So I’m in a parking lot. No, wait, not a parking lot…a parking area. It’s not like a parking lot outside a big box store, with lines designating parking spaces. This is just an extra wide bit of blacktop on a winding blacktop road through some woods near the spillway of a dam. It’s a place where people who fish the area above the spillway can park their cars.
On a weekday, it’s usually empty except for the occasional Asian or Latino immigrant looking to put some fish on the table. It’s a quiet spot. Shaded by trees. My partner and I sometimes make the half hour drive to this spot with a couple of camp chairs, something cool to drink, and our books. We sit, we read, we look at the birds, we listen to the wind in the trees, we chat with the folks who come to fish. On the way home we usually stop for ice cream. It’s nice.
She can sit still longer than I can. My knees are wonky and I have to get up periodically and stretch them. There’s always something to look at, and I’ve always got a camera with me, so occasionally I’ll take a photo. Yesterday I took a photo of the blacktop.

I don’t know why this particular patch of blacktop caught my attention, but it did. There are some cracks with little weedy bits growing in them, and some oil stains–some new, some faded. But it’s just blacktop (which isn’t asphalt, by the way; both blacktop and asphalt are made of crushed stone and bitumen, but the ratio of stone to bitumen is higher in blacktop, which can give it a more sparkly appearance–and lawdy, this is way more information than you need or want).
I pulled my Ricoh GR3X out of my pocket and looked at that patch of blacktop from several different angles and directions. I raised the camera higher, I lowered it closer to the surface, looking for a different framing of the patch. I probably spent three or four minutes trying to get the framing just right. Then I took this single photo.
I looked up to see my partner was watching me. She said,
“Bug?”
“What?”
“Where you taking a picture of a bug or something?”
“Oh. No. Just the blacktop.”
She looked at me for a moment, then nodded and went back to her book. The sky is blue, the clouds are white and fluffy, the water ripples a wee bit with the wind. There are swallows hawking for insects just above the surface of the lake. A kettle of vultures is making lazy circles in the distance. And there’s Greg taking a photo of a patch of blacktop.

Just another day at the upper spillway.
I, for one, appreciate your description of the difference between asphalt and blacktop.
And now I’m picturing the blacktop crumbling away from the crack in the photo and wondering how the asphalt would crumble differently.
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Asphalt comes in several different grades, each of which has a different purpose. It’s generally tougher and more durable than blacktop, but is less flexible…so it cracks more easily.
Why do I know this? Because 15 years ago I developed a relationship with a chunk of asphalt curbing. Really. Here’s the story.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/itsgreg/albums/72157625946628413/
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It must have seemed like a good idea at the time…
My relation to asphalt is more tenuous as it’s my brother’s relationship. Before he retired, he worked analyzing the dirt where roadways were to be built. His reports would determine how much gravel needed to underlay the pavement for the best durability. Probably other stuff, too, but he’s never talked about it much.
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I decided I had to make a post about my earlier crushed stone and bitumen-related photographs. Thanks for reminding me about that.
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It isn’t the subject; it’s the composition! CBS Saturday Morning ran a segment this morning that I thought you might like – it’s on the Brattle Book Shop in Boston. Just a nice, heart-warming story!Inside one of the country’s oldest bookshops – CBS News
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Hyla, what a wonderful story. Thanks.
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