Island Light: Holding the Dawn
Rose mallow blooms in the wetlands on the western end of Crystal Lake.
Entering Edgartown harbor with style.
Taking advantage of a rare rainy day to mend fishing nets.
Stop to pick the zinnias at Ghost Island Farm.
Vineyard sky over South Beach.
Ride like the wind in the Lagoon.
Old Sculpin Gallery.
Jump!
It's sunflower season at Katama Farm.
Finding shade in the Chilmark countryside.
East Chop Lighthouse.
Air force activity at the airport earlier in the week.
Preparing for the visit of the vice president.
Dry season at Cranberry Acres on Lambert's Cove Road.
Gnarled tree trunk in Christiantown.
DInghies are pulled up on the inner shore of Oak Bluffs harbor.
Bike ferry makes her way between Menemsha and Aquinnah.
Monarch alights on a flower.
Vice President Kamala Harris arrives on the Vineyard Thursday afternoon.
In the predawn light yesterday, the moon still was high in the gray-blue sky, crows were noisy, and the air was soft with warm humidity. At the same hour only a week ago, the sun was rising across Edgartown harbor beyond Chappaquiddick. But yesterday was another reminder that the days are drawing in even as summer is at its height on the Vineyard.
It's a moment that has its own faint echo of sadness, of rue or nostalgia, as the later sunrises and earlier sunsets send their unmistakable signals. But there's no time to dwell on loss that is yet to be, not when it's still warm and light before six o'clock in the morning and one flock of birds is still singing competitively with a rival flock in the next tree.
Illumination Night, the Agricultural Fair, the fireworks in Oak Bluffs — so much summer is still ahead. We enjoy it all the more in those early morning hours when we are reminded that the season is passing.
