• clouds,  landscape,  natural areas,  Pineridge Natural Area,  quotes,  sunrises

    Intimacy With the Natural World

    Predawn over Dixon Reservoir

    Soul has been demoted to a new-age spiritual fantasy or a missionary’s booty, and nature has been treated , at best, as a postcard or a vacation backdrop or, more commonly, as a hardware store or refuse heap. Too many of us lack intimacy with the natural world and with our souls, and consequently we are doing untold damage to both.

    Bill Plotkin

    I discovered through a friend a place in Wyoming called Red Desert. My Google research shows it is a landscape of buttes, dunes, sagebrush steppe, mountains, and rocky pinnacles located in the south-central portion of Wyoming. My kinda place. At the desert’s heart is the Great Divide Basin—a large depression along the Continental Divide from which surface water does not flow out to either the Atlantic or the Pacific. The majority of this area has no legal protection, and is therefore open to oil and gas exploration and development. Sounds like someplace I’d like to visit before we totally screw it up and do untold damage to it, as Plotkin says.

    I found some information from an organization wanting to protect the area from the untold damage Plotkin mentions. They are called Citizens for the Red Desert. You will find some good information about the area, photography and their mission on the website. The Shoshone people called the Red Desert two names. The first is “the place where God ran out of mountains.” The second name: “land of many ponies” relates to the major change in native cultures caused by the introduction of the horse. It looks like a four hour drive from me so I would like to make a visit this summer once my health issues are addressed.

  • clouds,  horizons,  landscape,  mountains

    Trust Me…

    This was taken north of Rock Springs, Wyoming along US Highway 191 on my trip to West Yellowstone last month. A lot of open sagebrush, no trees and almost endless blue sky. You can see for miles and the sagebrush dominates the landscape. You may look at this and think of it as a barren and desolate place, especially if you’re from anywhere east of the Mississippi where trees abound. And when you stop to take in this view you won’t believe the silence that surrounds you. But, even though it is a rugged and harsh environment what you see is a complex of ecosystem. These sagebrush ecosystems provide important food and cover for mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians, and especially winter habitat for big game species and other wildlife. So probably somewhere in this image is a Black-footed Ferret, Great Basin Gopher Snake, White-tailed Prairie Dog, Greater Short-horned Lizard, Red-tailed hawk or Sage Thrasher. And trust me, somewhere in there is an ant or two or three…

  • lake,  landscape,  quotes,  sunrises

    Sunrise

    Freemont Lake near Pinedale, Wyoming
    Fremont Lake near Pinedale, Wyoming

    “Each morning we are born again. What we do today is what matters most.”

    Buddha

    This was taken on a road trip back in 2003 about 6 months after purchasing a Nikon D100, my first digital camera. It’s the first of many practice photos iv taken since.

  • landscape

    35,000 feet

    35,000 feet

    I apologize for not keeping up on this blogging thing, both posting and responding to them. I blame it on a busy life but we all have some business in our lives. I also apologize for this image, at least the quality of it. I took this one out the back window of our aircraft using my cellphone, as we flew over the snow covered mountains of Idaho or Wyoming, really not sure.

    I am sort of settle in Colorado. I have my car unpacked and am now camped at my sisters, which is awesome! I will probably be there for the month of February and possibly March. It does feel good to me to know I am going back to my condo once the renter has moved out. I’ve missed family, friends and Colorado weather, which includes the snow and cold as well as the sunshiny days. So, this is one of my office views. It changes all the time.

  • landscape

    Knowing your histogram

    Lake Jackson
    Sunset on Lake Jackson

    This is an image taken in 2003 while on my way back from participating in a workshop in Jackson, WY. When shooting with film I always bracketed so when I started shooting digital I also bracketed exposures. Now that I have a better understanding of the histogram the need to bracket is not as important. I still do it on occasions but with the power of the histogram I sure use it less.

  • landscape,  National Parks,  Photography

    Lightpainting

    Barn in Tetons
    Barn in Tetons

    Back in 2003 I took a DLSW workshop with photographers Moose Peterson and Vincent Versace and Dave Black. This workshop was taken in Jackson, Wyoming  and our shooting was done in the nearby Teton Mountains. One evening we were given an opportunity to experience light painting, something new to me at the time.  They took us out to this barn located on Antelope Road just outside of Jackson. I would venture to say most photographers will have a photo of this barn somewhere in their portfolio. Anyway, the image was made after sunset with our cameras mounted on a tripod and an exposure from 20-30 seconds. We all would press our shutters on the count of three then Moose would run around in front of us shinning these lights on the barn creating our exposures. If you are interested in some very good images using this technique please visit Dave Blacks site.