Coronavirus photo thread

On this 2000 mile trip I drove through several counties which have not had a single case of the covid-19 virus. None. Most of these were in areas which primarily rely on summer tourism for income. There were a distressing number of businesses which have been put up for sale in the last couple of weeks, large and small. The problem is that most of these businesses rely on 4 months of good income over the summer to support the business and their families for the entire year. It's not a hugely lucrative life, but it's been effective until now. Many people have run the numbers and already understand that without this summer they will never make it until next year, so they are just selling the businesses and the properties to stop the bleeding from the overhead that continues unabated while they are forced to close.. with no real idea what they will do next. I have photos of a couple owned by people I spoke with, but there were many, many more.

It's a tragedy. Here in Germany, there have been emergency subsidy programs for small enterprises, but many fall through the cracks...
I hope this all sets some rethinking of the distribution of risks into motion. If those "too big to fail" and those who own real estate etc. can continue to rake in the dough, they need to share the risks, too.
Great photos.
 

Nikon Z7 + Nikkor 50/1.8 S
On this 2000 mile trip I drove through several counties which have not had a single case of the covid-19 virus. None. Most of these were in areas which primarily rely on summer tourism for income. There were a distressing number of businesses which have been put up for sale in the last couple of weeks, large and small. The problem is that most of these businesses rely on 4 months of good income over the summer to support the business and their families for the entire year. It's not a hugely lucrative life, but it's been effective until now. Many people have run the numbers and already understand that without this summer they will never make it until next year, so they are just selling the businesses and the properties to stop the bleeding from the overhead that continues unabated while they are forced to close.. with no real idea what they will do next. I have photos of a couple owned by people I spoke with, but there were many, many more.

Excellent body of work Larry, worthwhile a book. And I understand there are many sad stories around related to people indirectly hit by the virus, they can be still helathy but what future for them?
 
Retinax, Robert,

Thank you both. There are a lot of stories out there, happy and sad, resulting from the pandemic, that have nothing to do with getting sick. I am fortunate to live in an area, and it is a very large one, that is pretty much unaffected by the disease, but significantly affected by the response to the disease, a response largely predicated on conditions which exist elsewhere.
The pandemic isn't so much "pan" as it must seem if one lives in a metropolitan area, or, pointedly, Manhattan, where most of the U.S. coverage emanates from. Coverage, unfortunately, has been heavily politicized.
I'd like to stay away from that, yet still be able to document in a small way, things seen in thousands of square miles of country that are neither Manhattan, Chicago, or L.A. Mostly because that's where I am, that's all I have got from where I am, and the national news here is either ignoring it, or presenting it either with irony or unmerited condescension, generally. I'd like to do neither.
I am keeping away from people and being careful, but I am not confined. I thought that perhaps some of these photos could be like a travelog to those who are confined. A balm of sorts.
(Maybe that's what I thought, maybe I just thought I had to throw some cameras in the car and burn up a lot of fossil fuel taking photos just to get out of here🙂
God Bless.
 
Personally, I've been taking a lot more photos of my kids, since we're all sheltering in place, working and schooling from home. I'm grateful to be able to work from home, but with young kids, it's challenging to multi-task and manage everyone's schedules. Here's my son, adapting to classes via Zoom.

Nikon FM2n, AI Nikkor 50mm f/1.8S, Ultrafine Xtreme 400, developed in LegacyPro L110 at 1:31 for 5.5 minutes.


2020.03.14 Roll #239-04515-positive.jpg
by dourbalistar, on Flickr
 
Voigtlander Perkeo II, Rollei RPX 25 film, Rodinal 1:50

zVoxOZ.jpg
 

Nikon Z7 + Nikkor 50/1.8S
In locales where people don't travel packed together in subways, and no one has as of yet tested positive for Covid-19, this kind of thing is still a clear and ever present danger. And, yes, there actually were Bighorn Sheep on the road.
 

SWC/M +30 year old Panatomic-X

Shot 10 days ago. Panatomic-X keeps very well🙂 This shot is the last of all I have for now, thanks for watching; trying to close on an upbeat note with the hope that it won't be too long before everyone, everywhere is able to just put the top down and drive around to no place in particular with no cares more pressing than where the Hostess Cupcakes are.
 
Great series Larry, thanks for sharing them.

Manly beach, Sydney, May 2020.
Instax Mini 9

U27021I1588942228.SEQ.0.jpg

Thank you, Lynn. Also, for the first time in my life you have made me seriously consider getting an Instax. Have been enjoying your shots, which is not a reaction I have previously had to Instax shots, which, ones I am used to seeing, until now seemed mostly to be blurry photos of people at parties. So, not a crappy, pointless camera for teenage girls after all, in the right hands.
You have opened my eyes to the possibilities🙂
Now, which one? (Must resist.)
 
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This is at Pope Park in Hamtramck, MI. Some time in the 80s, Pope John Paul II visited the very-Polish-at-the-time city and some time after, this little park was made. My dad worked his first job at a tv repair shop at this site in the 60s or 70s.
 
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