The Housatonic River
A Photographic journey along a Wild and Scenic waterway
On the mornings when fog sits on the Housatonic River and the trees dissolve into amber early morning light, the valley feels like a wild, untamed frontier - like it belongs to another century.
This is a series of photographs from a corridor in the northwestern corner of Connecticut that most people pass through on the way to somewhere else. They drive Route 7 and miss the solitude and drama of this beautiful region.
They were taken in a small geographical area - essentially between two covered bridges, Bulls Bridge and Cornwall Bridge - but don't expect chocolate box New England scenes. This series documents the landscape, the whitewater, the ridge lines, the falling waters, and the weather. I keep coming back to the same stretches to capture changes across every season.
The Housatonic Valley often catches me off guard, but it always inspires.
Ever-Changing, Always Wild.
A River for All Seasons
Flow: Unseasonal Winter weather created heavy thaw conditions and this tumultuous flow of meltwater on the Housatonic River at Bulls Bridge.
Nikon D850 : 35mm : f5.6 : ½ second : iso 32
Freshly fallen snow blankets the world in silence, broken only by the river’s restless journey downstream
Winter’s Kiss : Winter sunshine gives life to the river following a heavy overnight snowstorm.
Nikon Z 7-II : 20mm : f22 : 3/5th second : iso 64
Deafening Silence: Winter sunshine on the Housatonic River near Bulls Bridge
Nikon D850 : 35mm : f22 : 2.5 seconds : iso 32
Bend in the River: Midday Winter sun barely penetrates the precipitous slopes adjacent to the Housatonic River
Nikon D850 : 105mm : f22 : 1/13th second : iso 64
Becalmed: Winter sun and freshly fallen snow on the Housatonic River in Western Connecticut
Nikon D850 : 70mm : f22 : 1.3 seconds : iso 64
The snow has to go somewhere!
No Winter lasts forever
The snow melts, the water rises, life returns and color slowly returns to the landscape
Housatonic Green: Summer turns to Fall on the Housatonic River at Cornwall Bridge in Western Connecticut
Nikon D850 : 82mm : f16 : 232 seconds : iso 64
Northern Lights over the Housatonic
On November 11th 2025 there was a strong magnetic substorm which was predicted to be a strong display of the Northern Lights in uncommon southern latitudes. The forecast in Connecticut that evening was for a dense cloud bank to move in as the night progressed, but, since the Housatonic runs north to south it had to be worth the short trip to Bulls Bridge just in case?
Kent Falls
Kent Falls is a series of falls and cascades, dropping nearly 250 feet from the hills above the Housatonic down to the river.
In winter it freezes, in spring it roars. On the right morning, when there’s a strong wind and right light is cutting through the mist it is one of the most beautiful waterfalls to photograph anywhere in New England.
Winter’s Last Stand:
A long exposure on a windy morning at Kent Falls, Connecticut showing the transition from Winter to Spring
Nikon D850 : 44mm : f18 : 1.6 seconds : iso 32
A Beautiful Gift: Spring sunbeams illuminated in the early morning spray at the lower part of Kent Falls in Western Connecticut.
Nikon D810 : 68mm : f22 : 3/5th second : iso 64
Above the Clouds
A hike in the dark, a climb up a hillside and if the weather is right you come to another world
Macedonia Inversions: Early Morning inversions fill the Housatonic Valley in Kent, Connecticut. One of the beautiful views along the Macedonia Ridge.
Nikon D850 : 200mm : f16 : 1/25th second : iso 64
Macedonia Brook State Park, Kent
Big hikes / Big Views
A Fall hike in the clouds to the Pine Knob viewpoint above West Cornwall
Islands in the Sky: Early Morning inversions fill the Housatonic Valley from the viewpoint at Pine Knob in West Cornwall, Connecticut.
Nikon D850 : 195mm : f18 : 1/80th second : iso 64
These photographs represent only a tiny 15 mile portion of this impressive 150 mile long river which flows from its headwaters in Northern Massachusetts, through Connecticut and on into Long Island Sound. I’ve travelled its length and I genuinely feel that this stretch of the river is by far the most scenic, I’m just very lucky that it also happens to be close to my home and I can visit pretty much whenever I want.
However I do want to finish with two photographs taken early one morning of the Housatonic Valley and its flood plain just a little further north than West Cornwall. The View is from the slopes of Round Mountain looking east towards Lakeville and Salisbury in Connecticut. They both happen to be amongst my favorite images and I can’t decide whether I prefer the landscape view or the portrait view so I’ve posted them both for comparison.