Bill and I drove to Harrisonburg, Virginia yesterday for our semi-annual trip to Costco. It’s about an hour away from home and we could drive the freeway or take the old north-south route that is now almost a country road. We went via the Interstate (a highway engineer’s preference), but then we took the country road for the return (an amateur photographer’s preference). However, getting him to stop for my perceived photo ops was the challenge.
I am always drawn to things that used to be, or things that leave remnants of memories from a long ago prosperity.
And there it was – a weathered old house that simply had to have a story of its own!
“STOP,” I cried and with a screech of brakes and a necessary U-turn, we found a spot to park and shoot.
The paint’s peeling, boards are rotting, and the sad old dwelling and its out-buildings stand in the middle of a parched field. The only real color is in the sky and one evergreen tree. There are no signs of life unless you look very closely for evasive clues. A magnifying glass might help too.
I felt engulfed in nostalgia for the family who abandoned this property.
Did they leave by choice?
Did they die off?
Did they leave in a hurry?
Could there still be someone there?
I think my photographs may hide secrets.
Wait! Do you see curtains in the windows?
Was I taking pictures of an occupied dwelling?
Check out the “guest house.” Do you see a wood pile at the base?
What could be inside either the main house or the guest quarters?
Is there furniture still being used or left there in haste?
Are there cobwebs and the nests of other creatures escaping winter?
Maybe I should knock.
Will anyone answer?
Will it be like the movie, Psycho?
“I’m sleepy. Let’s go home,” said Bill.
I suppose there is only so much nostalgia a civil engineer can take.
And off we went via the Interstate.
Oh, I wonder all those things too. So much history in all those old abandoned (vacant??) buildings. I’m sure you’re aware of all the arsons that have taken place on the Eastern Shore of Va. in the past few months (they’re up to 70+ now). So far, they’ve been unoccupied/abandoned structures. There are those who say it improves the looks of the area, but I don’t know that I feel that way. In either case, it’s crimiinal to destroy someone else’s property!
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That is some imagination you have!
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Argh, scary. Hope I never fall for any marketing that gets me to stay in a guesthouse such as this.
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I watched Hitchcock with Anthony Hopkins. Wanna see Paychobnow
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Definitely fodder for horror. Lucky the guy inside with the shotgun didn’t join your photo “shoot.”
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Mike was a little lacking in the patience department when I started asking to stop by the side of the road to take pictures. Then I bought him a camera for Christmas, and now that he is getting into it as well and trying to take better photos than me (LOL!!), he doesn’t mind stopping at all. Maybe you should buy Bill a camera :). By the way, I would have stopped for this old house too – we are attracted to the same photo ops Dor!!
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That is exactly the kind of place that I like to stumble upon, camera in hand 🙂
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Spooky! Great place though!
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You have a creative imagination, Doran! What fun for you but I imagine civil engineers are rather practical. Good shots though.
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I had a feeling we think alike Dianna. A shame about all those burnt buildings and no, I had not heard of the arsons on the Eastern Shore. I would not want to watch the fire.
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A victim of a worried mother who worked dispatch for the City’s Police Department!
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Ditto! 🙂
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Hmmmmm! You have a point there Lilly. 🙂
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We may be separated by years and space, but we sure do have our heads in the same direction Cindy! Will let you know if Bill suddenly gains patience. If not, I will have to donate a camera “for the cause.” 🙂
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Thanks coastalcrone! The imagination is rooted in family lore. My Mom was a dispatcher for a city police department and came home with all the horror stories (and some pretty funny ones too).
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This sounds familiar…trying to get the driver to stop for pictures! Ha! What a great find.
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I know it’s a difficult to think of men and patience in the same sentence, but I’ll cross my fingers for you LOL!!
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You are the quite the story-teller! Your imagination is amazing. It is so interesting to imagine those who lived in those old abandoned houses.
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Toes too!
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I see ghosts hovering, floating. Seeking what was lost; hoping for soul rest.
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Thanks for stopping by my blog. I have been looking around yours too and am following you. 🙂
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Thanks so much!
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Great story!! I love the pictures too
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A scary place for sure! 🙂
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