Posts in Travels
Waldron, Arkansas // A Personal Note

A fair bit of time before this little business of mine existed, the name & the story behind The Waldron Photograph Co. were being formed. See, Waldron is a little town in Arkansas where my mom & grandma were born, and after hearing story upon story about it, it had become near and dear to me simply by association. For quite some time I knew the name Waldron - and it's inherent story - would play a role in the things that I did; and thus, when I rebranded and refined my work early last year, The Waldron Photograph Co. was the result.

Before this past week, I had never seen Waldron in person. I had seen countless a picture and heard many a story, but had never made the trek to central Arkansas to experience it first hand. After all, Waldron isn't exactly a tourist destination; just barely three thousand folks call it home and it's way off the beaten path. But to me, it obviously holds certain meaning (and, I adore Arkansas in general - the geography, the unassuming quaintness, and the unique charisma it manages to keep.)

So, I drove to Waldron. It was a solo trip, on which I make it a point to embark once a year or so. It's about a seven hour drive through some of the most underrated terrain in the country, which, by nature, translates into more like a twelve hour drive for a person like me (read: constant stopping & picture making.)

When I finally arrived, I was a bit taken aback by the immediate value this place possessed to me, though unseen until now. I followed a red dirt road to the place my grandma grew up - a township called Jones Creek, I sat down and did some research on my heritage, and I met some locals who gave me quite the history lesson. More than anything, I was grateful... overwhelmingly (and somewhat unexpectedly) so. Grateful for those that came before me. Grateful for THEIR stories. Grateful for my own story. And grateful for the gift of places & exploration.

2013 // In Space & In Time

Two-thousand-thirteen. A year I had resolved to make simpler than the one which preceded it. A year that included travels all over; to places in which I had spent significant time, and to places upon which I had yet lay eyes (while most of which, as pictures prove, were at least fairly mountainous). A year that included twenty-six weddings, one of which was my own (you'll see Lizzie a handful of times below) -- and similarly, a year during which the two of us decided that we ought to buy the littlest, most snaggle-toothed puppy we could find. A year of new ventures, particularly in the form of a small shop near our home which we'll endearingly call The Bonfire. And a year that included more free space... both in pictures and in time.

In reflection of this past great year, I've chosen not to highlight my favorite pictures of weddings, but rather my favorite pictures of times away - from Texas to the Dakotas, from Washington to Maine. Thirty pictures that hold a place of story to me. Thirty pictures that make me grateful for time & space & people & freedom to roam this beautiful, mysterious earth God has placed us on.

Personal, TravelsRusty Wright
Autumn in Portland, Maine

A few weeks back I spent three days in the northeast with new friends learning about our craft & our businesses. It was wonderful, and the surrounding scenes & season was fairly decent, as well.

 

And a tip of my hat to The Find Lab for unparalleled dev/scan skills   Mamiya 645 / 80mm f/1.9 / Portra 400 (black and white frames manually converted in Lightroom)


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Andrew & Mary // The Kansas Flint Hills

The very minute I read of Mary's plans upon hearing from her - and I told her this - I knew I needed to be a witness to it all. The Flint Hills (one of the country's more beautiful - and underrated - parts) is easily a top five on my list of favorites, and learning that my wife and I would be two of only five or six total people in attendance was nearly too good to be true. And it all unfolded in a way that was nearly too good to be true... the intimacy, the closeness, the wide open space, the breeze, the wildflowers, the sun... and Andrew & Mary smack dab in the middle of it all.

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Ceremony Venue: The Lower Fox Creek Schoolhouse, Strong City Kansas

Eight Days in Guatemala — Personal Travels

Last May, I spent eight of my most favorite days in central Guatemala. Days filled with experiences & friends & places & emotions that I surely will never forget. Five close friends, my then-girlfriend (now fiance), & I made the venture to start new projects & finish old ones. This was my third trip; it was others’ first, and yet others’ twelfth.

In years past, our focus had been construction & manual labor, which always seemed a tiny bit awkward to me since neither are my particular forte here at home. Nevertheless, we had always gone with great plans and left with big accomplishments. But this time, our focus would be slightly different. Clean water.

Clean water. In other words, something that’s been on my radar for the better part of four years now thanks to a project-turned-organization a dear friend of mine put together called River to Well. Something that truly is meaningful to me & something for which I have no trouble going full-steam-ahead.

