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Thứ Tư, 7 tháng 3, 2012
Thứ Tư, 15 tháng 2, 2012
New England Foliage by Philip Greenspun, 1993-1996 (updated February 2010)
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Covered Bridges
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Towns
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Backroads
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Kancamagus Highway (and Franconia Notch)
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General Practical Information
The Basics

Dead Trees
Start with the Michelin Green Guide to New England. This book has excellent driving tours with all the important sights marked with stars. They have a particularly nice tour for the White Mountains of New Hampshire. Contact Robert Hitchman, author and publisher ofPhotograph America, and get the back issues on Autumn in Vermont (#2) and Acadia/Maine Coast (#13).

A Plan

My friend Bill grew up in Vermont and his favorite inn throughout the state is Ten Bends on the River (802-888-2827) in Hyde Park (NE of Burlington).
Here are some driving tours:
Equipment
- Tripod
- maximum resolution digital camera (it is all about the details) or Fuji Velvia if you're using film equipment
- Wide angle lens for all-around work, e.g., a 16-35/2.8 zoom with a full-frame body, a 10-22mm range with an APS-C camera, or 7-14mm with a Four-Thirds system body
- Macro lens for leaf patterns and such. Any macro lens between 50 and 100mm should work fine.
- Telephoto lens to isolate and compress elements. With a full-frame camera, a 70-200mm is practical and the f/2.8 aperture lenses are not necessary because you're not taking portraits.
Live Free and/or Die

Anyway, my favorite New Hampshire picture is the side-by-side State Safety Rest Area and State Liquor Store. New Hampshire used to be one of the few states where you could legally drink a beer in your car, i.e., they had no "open container law". Anyway, you don't need PhotoShop to create this absurd image. Just pull over at the first stop off I-93N from Boston.
Stay Home
Or almost home. I snagged a fairly reasonable foliage picture just north of the Boston suburb of Ayer, Massachusetts.
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