Then, suddenly, you stumbled on Niagara Falls. You, on your own, have discovered the never-before-known falls. I know for sure your breathing would be difficult; your senses would be overwhelmed. And you wouldn’t be comparing it to that really cool CD where you saw the falls from every angle the helicopter pilot could manage.
I believe that’s one of the things to look for in life. Drive off the beaten trail. Don’t read the guide books. Just haphazardly come across things. I recommend it as the only way to travel. It will leave you with a lot more than a Kodak moment.
So, shun all “destinations†and seek your own epiphanies. The abandoned ranch with it’s fencing collapsing. The ghost town you didn’t know was there. The soda springs you had not read about. The salt Lake no one pointed you toward. Avoid the guide books. Don’t ask locals “What’s here to see?†Skip the photo opps.
Reach out for the unknown. Just stumble about. Come upon things unexpected. It’s what the explorers did. It’s what will give you the grandeur you didn’t know about. You will see the things too small to have been noticed. You will find things no one knew were there.
You will discover what a friend of mine told me 30 years ago when I took up photography as a hobby. He said, “If you can’t spend a lifetime taking extraordinary pictures in your own backyard, you do not have an artist’s eye.†How much more is this true of daily sojourns into nearby and distant territories?
Cold-Packed Sweet Dill Pickles: Canning Without a Pressure Canner or Jar Prep!
Learning to can? Lindsay Lehman Peters shares her family's recipe for easy cold-packed sweet dill pickles.
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