Travels With Charlie (Thompson)

 

My long-time friend and collaborator, Charlie Thompson, will be reading from his new book, Going Over Home: A Search for Rural Justice in an Unsettled Land, at the Madison Container Company in downtown Marshall on Friday evening, March 6, at 6:30p.m.

We will also share the stage together for a few minutes looking at photographs from our trips and talking about them.

 
 

Jim Smyre and Family planting tobacco, Harmony, North /Carolina 1987.

When I think about Charlie Thompson, a number of things come to mind. There is his overwhelming commitment to the common man - the underserved, the small farmers, the downtrodden, those among us who haven’t been able to achieve their dreams. I think about his intensity of belief, his integrity, and the value he places on dialogue and story. I think about his love of tradition, of old ways, and the importance of holding our history close to our hearts. But mostly when I think about Charlie, I think about the soil, the land, the dirt under fingernails, and understand that that is where his true happiness lies.

 

Travels With Charlie (Thompson)

 

My long-time friend and collaborator, Charlie Thompson, will be reading from his new book, Going Over Home: A Search for Rural Justice in an Unsettled Land, at the Madison Container Company in downtown Marshall on Friday evening, March 6, at 6:30p.m.

We will also share the stage together for a few minutes looking at photographs from our trips and talking about them.

 
 
Man with fire ant bites, the Hurricane Floyd Flood, eastern North Carolina 1999.

Man with fire ant bites, the Hurricane Floyd Flood, eastern North Carolina 1999.

 
 

In 1999, Charlie Thompson and I travelled through eastern North Carolina documenting the aftermath of Hurricane Floyd and the ensuing flood, which left the eastern third of the state under water. We were working with the Southern Oral History Program at Chapel Hill and our goal was to try to understand the effects of this unprecidented natural disaster on the numerous small, rural communites in its path.

We met an elderly man in front of his home and he described the night the waters rose around him, flooding first his fields and then his home. As he waded four feet of water, trying to get to higher ground, believing he would die, he noticed massive balls floating in the water around him. Fire ants.

That day, two months after the storm, he lifted his pants leg for us to reveal his limb, still covered with ant bites.

 

Travels With Charlie (Thompson)

 

My long-time friend and collaborator, Charlie Thompson, will be reading from his new book, Going Over Home: A Search for Rural Justice in an Unsettled Land, at the Madison Container Company in downtown Marshall on Friday evening, March 6, at 6:30p.m.

We will also share the stage together for a few minutes looking at photographs from our trips and talking about them.

 
 

Charlie Thompson (second from left) talking with farmers in a feed mill in Iredell County, NC, 1986.

 
 

In 1986, I was a freelance photographer and had been hired by the Rural Advancement Fund (RAF), a non-profit farm advocacy organization, to photograph in rural communities in the two Carolinas. I was introduced to Charlie Thompson, one of the organization’s field organizers, who would take me to meet some of the farmers RAF worked with. This trip, our first of many, marked the beginning of a relationship that has lasted thirty-four years and taken us to numerous far-flung, out-of-the-way places.

 

Little Worlds

 
 
 

My original intention with my blog was to simply put my work in front of people. My friend and co-worker, Jamie Paul, suggested I blog, and while I resisted it at first, it’s become a perfect avenue of expression for me. It’s allowed me to combine my photography with an equal obsession with words. I could cover any subject that interested me - photography, Madison County new and old, family, the landscape, travel, just to name a few. And I could work at my own pace with little pressure and no deadlines. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed producing the posts, most especially for the new people they have brought into my life.

But I’ve decided to take a break from blogging and most social media. I can’t imagine not talking for very long, or not wanting my work to have a public venue. Yet I can imagine, and welcome, taking a break from it. For those of you readers who have followed this blog over the last seven years - thank you. Your goodwill, support, criticism, and positive reinforcement have kept it moving forward, and I’m sure those same offerings will bring me back to it at some yet-to-be-determined time in the future.

Rob

 

Little Worlds - Staring at Jenna after Chemotherapy

 

Jenna Nagle, after completing chemotherapy treatment for breast cancer, Guntertown, Madison County, 2019.

 
 

I love Jenna.
I love her openness and exuberance.
Her lack of pretension as she pulled off her scarf to show me her hair.
I love her strength to face the world.
Her life is in the moment.
The most human and real person I know.
But, being honest, and more than a little selfish,
what i love best about Jenna is that
she is always happy to see me. Always.
That is not the case with everyone I know.
And that simple gesture, that unrestrained pleasure in seeing me,
Always lifts my day.

Thank you, Susie.

Mothers in My Life

I have been most fortunate in my Life to be graced with strong, vibrant, challenging and caring Mothers.

 

My Grandmother, Jennie Galeano

 

My Mother, Catherine Galeano Amberg

 
 

My Mother-in-Law, Faye Cooper Stilwell

 
 
 

The Mother of My Second Child, Leslie Gail Stilwell

 

Little Worlds - An Unexpected Guest

I’ve lived in Madison County for forty-five years now and, being here, I’ve learned and done things I never would have imagined when I was a young man. It’s been a rich and extraordinary time. This past weekend allowed me to add to the ever-growing list of remarkable gifts this place has brought me.

