I'll give you a bit of feedback Stu (since you asked). While I too think the grave at Red Oak Grove is poignant and interesting, I think that your decision to commercialize it may hasten its demise. Is this a decision you struggled with prior to developing a poster and notepad cover that utilized the photo that you took of it? If the answer is yes, then why try to sell photo's of other fragile artifacts that we all hold dear as legendary and loving features of the pines we know and love?
First off that was not one of the stock photos I had in mind; what I was going to do is barely site-related - landscapes, nature shots, etc.
As for the grave, I fail to see how a picture, which has been in my seldom-looked at, crappy little CafePress shop for about a year now, with no description or hint of where it is, and by the way which has not even been bought, is going to to do much of anything. That's just asinine. And also unrelated to the topic.
By that logic, my book, along with any other related book and websites, including this one, should have the wrecking balls coming in droves.
Then again, you think a small plastic container is more damaging to "legendary and loving features" than the inches of broken glass, paintballs, and other garbage accumulated due to years of partying at said locations.
I asked for some information about stock photography, not a blatant attack about something off topic.
Thanks though.