19 August 2010

Life On Mars



Red Rock on Highway 313

For those of you who have not had the pleasure of visiting the Colorado Plateau of Utah, Arizona, and Colorado, it's not like any other place on Earth. Human beings are rather used to seeing life all around them: we look at the mountains not thinking about how we aren't just seeing the rock, but also the living things on the mountain and the result of those organisms being there. Make no mistake plants hold mountains together, and they can change a dull rock into an enduring testament of life: think of a tree seemingly fused together with a solid granite bolder.

But the Colorado Plateau is somewhat different. It's basically a giant photography studio. Here the scenic beauty is dominated by the landforms and the plants and animals have little if any impact. Which is what makes it so photographically appealing: red rock with green plants? How great is that? You don't even need to worry about filters (I was sitting dead red in terms of filter the entire trip) or shooting in black and white (a tremendous waste of red rock in my opinion). In fact the only thing you really need to worry about since everything is so still and lifeless is light.

Well, that and weather. My recent trip to Canyonlands National Park and Goblin Valley was marred somewhat by bad weather. August is the wettest and most unpredictable month weather wise, and in the desert the weather can change fast. Very fast. This is why I did not hike Little Wildhorse Canyon, a fantastic and photogenic slot canyon. While it was dry as a bone when I went to the trail head, the dark thunderclouds ahead just posed to great a risk of a flash flood.

In fact, massive merging thunderstorms prevented me from hiking there, albeit while giving me a hell of a show in terms of lightening. Lesson in photographic frustration: I stood at the viewpoint for 30 minutes snapping well over 200 pictures trying to get a shot of lightening. Nothing. Nothing even though I was snapping while lightening struck. Shutter speed was off, and too make matters worse, I was increasing the shutter speed when I should have been lowering it.

No technical details with these photos, because, well I just fooled around until I got the light right. That's what makes red country so inviting: it's easy to shoot, and everything is photogenic.


Colorado River

This photo I took just east of Moab. The Colorado River here is muddy with red soils, but unlike a lot of other rivers, mud does not make the Colorado uglier, in fact it makes it more beautiful. I took this to show the contrast between the shaded river and the sunlit river.








An experiment in perspective: cliffside view from the first angle. Step forward two feet and it looks like an aerial view.


Goblins at Goblin Valley. Actually, just one Goblin taken from different sides. These rocks are fascinating and I'm sure you could easier scour the valley trying to find the most photogenic one. Goblin Valley was one of the most lifeless and serene places I've ever been. It truly is Mars on Earth.


I was hiking early in the morning and turned just in time to see the light hit the Butte before it hit the rest of the valley. The result was two minutes to shoot this spectacular, once a day lighting situation.



The fun thing about red rock is that lowering the aperture and/or shutter speed essentially dictates whether the rock will appear dark red or a glowing orange, and in both cases it makes for great photos.


15 Second Exposure of a campfire. Accident that occurred when I was trying to shoot at night and I decided to have some fun.

16 August 2010

Sierra Nevada National Parks



Last week I had the opportunity to go to Sequoia National Park and Yosemite National Park. It was a lot of fun for the most part. I really enjoyed Sequoia, particularly Generals Highway, a winding, climbing road that takes you from a hot Mediterranean like hills to cool, fern covered forest higher in elevation, to dryer forests dominated by Sequoias. Sequoia is also a park with a huge back country and relatively small front country, so there's plenty of exploring to be done.

Yosemite is awe-inspiring but I must say that it is just impossibly busy in the summertime: I did some rough mental math and the density of the Yosemite Valley on a summer weekend is roughly the same as that of a mid-sized city. It was difficult to get shots without people in them and I didn't even stop anywhere in the actual Yosemite Valley outside of Bridal Veil Falls because it was so busy, although I stopped more frequently over Tioga Pass.

Photography wise, at both Sequoia and Yosemite, the conditions were less than ideal because of a slight haze: some of it from forest fires, and some of it, like most of California, I'm sure was from smog. And lots of tourists.

It's been a while, and I took a lot of shots, so I'm a bit light on the technical side this post.

Anyway....some shots:

Pano From Washburn Point

This is a decent shot through the haze and the obvious photo seam on the right side, but that just goes to show how spectacular the scenery in Yosemite is.



Pano From Glacier Point

This shot is a bit better, but notice the haze still surrounding Half Dome and the deeper pockets of air.



Tioga Pass Panos

I like these two panoramas taken over Tioga Pass (unfortunately I don't know what specific geographic features/mountains they are) and in them I'm kind of channeling Ansel Adams. The Sierra Nevada lend themselves well to black and white, although you lose the contrast between the green trees and the gray rock when you go to black and white.


General Sherman Pano

Increasingly I'm getting the hang of using panos to get full pictures of tall objects, and General Sherman, the largest tree on Earth, was perfect for this. It's impossible to fully appreciate the size from this picture, but it's better than just a one click looking up photo.



Moro Rock Through The Trees

Instantly this made me think of the opening of Raiders of the Lost Ark. Moro Rock dominates the view from Generals Highway as you enter Sequoia, and when you get to it, it's an easy climb: kind of a poor mans Half Dome. At this point the forest is still hot, full of bugs (mosquitoes unlike anywhere I've ever been....and that's including Alaska) and mostly made of scrub oak.


Tumbling Water

In this photo I tried to show the clear green water above, the bands of color in the rock, and then eventual tumbling whitewater.

Visiting Goblin Valley and Canyonlands soon.....will do better to post soon after the trip.

05 August 2010

Some Photos From The Coast

Thought I would share some photos from a recent trip to the Oregon Coast....didn't really have time to stop and take a lot of shots, but just a few, and a bit unique for me so far as they are almost all of wildlife.


An elk outside Veneta, OR. This was early morning and I shot a dozen or so shot in sport mode, it worked well, but with the slight black out on the display after each shot it was sometimes hard to keep pace with the elk.

Flowers near Newport.


This shows how sequences can work out great (even if they are a bit overexposed)


Pop: suddenly another harbor seal appears!

Checking out the photog in the river.

Thank You For Voting-Photo Contest Vote Winners

I want to quickly post the winners of the Oregon Wild Photo Contest Vote. Thank you to all who voted and I hope you all check in from time to time.


The Horseshoe


Proxy Falls


South Sister Pano


Marys Peak Trees


Mt. Bachelor Through The Buttercups

Obviously, expect a post if any of the photos win in the contest.

Thank you again!

01 August 2010

Checking In!


Today is the last day to vote in the Oregon Wild Photo Contest....voting closes at Midnight.

In the meantime, I have finished the bar exam and have hit the road for a solid month, so expect lots of updates with pics of Sierra Nevada forests and red rock deserts.