This is one of those photos that I think works well on a couple of different levels. There’s the surface layer, which is the image presented exactly as-is for the viewer to see and take in as they see fit. A snowy scene in the middle of a city (which you can sort of tell thanks to the brick building in the background) with a stone arch bridge crossing a small stream deep in a valley below. What you see, essentially, is what you get, though what you get out of it is another matter entirely.
On another level, which you can’t see just by looking at the picture, is the personal connection I have to this scene and the memories it brings back as I look at it. My wife and I lived in St. Paul for five years when she was in graduate school, long before our kids were born in a time that almost feels like another life. We enjoyed exploring the Twin Cities on foot, bike, or automobile, and often ended up at Minnehaha Falls–a 50-foot waterfall surrounded by gardens, green spaces, and hiking trails that lead all the way to the Mississippi River. Though in all the years we lived in the area, we never went to Minnehaha Falls in winter. That all changed on a recent visit to Minnesota for my cousin’s wedding.
My family and I decided to head up a few days prior to the event in order to spend time with friends and family, and one chilly afternoon we, along with our friend, bundled up in our winter gear, hopped in the car, and trekked down to Minnehaha Falls from the northern suburbs where we were staying. The biting, bitter cold was a far cry from what we are used to down in Oklahoma, but the view, and the experience of being there together, more than made up for it. The walkway down to the base of the waterfall was closed (which did not deter many intrepid visitors who treated the sign and its accompanying padlock on the gate as little more than a minor inconvenience or, perhaps, a dare) so instead we walked around at street level taking in the view while our kids threw rocks and ice chunks into the stream below.
It really was an impressive sight, to see everything around us draped in a blanket of snow with the semi-frozen stream bubbling and gurgling as it flowed over the rocks and dirt before tumbling five stories into the valley. I took this shot of the scene with my Fuji X100F set to f/8, 1/400 second, ISO 400 and though we probably won’t have the opportunity to return to Minnehaha Falls for many years, I hope this helps me capture the time we spent there and remember it for the rest of my life.





