Three Days of Fall Colors in the Eastern Sierra
Three days of fall colors
I had a wonderful time bopping around the Eastern Sierra enjoying and capturing the season’s fall colors and clouds.
God writes the Gospel not in the Bible alone, but also in the trees, and in the flowers, and clouds, and stars. Martin Luther
Three days of exploring the Fall Color in the Eastern Sierra
Cloudy with a 100% of Spectacular
The Clouds are calling and I must go!
Kearsarge Station, Owens Valley
There is nothing wrong with blue skies. In landscape images, a pure blue sky can be a bit boring. That is why clouds are a landscape photographer's best friend.
Last of the ice at Grant Lake
There have been summers where I have complained of a cloud drought. You will not hear me complain about the lack of clouds in 2022 or 2023. Using Waynes World speak, 2022 has been cloudalicous.
Last of the Ice a Silver Lake
For the last several months the clouds have been amazing. They have sometimes been complex, threatening, angry and other times o majestic hanging in the mountains
I thought it would be an excellent blog post to pair these images with great quotes about clouds.
Here we go on our cloud trip and quotes
“We pledge to fight 'blue-sky thinking wherever we find it. Life would be dull if we had to look up at cloudless monotony day after day.”
― Gavin Pretor-Pinney, The Cloudspotter's Guide:
Iris Field in Bishop
“Thirty-nine years of my life had passed before I understood that clouds were not my enemy; that they were beautiful, and that I needed them. I suppose this, for me, marked the beginning of wisdom. Life is short.”
― Iimani David
Pine Creek
I’m sure it is a great mistake always to know enough to go in when it rains. One may keep snug and dry by such knowledge, but one misses a world ofloveliness. -- Adeline Knapp
Lower Owens River near Independence
“Clouds are the most egalitarian of nature's displays, since each one of us has a good view of them, so it really doesn't matter where you are.”
― Gavin Pretor-Pinney, The Cloudspotter's Guide
Well, I hope you enjoyed all these clouds as much as I did. Now it is time to float away…
Best Images 0f 2021
My best Eastern Sierra images of 2021
It is that time of year where folks publish their best images of the previous year. Here is my list.
Locations include:
Owens River
June Lake Loop
Bishop Canyon
Bridgeport
Sage Hen
Silver Lake
Gull Lake
Mammoth Lakes
Round Valley
While 2021 had its issues it was a great year for photographing the Eastern Sierra.
Would love to know what you think of the images and which one you liked the best.
Wishing you an awesome 2022!
Owens Valley: The Tule Elk on Hwy 395
The tule elk herd was established in Owens Valley on October 10, 1933. Twenty-six tule elk, 7 bulls, 3 yearlings, 11 cows, and 6 calves, were brought from Yosemite National Park to an enclosure in the Owens Valley near Aberdeen and held for several days before their release. Four months later, 28 more elk were brought from Buttonwillow (which became the Tupman Tule Elk State Reserve) to augment that initial release. These original translocated elk have since expanded in size and range and have formed eight distinct tule elk sub-herds located throughout Owens Valley.
Bull Elk
Our Elk Photographic Journey
When traveling on 395 just south of Big Pine we always look for the Tule Elk at the wildlife turnouts. It was always a mystery to us when they would be in the field there. Unfortunately, when we were lucky enough to see them, I hadn’t had much luck in photographing them.
We usually find the Elk in the late afternoon. That meant I was shooting straight into the sun, which is not ideal. Lots of lens flare. Other times they were way at the far end of the field. Too far away to get a good image.
Riding with the King
One time, all the conditions were perfect. They were near the road. The sun was still high in the sky. I even had rented a long telephoto lens. When we saw the Elk, we pulled off into the viewing pull-out. I grabbed my camera with the telephoto on it. I took a bunch of images and they all looked great on the camera display. When I got them on the computer it was a different story. All the images were blurry. I use a tripod a lot, so don’t usually worry about the shutter speeds too much. Turned out I was shooting a 400 MM telephoto handheld and only had the shutter speed at 60th of a second. Another fail.
