I have noticed that it is dark once again when I awake and often, even as I head to work a little later. My days stretch into dusk now and the trend of even shorter days will continue. What I like about it is that it is so subtle--a few minutes of light at the beginning and end of the day just disappear.
I think sunflowers are like these coming fall days. If you have a field with a few hundred thousand sunflowers in bloom, they don't just turn dark. As some faded, there were a few that are still bright and that catch your eye, or at least they caught mine. I actually like the contrast between the bright blooms and their more faded neighbors. It isn't a stretch for back-to-school metaphor, though it hurts a wee bit to be reminded which sunflower I am in the field of "sunflowers" that fill schools across the country. Sigh…
I have never taken photos of a sunflower field despite lots of sunflower photos. I was glad to find a field, in part because I was inspired this year by this great story from Wisconsin. Check this out: http://www.jsonline.com/news/wisconsin/family-plants-womans-dream-along-highway-85-b99565109z1-323233271.html. To celebrate a life and a love, a stretch of four-plus miles was planted with sunflowers. My photos have no such lofty goals. They just celebrate shorter days.