I took this photo in the middle of last month, while
walking along the crossroads of Bergenfield, Englewood and Tenafly.
Showing posts with label Bergenfield (NJ). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bergenfield (NJ). Show all posts
Saturday, October 10, 2020
Photo of the Day: St. Anthony Orthodox Church, Bergenfield NJ
St. Anthony Orthodox Church, a longtime mainstay of
Bergen County, NJ, where I live, was dedicated in 1964.
Sunday, September 27, 2020
Photo of the Day: Calvary Lutheran Church, Bergenfield, NJ
A few days ago, while stopping at the Bergenfield Public Library, I was struck by the sight of this church, and decided to photograph it.
Sunday, December 22, 2013
Photo of the Day: Creche, St. John’s, Bergenfield NJ
I was driving around this afternoon, heading from one
late-Christmas store purchase to another, when my eye was caught by the display
you see here. This crèche scene was facing Washington Avenue, outside
St. John the Evangelist Roman Catholic Church, in Bergenfield, not far from
where I live in Bergen County, NJ.
The sight pulled me up short, reminding me that this
time of year should not be about the purchases but about a baby—but not just
any baby—brought into a very dark world to light it with love, and to reunite the worlds of man and nature into a harmonious whole.
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Photo of the Day: Coopers’ Pond II
Another photo (taken on the same day as this earlier post) of Coopers Pond
Park, in Bergenfield, N.J., a few miles from where I live.
Labels:
Bergenfield (NJ),
Coopers Pond Park,
Parks,
Photo of the Day
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
Photo of the Day: Sunday Reflections
The next day, however, I knew—and also realized why I
had previously sensed the source as being local without being able to identify it concretely. Many a
time, I’d passed Coopers Pond Park in Bergenfield, NJ, a few miles from my
home. I had wanted to stop, but was always in a hurry to get someplace else.
This past Sunday, however, a friend’s brief Facebook mention of power walking
led me to look around for local parks where I could perambulate. As I did so, I spotted the now-familiar gazebo and
the reflections in the pond, and had to pull over.
Before long, I was snapping picture after picture. The
rain had abated long enough for me to feel comfortable as I took in the
setting. Visitors to the park also seemed comfortable, leaning over the railing
in the gazebo to fish for bass and carp.
The height of fall seemed right at the brink of my
consciousness, just as, not so long ago, the identity of a lovely little park
in a painting lay in the same realm.
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