A Visit to Cold Spring, NY – A photo exhibition

Here Coffee + Beer was holding a exhibition of photographs by Brian Avenius. It’s called Lost and Found and it’s running through February. Some very impressive, large format photographs here.

I’ve often thought about printing some of my photographs larger, but I always talk myself out of it. Since I don’t have a large format printer, it would cost me quite a bit to print them, and I’m not sure what I would do with them afterwards. I certainly don’t have any wall space in my house, and I don’t sell any of my photographs. I think I’ll stick to printing smaller format photobooks.

It might be nice to print a couple of them though…just to see how they look.

Taken with a Sony RX100 MVII

A Visit to Cold Spring, NY – Here Coffee and Beer

My first stop wasn’t Cold Spring though. I’m compulsively punctual. I’ll get to a particular location an hour early, rather than risk being 1 minute late. This means that, when I’m taking a train, I often get there very early. Luckily there’s a small place next to the Ossining Metro North station where you can have coffee and/or snacks while you wait for your train. They also have a great selection of craft beers, which since it was fairly early in the morning I skipped, tempted though I was.

It’s called Here Coffee + Beer

While there I was particularly impressed by these large, metal, machines. I assume they are some kind of commercial coffee roaster. Very picturesque.


Taken with a Sony RX100 MVII

A Visit to Cold Spring, NY – Overview

I decided to go to Cold Spring, NY the other day. When we had a house in Putnam Valley we used to go there often. It’s a picturesque river town, which happened to be the closest metro north station to where we lived. Wikipedia describes it as follows:

Cold Spring is a village in the town of Philipstown in Putnam County, New York, United States. The population was 1,986 at the 2020 census. It borders the smaller village of Nelsonville and the hamlets of Garrison and North Highlands. The central area of the village is on the National Register of Historic Places as the Cold Spring Historic District due to its many well-preserved 19th-century buildings, constructed to accommodate workers at the nearby West Point Foundry (itself a Registered Historic Place today). The town is the birthplace of General Gouverneur K. Warren, who was an important figure in the Union Army during the Civil War. The village, located in the Hudson Highlands, sits at the deepest point of the Hudson River, directly across from West Point. Cold Spring serves as a weekend getaway for many residents of New York City.

The Village’s website provides this information.

The historic Village of Cold Spring, New York, was incorporated in 1846 and is a small community of approximately 2000 residents located on the scenic banks of the Hudson River just 50 miles north of New York City. Easily accessible from major highways and the Hudson Line of Metro-North Railroad, Cold Spring offers a wide range of recreational and cultural diversion, as well as fine culinary choices from pizza and baked goods to some of the finest restaurants in the Hudson Valley. Visitors can browse through our unique shops, take historic tours or simply enjoy the breathtaking surroundings. Residents and tourists alike take advantage of a variety of outdoor activities such as boating, hiking, cycling and kayaking. For those seeking leisure and relaxation, there is plenty of quiet space at our picturesque waterfront and in our well maintained parks. It is easy to envision why a village was established here on the banks of the Hudson River. The abundance of natural resources and the ingenuity of Cold Spring’s first settlers put it on the map nearly 200 years ago, and we are still thriving today.

As early as the 1600s, the Hudson River was used as a major watercourse by Native Americans and continued to be a main mode of travel and transport until the nineteenth century. In addition, Cold Spring’s proximity to what is now Fahnestock State Park provided a cheap source of lumber and iron ore. Margaret’s Brook, a small creek located to the west of Route 9D which runs into the Hudson River, supplied hydro-power to the West Point Foundry, which helped propel Cold Spring from a tiny hamlet into a bustling village. Even the name of Cold Spring is linked to a natural resource. Myth has it that George Washington drank from a local spring and declared it to be refreshingly cold.

The first settler of Cold Spring was Thomas Davenport in 1730. A small trading hamlet grew alongside the river by the early 1800s, and in 1818, Gouverneur Kemble and others established the West Point Foundry. It became one of the major industrial sites in the United States and provided munitions (including the famed Parrott gun) for the Union Army during the Civil War. With the influx of workers at the Foundry, local housing, businesses and churches increased, and Cold Spring was incorporated as a village in 1846. During the last half of the nineteenth century, Cold Spring was a magnet for artists, writers and prominent families, all attracted to the extraordinary beauty of the Highlands. Great mansions were built along Morris Avenue, including Undercliff, the home of George Pope Morris, and Craigside, the home of Julia and Daniel Butterfield. After the Foundry closed in 1911, Cold Spring’s prominence faded; however, following World II, a rebirth began with an influx of businesses into the Hudson River Valley and commuters to New York City. In 1973, the Village was designated a Federal Historic District, and tourists have been visiting Cold Spring’s historic sites, shops, restaurants and hiking trails ever since.

Through the changing times since 1973, the Village of Cold Spring has been unique among the Hudson River communities in retaining its fundamental character. This is largely due to the steadfast loyalty of Cold Spring residents and their ingenuity in adapting to the needs of the present while carefully preserving their heritage and way of life.

Apart from it being a nice place to visit, I had a particular reason for going. We used to frequent a restaurant in Cold Spring. It’s called Le Bouchon, and I felt like having it’s Cassoulet again.

So off I went.

Taken with a Sony RX10 IV

Windmills

I would have preferred it if the two windmills had been closer, but it was so cold that I didn’t feel like fiddling around trying to find a better viewpoint (it may not have been possible to even do so.

Taken with a Sony RX10 IV

Seagulls-on-Hudson

Last week I went down to the Hudson River to take some pictures, (See: By the Ossining Boat and Canoe Club) some of which were pictures of seagulls. While some of them were OK, the birds were some distance away and I didn’t have a camera that was well suited to taking pictures of birds.

So, I went back yesterday. It was still pretty cold, but nowhere near as cold as it was last week. And this time I took a camera with a 24-600mm lens, fast and accurate autofocus and tracking, and 24fps burst speed.

While I still have to practice a lot more as well as learning more about where to find bird, and how to have enough patience to wait, I got a couple of photographs that I liked.













Taken with a Sony RX10 IV