A couple of weeks ago we hit all the right conditions. The images you see in this post are from then. I can check another bucket list from my Hwy 395-image list as I now have some Elk images I like!
Keeping an Eye on Me
History of the Owens Valley Elk
Some history about these Tule Elk. Most of the info below is taken from the Fish and Wildlife’s “Distribution and Abundance of Tule Elk in the Owens Valley January 2020” report. You can see the full report here.
The Tule Elk herd was established in Owens Valley on October 10, 1933. Twenty-six Tule Elk, 7 bulls, 3 yearlings, 11 cows, and 6 calves, were brought from Yosemite National Park to an enclosure in the Owens Valley near Aberdeen and held for several days before their release. Four months later, 28 more Elk were brought from Buttonwillow (which became the Tupman Tule Elk State Reserve) to augment that initial release. These original translocated Elk have since expanded in size and range and have formed eight distinct Tule Elk sub-herds located throughout Owens Valley.
The count of the Elk in 2018 showed the following herd sizes.
· Bishop: 80-100
· Tinemaha: 80-100
· Goodale: 50-70
· Independence: 60-80
· Lone Pine: 60-80
· Whitney: 40-60
Where and When to See the Elk
One place to view the Elk is the wildlife viewing pullouts on Hwy 395 just south of Big Pine. The herd there includes bulls with expansive antlers and plenty of cows and calves. There are "Wildlife Viewing" signs that point car pull-outs near two of the herd's most favorite places to graze and bed down. This allows you a safe way to look and photograph the Elk.
Gorgeous Antlers
The best time to see the Elk is spring through fall as the herd stays on or close to irrigated fields to take advantage of the ample water and feed. The best time of day to see them is in the morning.
I am sure to include one of my Elk images on next year’s Eastern Sierra calendar!
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2016
2
- Dec 14, 2016 Don Henley was Wrong You can go Back Dec 14, 2016
- Sep 10, 2016 Another Bucket List Checked Off – Getting to a Sierra Pass Sep 10, 2016
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2017
1
- Jul 10, 2017 The Streams are Alive Jul 10, 2017
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2019
1
- Feb 11, 2019 The Wildflowers are Coming, the Wildflowers are Coming; are You Prepared? Feb 11, 2019
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2021
2
- Jul 12, 2021 Sound of Silence Jul 12, 2021
- May 3, 2021 The Case for Lingering May 3, 2021
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2022
1
- Nov 5, 2021 Five Reasons to Buy a Wall Calendar Nov 5, 2021
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395
1
- Aug 14, 2017 Another Hidden Gem Along Highway 395 Aug 14, 2017
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Aberdeen
4
- Nov 5, 2021 Five Reasons to Buy a Wall Calendar Nov 5, 2021
- Feb 26, 2019 Lone Pine the Little Town Below a Big Mountain Feb 26, 2019
- Sep 11, 2017 Eastern Sierra Early Morning Scramble (ESMS) Sep 11, 2017
- Aug 14, 2017 Another Hidden Gem Along Highway 395 Aug 14, 2017
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Airplane
2
- Mar 25, 2019 March in Like a Lion ( and leave the same way!) Mar 25, 2019
