Adventure Watercolors
Watercolors are perhaps the antidote to all the other drawing I’ve done in my life.
Most of my little images do start with a very light, five or six- line sketch, but then it’s all paint, and quick! Stopping for an hour or two to complete a painting during a day-long arduous bike ride adds obvious constraints to my usual fastidious process of image making, but that’s the joy and benefit. No time to fuss with details or accuracy, just “see it and paint it!” No time to think. I have such reverence for the great plein-air painters throughout history. The immediacy of their images touch your heart so directly it’s easy to forget it was probably 95 degrees or 25 degrees, too sunny or too rainy, not to mention the line of ants walking up their leg.
The real pay-off is that while I take thousands of photographs on a months-long adventure, it’s the places where I stop, sit, and paint that I vividly remember and feel in my heart years later. Plus, while I feel competent with a pencil, watercolors still basically terrify to me, and it’s good to feel that challenge. It wasn’t always easy agreeing on where to stop and what to paint, but sharing this pursuit with my cycling and adventuring partner, Bob Horsley, has been one of life’s great joys.
In 2017, Bob Horsley and I rode our bikes from Gloucester, MA, to Vashon Island, WA, along the Northern Tier Cross Country road bike route. 60 days and 4,300 miles.
In 2022, Bob and I set off again, this time on the Great Divide Mountain Bike Route from the Canadian border to the Mexico border. 72 days and 2,700 miles – oh, and over 200,000 feet of vertical.




Sheldon

View of Glacier National Park

Holland Lake

Leaving Holland Lake

Fleecer Ridge

Landers Creek

Red Desert

Aspens & Blue Sky

Indiana Pass

Descent to Horca

Heading to Abique

Final Rain Storm

Troy

Thruway Motel

Coming Storm

Cute Farm Clinton

Garden Plain

Waiting For A Train In Trenton

Lake Osakis

Kindred

Hazelton Road to Horison

Logan Pass

Bull River MT

Approching Sandpoint
