
A lot of new wiring going in as part of the dean’s suite renovation, sometimes they run it through the ceilings, sometimes the floors and, today, just through an open doorway.

A lot of new wiring going in as part of the dean’s suite renovation, sometimes they run it through the ceilings, sometimes the floors and, today, just through an open doorway.

I had a meeting at Emory University to talk about the Georgia Climate Project that I’m part of. Never been to Emory, though I’ve been in the area several times. Didn’t get to see much, but would like to wander around again.



The rush to the end has commenced, tests and papers and projects and the kids are just sleeping everywhere it seems.

After the last few days, we could all use something to lean on a bit.

Day three and the kids were in early for some feedback. Coming in when it’s quiet can be problematic – instead of some one-on-one coaching, you may end up in two-on-one or even four-on-one if you’re really lucky.

Hotel parking lot, someone’s a little defensive about their car …
Day two of the Woodall Weekend Workshop, kids started early at the Waffle House, I got out to make some photos with Billy Weeks (pictured below) and Woody Marshall and there were even some flash lessons from Robin Nathan. Good day.







They don’t always photograph cows at the Woodall Weekend Workshop … because the visiting pros tend to give them a hard time about it after day one. Unless they’re doing a story on a dairy farmer, which a couple did, so they got away with it.
The 13th edition of our three-day, immersive, experiential and active learning weekend photojournalism workshop launched today in Greene County. (See how many educational buzz words I got in that previous sentence? SEO, kids, it’s what puts dinner on the table.)
We have 26 students (19 from the University of Georgia and another seven from the University of South Carolina), ten visiting professionals and two professors in rural Georgia for a few days. Little sleep, many photos.