- Jan 16, 2017 Clouds are the Photographers Spice of Life Jan 16, 2017
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Alice's Restaraunt
1
- Dec 7, 2016 Update on Operation Santa Dec 7, 2016
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Alpine
7
- Jan 17, 2022 Best Images 0f 2021 Jan 17, 2022
- Jul 31, 2017 FIVE SIMPLE STEPS TO ENJOY YOSEMITE ON A CROWDED WEEKEND Jul 31, 2017
- Jul 24, 2017 Mom, why is the sky blue? Mom, Why is the sunset red? Mom, why does it always looks better in the Eastern Sierra? Answers to questions you May have always wanted to know Jul 24, 2017
- Jun 27, 2017 Water Everywhere! Jun 27, 2017
- Sep 26, 2016 Tom's Place Sep 26, 2016
- Sep 19, 2016 Unbelievable - Time again for Fall Colors Sep 19, 2016
- Sep 10, 2016 Another Bucket List Checked Off – Getting to a Sierra Pass Sep 10, 2016
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Aspens
3
- Oct 20, 2024 Three Days of Fall Colors in the Eastern Sierra Oct 20, 2024
- Sep 22, 2017 Dad Why Do the Trees Change Colors? Sep 22, 2017
- Sep 19, 2016 Unbelievable - Time again for Fall Colors Sep 19, 2016
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Baseball
1
- May 22, 2015 Some Things Age With Grace May 22, 2015
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Beach
2
- Jan 10, 2017 Sunrise to Sunset in Southern California Jan 10, 2017
- Dec 14, 2016 Don Henley was Wrong You can go Back Dec 14, 2016
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Big Pine
1
- Dec 12, 2021 Owens Valley: The Tule Elk on Hwy 395 Dec 12, 2021
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Big Sky
7
- Jul 1, 2019 A Different Take on Bodie Jul 1, 2019
- Jun 10, 2019 Heaven Jun 10, 2019
- May 20, 2019 A Perfectly Cloudy Day May 20, 2019
- Jan 20, 2019 Hike Big Sycamore Canyon - Tejon Ranch Jan 20, 2019
- Jan 5, 2019 My 12 Best Images of 2018 Jan 5, 2019
- Jul 31, 2017 FIVE SIMPLE STEPS TO ENJOY YOSEMITE ON A CROWDED WEEKEND Jul 31, 2017
- Jan 16, 2017 Clouds are the Photographers Spice of Life Jan 16, 2017
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Big Sur
1
- Dec 14, 2016 Don Henley was Wrong You can go Back Dec 14, 2016
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Bishop
1
- Dec 12, 2021 Owens Valley: The Tule Elk on Hwy 395 Dec 12, 2021
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Bishop Creek
1
- Sep 22, 2017 Dad Why Do the Trees Change Colors? Sep 22, 2017
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Bixby Bridge
1
- Dec 14, 2016 Don Henley was Wrong You can go Back Dec 14, 2016
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Blue Sky
7
- Jan 17, 2022 Best Images 0f 2021 Jan 17, 2022
- Jun 10, 2019 Heaven Jun 10, 2019
- Jan 5, 2019 My 12 Best Images of 2018 Jan 5, 2019
- Jul 31, 2017 FIVE SIMPLE STEPS TO ENJOY YOSEMITE ON A CROWDED WEEKEND Jul 31, 2017
- Jul 24, 2017 Mom, why is the sky blue? Mom, Why is the sunset red? Mom, why does it always looks better in the Eastern Sierra? Answers to questions you May have always wanted to know Jul 24, 2017
- Jan 16, 2017 Clouds are the Photographers Spice of Life Jan 16, 2017
- Sep 10, 2016 Another Bucket List Checked Off – Getting to a Sierra Pass Sep 10, 2016
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Bob Kent
