This rock is in Newbury, NH a half mile south of the Village, right hand side of route 103. The graffiti has been there for over 50 years. NHDOT painted over it once but it reappeared a couple of nights later. If anyone knows who started it, no one is saying.
Interesting story behind this…my only suggestion would be to crop a bit so the distraction that my eye was drawn to in the lower left corner is not in the frame. Nicely done…love a photo that tells a story that evokes my curiosity.
I have seen this and wondered who Chicken Farmer is. I hope that the originator of the graffiti was also loved by Chicken Farmer. I agree with the other commenters about the white rock on the left, but I would simply clone it out.
Nicely done; makes us curious, and the axe and stump give a sense of scale.
Where? I’ve seen this in a magazine publication before. The axe is a great addition!
This rock is in Newbury, NH a half mile south of the Village, right hand side of route 103. The graffiti has been there for over 50 years. NHDOT painted over it once but it reappeared a couple of nights later. If anyone knows who started it, no one is saying.
Nice! Thanks for that bit of history too.
Interesting story behind this…my only suggestion would be to crop a bit so the distraction that my eye was drawn to in the lower left corner is not in the frame. Nicely done…love a photo that tells a story that evokes my curiosity.
Graffiti with a history. Nice.
Such an iconic image. I agree with Trish, either crop or clone out the white rock in the lower left which is distracting.
I love this, NPR had a story on this years ago. I agree with the comments above, I would crop a bit from the left to get rid of that white rock.
Whimsy plus history. I like it. Yes, the rock can go. This would make a nice square image.
I have seen this and wondered who Chicken Farmer is. I hope that the originator of the graffiti was also loved by Chicken Farmer. I agree with the other commenters about the white rock on the left, but I would simply clone it out.
Nicely done; makes us curious, and the axe and stump give a sense of scale.