sunrise

Opening Neabsco Creek Boardwalk New Years Day 2024 by Todd Henson

My father and I welcomed in 2024 with a walk along the Neabsco Creek Boardwalk. He volunteers to open the boardwalk several days a week and this happened to be one of those days. We arrived when it was still pitch black outside. For the holidays they decorate and light up parts of the park and some sections of the boardwalk on select days and during certain hours, so it was interesting seeing all the decorations and lights when they were off and dark. Some were a little creepy, hanging from trees over the path leading to the boardwalk. I didn’t get any photos of these as it was completely dark.

You can see at 6:28 how dark it was from the parking lot. You can also see some of the decorations. They had a sleigh and reindeer under the pavilion for the kids. There’s also a small playground just beyond. The lights through the trees on the left are from a sewage treatment plant.

Pitch black beyond the parking lot

When we arrived at the first gate it was 6:38 and still very dark. I set up the tripod and captured a 30 second exposure of the gate, which I then lightened a bit in post. You can see the sky lighting up where the sun will rise, as well as the lights of the marina and a housing community through the gaps in the gate on the far shore of the wetlands.

Gates of Neabsco Creek Boardwalk

This time of year the wetlands is somewhat scraggly with all the vegetation now brown. Some cattails still stand tall but many of the grasses and other plants have died down or been plastered to the ground by the tides and flooding. These photos were created between 6:53 to 7:09.

Early morning wetlands

A field of old cattails before sunrise

Just before the sun comes up, if there’s enough of a gap, it can light up the clouds with reds and oranges. I happened to find a cooperative great blue heron fishing just off the boardwalk during this time, and though this was a 1.6 second exposure it stayed fairly still during that time. This occurred at 7:17.

Fiery sunrise with a great blue heron

The sewage treatment plant on one shore sometimes releases warmer water into the wetlands which increases the amount of mist floating over that area. This morning the receding tide took it out towards the Potomac River, which at this location is close enough to the ocean that its tidal, meaning these are tidal wetlands. If you come at different times you see the channels of water flowing in either direction. The large houses are further along the shore, down from the sewage treatment plant and slightly closer to the river. These photos are from 7:33 and 7:45.

Mists on the far shore

Boardwalk, mists and houses

Sometimes it doesn’t take long for people to begin showing up to either jog or walk the boardwalk. There was one very early, before all the gates had yet been opened. But after all the gates were open more slowly showed up for their first of the year walks. In this case I found a section of boardwalk where you could see it winding back and forth into the distance and thought adding that human presence added something nice. By this time it was 8:16. 

Walking Neabsco Creek Boardwalk

Heading back I thought I’d capture a view of some of the decorations they’d installed around one of the gates to the boardwalk. I think they’ve done a nice job. They limit the decorations and lights to the loop of the boardwalk closest to the shore, as well as the paths on land, and only do them for a limited amount of time so as to limit disturbance to wildlife. And speaking of wildlife, I did see a fox, beaver, muskrat, heron, hawk (which landed on one of the fake trees on the boardwalk!), ducks, gulls and many smaller birds like sparrows. Granted, many were seen when it was still so dark I wasn’t able to capture any clear photos of them.

A hawk on the holiday trees

Decorations at the boardwalk entrance

And this final photo was created at 8:39 just outside the boardwalk gates looking back out towards the marina and the train bridge over the wetlands. Beyond the bridge is the Potomac River, and where the sun rose.

A parting view from Neabsco Creek Boardwalk

It doesn’t take two hours to open the boardwalk, but when you have someone with a camera tagging along it can cause the overall walk to take that long. :-)

This was a great way to begin the year, and I hope you enjoyed reading about it.

Try the following for more from Neabsco Creek Boardwalk:


Do you enjoy these posts?

Sign up to receive periodic emails with updates and thoughts. Don’t worry, I won’t spam you. And please consider purchasing artwork or products from my online store, and using my affiliate links in the sidebar to the right when shopping online.

I appreciate your support!


A Quiet Morning by Todd Henson

Sunrise, Mason Neck National Wildlife Refuge, January 2023 by Todd Henson

Sunrise, Mason Neck National Wildlife Refuge, January 7, 2023

In mid to late-December, 2022, my father and I hiked trails at Mason Neck National Wildlife Refuge in Virginia. It’s a location I don’t get to all that often and because of that we thought it would be a good place to revisit. While there we heard these extremely loud birds out in the marsh and wondered what they were. I only had my wide angle lens with me so the best I could do was capture some very distant images and record a little audio, which was enough to later identify the birds as tundra swans, a species that winters over in this area each year.

There was a time when the only lens I brought with me was my longest lens and wildlife was, by far, my most common subject, with birds being what I most sought out. Since then I’ve branched out and now I seek out many more subjects, but I’m still very drawn to birds and other wildlife. So finding these tundra swans and learning they overwinter here lit a fire in me to photograph them. So on New Year’s Day, 2023, my father and I returned to the refuge with my big lens (and my wide angle, just in case). As luck would have it, it was a very foggy morning so any birds we saw out in the marsh were just silhouettes in the fog. It also happened to be low tide and the swans seem to prefer slightly deeper water, meaning they were much further away than they’d been in December. We could hear them but not see them.

I checked the tide charts and found that January 7th would have a high tide at the marsh right around the 7-8 am time period, so we planned to give it another try. And luck was with us. We did get the chance to watch a small number of tundra swans out in the marsh as they woke up, stretched, and started their day. They were still at a distance but with my long lens I was able to create some decent images of them.

But wait a minute, you might say. There’s not a single tundra swan in the photograph I’m presenting today. What does any of this have to do with the story behind this image? Well, the story is that I never expected to create this image. I was focused on the tundra swans. But thankfully I also brought my wide angle lens and we just happened to arrive at the observation platform not long after sunrise. So I brought up my camera with the wide angle lens and quickly created a series of handheld images of sunrise over the Great Marsh. The river you see in the background is the Potomac River. And the land in the distance on the other side of the Potomac River is Maryland.

So the lesson of the day is one I’ve relearned many times. Always be open to the unexpected. Even if you go out with a single goal in mind, be open to the possibilities nature presents you. You just never know what you’ll find, though with time you learn some of those possibilities and can prepare for them.

And about those tundra swans, I do hope to share some photos of them with you in the not too distant future. Nothing spectacular, but a nice collection of photos I’m happy with that represent some of the behaviors we observed.


Do you enjoy these posts?

Sign up to receive periodic emails with updates and thoughts. Don’t worry, I won’t spam you. And please consider purchasing artwork or products from my online store, and using my affiliate links in the sidebar to the right when shopping online.

I appreciate your support!