30
- Jul 9, 2022 Channeling Huell Howser in the Eastern Sierra Jul 9, 2022
- Jan 17, 2022 Best Images 0f 2021 Jan 17, 2022
- Dec 12, 2021 Owens Valley: The Tule Elk on Hwy 395 Dec 12, 2021
- May 17, 2021 Early Morning Around the Loop May 17, 2021
- May 3, 2021 The Case for Lingering May 3, 2021
- Jul 1, 2019 A Different Take on Bodie Jul 1, 2019
- Jun 10, 2019 Heaven Jun 10, 2019
- May 20, 2019 A Perfectly Cloudy Day May 20, 2019
- Apr 1, 2019 My Path to Better Wildflower Images Apr 1, 2019
- Mar 25, 2019 March in Like a Lion ( and leave the same way!) Mar 25, 2019
- Mar 15, 2019 The End of the Line (well maybe) - Keeler Mar 15, 2019
- Feb 26, 2019 Lone Pine the Little Town Below a Big Mountain Feb 26, 2019
- Feb 11, 2019 The Wildflowers are Coming, the Wildflowers are Coming; are You Prepared? Feb 11, 2019
- Jan 20, 2019 Hike Big Sycamore Canyon - Tejon Ranch Jan 20, 2019
- Jan 5, 2019 My 12 Best Images of 2018 Jan 5, 2019
- Sep 22, 2017 Dad Why Do the Trees Change Colors? Sep 22, 2017
- Sep 11, 2017 Eastern Sierra Early Morning Scramble (ESMS) Sep 11, 2017
- Aug 14, 2017 Another Hidden Gem Along Highway 395 Aug 14, 2017
- Jul 31, 2017 FIVE SIMPLE STEPS TO ENJOY YOSEMITE ON A CROWDED WEEKEND Jul 31, 2017
- Jul 24, 2017 Mom, why is the sky blue? Mom, Why is the sunset red? Mom, why does it always looks better in the Eastern Sierra? Answers to questions you May have always wanted to know Jul 24, 2017
- Jul 10, 2017 The Streams are Alive Jul 10, 2017
- Jun 27, 2017 Water Everywhere! Jun 27, 2017
- Jan 16, 2017 Clouds are the Photographers Spice of Life Jan 16, 2017
- Jan 10, 2017 Sunrise to Sunset in Southern California Jan 10, 2017
- Dec 14, 2016 Don Henley was Wrong You can go Back Dec 14, 2016
- Dec 5, 2016 Quests in the Owens Valley are Fun Dec 5, 2016
- Oct 31, 2016 Dia de los Muertos 2016 Oct 31, 2016
- Sep 26, 2016 Tom's Place Sep 26, 2016
- Sep 19, 2016 Unbelievable - Time again for Fall Colors Sep 19, 2016
- Sep 10, 2016 Another Bucket List Checked Off – Getting to a Sierra Pass Sep 10, 2016
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Bodie
1
- Jul 1, 2019 A Different Take on Bodie Jul 1, 2019
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Bridgeport
2
- Nov 5, 2021 Five Reasons to Buy a Wall Calendar Nov 5, 2021
- Jul 19, 2021 Clouds make my Eastern Sierra Sunset Images Pop! Jul 19, 2021
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Cal
1
- Dec 12, 2021 Owens Valley: The Tule Elk on Hwy 395 Dec 12, 2021
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California
26
- Jul 9, 2022 Channeling Huell Howser in the Eastern Sierra Jul 9, 2022
- Jan 17, 2022 Best Images 0f 2021 Jan 17, 2022
- Nov 5, 2021 Five Reasons to Buy a Wall Calendar Nov 5, 2021
- Jun 7, 2021 Sunrise, Sunset Jun 7, 2021
- Jul 1, 2019 A Different Take on Bodie Jul 1, 2019
- Jun 10, 2019 Heaven Jun 10, 2019
- May 20, 2019 A Perfectly Cloudy Day May 20, 2019
- Mar 25, 2019 March in Like a Lion ( and leave the same way!) Mar 25, 2019
- Mar 15, 2019 The End of the Line (well maybe) - Keeler Mar 15, 2019
- Feb 11, 2019 The Wildflowers are Coming, the Wildflowers are Coming; are You Prepared? Feb 11, 2019
- Jan 20, 2019 Hike Big Sycamore Canyon - Tejon Ranch Jan 20, 2019
