Below is some of my best photography work in different styles. Enjoy!
Photo-Journalism Story
#1 – A volunteer, Wayne Leaver, planting limonium sinuatum as well as other herbs like basil in one of the greenhouses at the Barrington Farm School on a Sunday afternoon.
#2 – More progress of some of the basil planted by Wayne Leaver, taken on the following Wednesday at the Barrington Farm School.
#3 – Wayne Leaver, a volunteer at the Barrington Farm School hard at work planting basil and other herbs on a Sunday afternoon.
#4 – Gail Reed (closer to table) and Lindsay Green (further from table) going over some plans for work that needs to get done at the Barrington Farm School on a Sunday afternoon.
#5 – Frank Carini, a volunteer and journalist for the ecoRI paper, hard at work painting one of the produce stands at the Barrington Farm School on a Friday morning.
#6 – The summer kitchen at the Barrington Farm School, taken on a Wednesday afternoon. This is where all the hard work from volunteers who help around the farm, growing produce and more get to enjoy the fruits of their labor.
#7 – Lindsay Green filling buckets with a hose in order to go and water crops around the Barrington Farm School on a Sunday afternoon.
#8 – Progress of the crops that Lindsay and others watered in one of the green houses at the Barring Farm School, that next Wednesday afternoon.
#9 – Kelvin Misiurski laying down some fertile soil to help the growth of the crops this spring and summer, on a Wednesday afternoon at the Barrington Farm School.
#10 – Some healthy growing spinach on a Sunday afternoon in one of the Barrington Farm School’s green houses. Due to the hard work of volunteers like Kelvin Misiurski who have been laying down soil.
#11 – Tim Faulkner, biking with some produce grown recently at the Barrington Farm School, to drop off at a nearby middle school’s food drive on a Sunday morning.
#12 – Jill Caskey, a volunteer at the Barrington Farm School explaining to student journalists what she does and what it means to be a part of the community and volunteer there, on a Saturday morning.
#13 – On a Wednesday afternoon, Lindsay Green is on her way to the back part of the Barrington Farm School, wheeling some compost that will later be turned by other volunteers like Jill Caskey.
#14 – Jill Caskey, turning compost at the Barrington Farm school on Saturday morning, that other volunteers have helped carry to the designated compost area. This is done in order to create fertile soil, volunteers then lay this down to help the growth of crops.
#15 – An overall photograph of the Barrington Farm School on a Wednesday afternoon with freshly laid fertile soil and the early growth of crops. All this is due to the hard work of the volunteers here at the Barrington Farm School.
The Barrington Farm School’s Volunteers Bettering the Environment
The Barrington Farm School in Barrington Rhode Island is a place where environmental enthusiasts and volunteers come to learn or help with farming and agriculture. This small farm in Barrington is the pinnacle of a wholesome community of volunteers and farmers that love what they do. They all are very hard working and strive to help the environment as much as they can. Volunteers like Lindsay Green, Jill Caskey, Wayne Leaver, Tim Faulkner, Kelvin Misiurski, etc… were especially enthusiastic about all of the work they have been doing. Additionally, They all did so with a smile on their face. The work on this farm is to demonstrate how the importance of being environmentally aware can affect our communities. Growing healthy foods and positive communities is an important part of keeping our environment happy.
All the volunteers here help in many different ways, some organize and plan while others move compost or plant but at the end of the day they all work together. By each volunteer covering different aspects of the farm the work gets done quickly and efficiently. Furthermore, in order to keep the farm running the volunteers are all one hundred percent committed to what they do.