also stopped by our neighbor’s farm for a fundraiser for NOFA-VT’s Farmshare program.




From top: Band member Rudy Ruddell tunes up his harmonica for Haywire’s performance at Tunbridge Hill Farm; Children try to get the attention of the Tunbridge Volunteer Fire Department as they throw candy during the parade; One pug had a good view of the tractors, hot rods, children and oxen parading down Route 110; Amy Bogardus tries to direct her Guernsey ox, Cash, during a game of Cow Plop Bingo at the fairgrounds.
Saturday afternoon was picture-perfect for Jeannette and Michael’s wedding I photographed at Mountain Meadows Lodge in Killington, Vt. It’s not every day you see a bride feed the inn’s pet goat bits of her bouquet! More photos can be seen on my Facebook page.






Last weekend, I enjoyed photographing Christina and Timothy’s small wedding at The Inn at Weathersfield in Perkinsville, Vt. A rumbling thunderstorm briefly kept everyone inside, but we were able to get out to take formal pictures afterwards! More photos can be seen on my Facebook page.






On May Day, my sister paid to fly me to Washington D.C. to document the arrival of 100 Iowa veterans — including her father-in-law, Allan Wehrspann — to see the National World War II Memorial. They were part of a national program called the Honor Flight, which raises money to send veterans to the nation’s capital to see the memorial, completed in 2004. Over the three hours I was there, I saw Honor Flight groups from Alabama, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, New England, New York, and Washington. The Iowa veterans also saw other monuments and had a quick tour of the city before returning home to Fort Dodge, Iowa, on the same day.





From top: When he got off the bus at the National World War II Memorial in Washington D.C., Allan Wehrspann of Ottosen, Iowa, was surprised to see his daughter Mary, who had flown in from St. Paul, Minn., with her two sons and daughter-in-law. Wehrspann’s two sons were guardians on the flight; completed in 2004, the memorial honors the 16 million veterans of the United States who served in the war; four-thousand stars at the memorial symbolize the 400,000 who died in the war; a female Mallard bathes in the reflecting pool that flows into the memorial — in the background is the Lincoln Memorial, where a national church service was held in the morning; Wehrspann, left, and two other veterans are reflected in the mural wall at the Korean War Veterans Memorial, which opened in 1995.
Last weekend, I was honored to be part of Catherine and Andrew’s wedding celebration at the Cambridge Boat Club on the Charles River in Cambridge, Mass. It was a beautiful day and a fun evening! More photos from the wedding can be seen on my Facebook page.







