Sharon, IMHO this photo would be better if you were closer to the barn, and included less foreground.
Bruce
A bit of a strange conversion. At first glance I thought that the fields were covered in snow.
Getting the right tonal range into the various areas if the image is always the challenge when doing a B&W conversion. Why did you decide to go B&W here, rather than leave it as a colour image?
My fault for not identifying that as it will look strange if unknown. It’s not for everyone many hate it. I was using it for fun mostly and to get an idea of whether to play more or not.
I left the big foreground in the original image to convey a more vast open space but I didn’t leave enuff of it in 😑
Nice effort, I like the composition as shown, the little patch could be cloned out and looks like you cropped in the color version. Your conversion process seems to have shifted tones somewhat darker.
I don't pick up on everything. I did some IR work in the distant past, so I have a feeling for what the images look like.
That being said, the vegetation goes white look only happens if a heavy red filter is put on the lens (Wratten 25A) for a B&W shot, which is the standard approach. Unfiltered, the look you got is more what one would get.
Sharon, I like your color version much better. Nice job.
Bruce
Sharon, I also prefer the colour version but would retain the original view with more foreground. The cropped version is very cramped to my mind.
Cheers Ole
I like the "IR" version but agree with the closer crop suggestion. The color version, IMO, is WAY too saturated. The colors don't look real. I absolutely love the subject matter, though. I have an attraction to old buildings like a moth to a porch light. They make great photos.
Thank you Ted, for a very nice edit.
I did nothing with the saturation of the photo, rarely do I touch that in post processing.