Easter weekend began with our third major flood in the last twelve months, this one, perhaps, the worst yet. Collapsed roadways, mudslides and, covering every flooded pasture, yard, or parking area, a debris field of logs, refuse, small buildings, and trailers.

We had gotten a call a couple of days before from our neighbor and friend, McCray Roberts. Like us, McCray has a B&B he rents for short and medium length stays and he was calling to see if our place was available. Seems that McCray had had a young couple in his place for the last two weeks, where they were planning to birth their second child. Problem was, the baby was overdue and he had other renters coming the next day so the couple had to leave. “Can you all take them in?’

Now, given this was Easter weekend, and me being an ex-Catholic, the symbolism was running rampant in my mind. “Of course, they can come here.”

The flooded French Broad River at Barnard, 2019/04/19.

They were young, he was twenty-one and she seemed younger, already with an eighteen month old son. They loved our barn apartment, deep in the woods, quiet, sheep and goats, comfortable, just what they wanted for the birth. Despite our initial enthusiasm we also were skeptical. Leslie was a mother/baby nurse for thirty years and started worrying about all the things that can go wrong. We both were concerned about the midwife finding our place, given our sketchy relationship with GPS and the flooded and closed roads. The young couple were non-plussed, so we moved forward.

 
 

Heather contracting in My Studio, PawPaw, 2019

 

I walked up to my studio in the barn to check email and messages and found Heather sitting on the futon in my work space. The heat was turned up, the overhead fan going, and Heather was focussed. Contractions were five minutes apart, the baby was on its way. The midwives hadn’t arrived and Tyler hadn’t heard from them in some time. I drove to the bottom of our driveway and waited. And waited. Finally, 45 minutes later a solitary man arrived, a doctor. The midwife couldn’t come because her father had had a heart attack. I took him up to the barn and helped carry in supplies.

We had talked about pictures of the birth, but Heather decided against it, wanting it to just be her husband, son, and the doctor. I went down to the house.

 

Waiting for the Midwife at the Bottom of Our Driveway, PawPaw, 2019

 
 
 

Heather and Baby Sophia, PawPaw, 2019

 

The Family - Heather, Tyler, Zacharia and 16 hour old Baby Sophia, PawPaw, 2019.

The next morning, Easter Sunday, we received an early call. Baby Sophia had arrived the night before, “a magnificent birth,” Tyler said. Would I like to come up and meet the baby and make pictures? I did. By that afternoon they were packed up and heading down our driveway, heading home.

Little Worlds - A Visit and a Storm

 

Susie and Todd at Home, Guntertown, Madison County 2019

 
 

I went to visit Susie and Todd last weekend over in Laurel. The catalyst for the visit was small engine repair as Todd has a gift with saws, tillers, mowers, weedeaters and such.

But visits with Todd and Susie are always about much more than spark plugs and carburetors and this was no different. We talked at length about their recent trip to India and Europe, about Istanbul, and a drive through the French Alps for a short stay in Italy.

We talked a lot about Susie’s father, Bill Mosher, a long-time professor at Warren Wilson College, who was born in India to parents that were agricultural missionaries there. Bill took scores of students to India for cultural studies and continues to go back for extended stays every two years or so, even now at 81 years old. Susie, and often Todd, accompany him.

In my mind Bill should be a role model for all of us elders, everyone really. He’s open-minded, and adventuresome, fearless really, always ready to try new foods, meet new people, and absorb new places. He’s a wonderful photographer, also, and has an engaging manner with people that produces intimate portraits. Susie told me of a recent solo trip Bill made, where he drove around the south for a few weeks, sleeping in his car, often in Walmart parking lots, visiting small and large towns, going to art galleries, delighting in his near total anonymity, and not knowing where he would end up from one day to the next. He’s inspirational and it’s easy to understand why his students loved him.

 

Looking East from Lonesom Mountain, Maidison County, NC 2019

 

I was thinking about Bill as I left Todd and Susie’s house for the winding ride home. Down the mountain and across the Dickie bridge and then up the hill to Peachtree where I turned onto Lonesome Mountain road. While visiting, we all noticed a change in the light and the air - softer with darkening skies and the air sweeter with the distinct smell of approaching rain.

 
 

Dellie would always refer to Lonesome Mountain as Ol’ Lonesome, granting it an ominous or haunting description that was close to the truth. Especially at night, the dark, narrow road with steep turns and switchbacks, with overhanging trees and few houses and could be scary, as it was on this evening.

The rain came in sheets as I approached the top, the sky black, gusts of wind strong enough to move my truck, the road slick, no guardrails, and steep dropoffs. Ol’ Lonesome at her finest. I slowed, not only for safety and better traction, but to make photographs through the windshield, trying to capture something of this storm’s fury.

 
 

At the bottom, where Lonesome Mountain meets Hwy. 25-70, the sky lightened and opened, the road widened, signaling an end to my passage over Ol’ Lonesome. As always, I stopped at the painted rock to read its current message.