In Guatemala, there are a couple problems that are noteworthy here. One: the vast majority of folks don't understand that there’s actually a problem with the water they’re drinking. Water isn’t scarce there; but the water sources… they’re heavily — and unknowingly — polluted by those who then rely on them for useable water. Two: of the folks who understand the problem, very few have the means necessary to fix it. Boiling water takes time and resources, and wells are expensive and rather inconceivable. And, just imagine having to radically change your lifestyle to compensate for something that you might not even consider to be a problem. See, folks there can tolerate the unhealthy water to a point, at least in the short term; they may get sick as a result here and there, but such is life, and thus, a change in the way of doing things simply isn’t warranted in their eyes. So, at the end of the day, the issue of clean water has just as much to do with education as it does with efforts to actually make the water cleaner & healthier.

So here we are. Our job? It was to install fifty-some portable water filters in three rural schools. But just as important, to teach the students and faculty why we were there in the first place, and then instill in them the importance of using & caring for their new filters correctly. We prefaced all of this by visiting the factory responsible for constructing the filters — called Ecofiltro — and talking with several of the folks behind its operations. The actual filters were small — about the size of a medium flower pot — and made out of clay & wood chips. They fit perfectly inside a variety of housings, from five gallon buckets to nicer ceramic containers. We chose the more economical of the different containers — the five gallon buckets — and planned to give them new homes in the aforementioned schools in the coming days.

I should mention that the organization which helped us plan our mission — Salud y Paz — had reached an agreement with these three schools to ensure the filters are properly cleaned and replaced for the foreseeable future. I should also mention that this project was the first of its kind; not only was our team straying away from its tried-and-true construction roots, but Salud y Paz was also treading unfamiliar waters in coordinating such a deal.

We spent the following days assembling filters, preaching about dirty & clean water, playing soccer, sitting with new friends, giving instructions, seeing hillsides and villages, listening to stories, snapping photos, and doing our best to love folks. We were welcomed with open arms. We were given wonderful lunches and all-school assemblies, complete with native dances & music. And we were awed in knowing that this was exactly where we needed to be, and exactly what we needed to be doing.

Aside from all this, we also spent a morning with Nehemiah, who we met in 2011. If you follow this blog, my Twitter feed, or my Facebook, you’re well aware of this guy. (And if not? Nehemiah is six. He was born with cerebral palsy and was unable to walk. Since meeting him, we’ve supported his family financially, he’s been allowed into a private school, and we’ve grown awfully fond of him.) There are a couple photos below of him and his parents, but the short of it is that he’s better; he’s walking more, he looks happier & healthier, and he’s the brand new owner of a slick yellow three-wheeler.

This trip meant more to me personally than any other trip I’ve taken. It was much more of a seed-planting trip than any other. We opened a lot of doors. There wasn’t a big sense of completion. And I like that. For certain, a decent-sized part of my heart is in Guatemala, and I’m so excited to see how that continues to build. I’m excited to hear stories about our water filters. I’m excited to visit our three schools again. I’m excited to see Nehemiah once more as soon as possible. And the list goes on…

It seems a bit backward for a blog that otherwise focuses primarily on photographs to have so many words, especially crammed into the top of one post. But, when it all shakes out, there’s a reason I take photos. I love the idea of my camera serving as a catalyst to hopefully build relationships and be of some kind of help to folks here and there. I’m grateful to have a job that not only allows me to spend time in Guatemala each year, but also pushes me to tell stories. Stories not only about weddings & people, but about every-day life in another country, where seemingly huge and overbearing problems might not be so huge and overbearing afterall, if we just make plans and go do things to make them better.

Personal, Travels, Film, ContaxRusty Wright
West & North - Personal Travels
For my part, I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel’s sake. The great affair is to move.
— R.L. Stevenson

Each winter, I try to make it a point to set out alone for a few days. See new things, open my mind up, do some reading, explore a bit. At the beginning of February, I headed toward South Dakota & Wyoming. I made loads of unplanned stops along the way, slept in dumpy motel rooms, jumped fences & drove gravel roads. I ended my journey by heading toward Chicago before returning home. Eight states, twenty-three hundred miles.