- Jan 5, 2019 My 12 Best Images of 2018 Jan 5, 2019
- Sep 22, 2017 Dad Why Do the Trees Change Colors? Sep 22, 2017
- Sep 11, 2017 Eastern Sierra Early Morning Scramble (ESMS) Sep 11, 2017
- Aug 14, 2017 Another Hidden Gem Along Highway 395 Aug 14, 2017
- Jul 31, 2017 FIVE SIMPLE STEPS TO ENJOY YOSEMITE ON A CROWDED WEEKEND Jul 31, 2017
- Jul 24, 2017 Mom, why is the sky blue? Mom, Why is the sunset red? Mom, why does it always looks better in the Eastern Sierra? Answers to questions you May have always wanted to know Jul 24, 2017
- Jun 27, 2017 Water Everywhere! Jun 27, 2017
- Jan 10, 2017 Sunrise to Sunset in Southern California Jan 10, 2017
- Dec 14, 2016 Don Henley was Wrong You can go Back Dec 14, 2016
- Dec 5, 2016 Quests in the Owens Valley are Fun Dec 5, 2016
- Oct 31, 2016 Dia de los Muertos 2016 Oct 31, 2016
- Sep 26, 2016 Tom's Place Sep 26, 2016
- Sep 19, 2016 Unbelievable - Time again for Fall Colors Sep 19, 2016
- Sep 10, 2016 Another Bucket List Checked Off – Getting to a Sierra Pass Sep 10, 2016
- May 22, 2015 Some Things Age With Grace May 22, 2015
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California's Gold
1
- Jul 9, 2022 Channeling Huell Howser in the Eastern Sierra Jul 9, 2022
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Canon
13
- Jun 7, 2021 Sunrise, Sunset Jun 7, 2021
- Jun 10, 2019 Heaven Jun 10, 2019
- Jan 5, 2019 My 12 Best Images of 2018 Jan 5, 2019
- Sep 22, 2017 Dad Why Do the Trees Change Colors? Sep 22, 2017
- Sep 11, 2017 Eastern Sierra Early Morning Scramble (ESMS) Sep 11, 2017
- Jul 31, 2017 FIVE SIMPLE STEPS TO ENJOY YOSEMITE ON A CROWDED WEEKEND Jul 31, 2017
- Jul 24, 2017 Mom, why is the sky blue? Mom, Why is the sunset red? Mom, why does it always looks better in the Eastern Sierra? Answers to questions you May have always wanted to know Jul 24, 2017
- Jan 16, 2017 Clouds are the Photographers Spice of Life Jan 16, 2017
- Jan 10, 2017 Sunrise to Sunset in Southern California Jan 10, 2017
- Dec 14, 2016 Don Henley was Wrong You can go Back Dec 14, 2016
- Dec 5, 2016 Quests in the Owens Valley are Fun Dec 5, 2016
- Sep 26, 2016 Tom's Place Sep 26, 2016
- Sep 10, 2016 Another Bucket List Checked Off – Getting to a Sierra Pass Sep 10, 2016
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Canon 5d Mark III
20
- Jan 17, 2022 Best Images 0f 2021 Jan 17, 2022
- Jun 10, 2019 Heaven Jun 10, 2019
- May 20, 2019 A Perfectly Cloudy Day May 20, 2019
- Apr 1, 2019 My Path to Better Wildflower Images Apr 1, 2019
- Mar 25, 2019 March in Like a Lion ( and leave the same way!) Mar 25, 2019
- Feb 26, 2019 Lone Pine the Little Town Below a Big Mountain Feb 26, 2019
- Feb 11, 2019 The Wildflowers are Coming, the Wildflowers are Coming; are You Prepared? Feb 11, 2019
- Jan 5, 2019 My 12 Best Images of 2018 Jan 5, 2019
- Sep 22, 2017 Dad Why Do the Trees Change Colors? Sep 22, 2017
- Sep 11, 2017 Eastern Sierra Early Morning Scramble (ESMS) Sep 11, 2017
- Jul 31, 2017 FIVE SIMPLE STEPS TO ENJOY YOSEMITE ON A CROWDED WEEKEND Jul 31, 2017
- Jul 24, 2017 Mom, why is the sky blue? Mom, Why is the sunset red? Mom, why does it always looks better in the Eastern Sierra? Answers to questions you May have always wanted to know Jul 24, 2017
- Jun 27, 2017 Water Everywhere! Jun 27, 2017
- Jan 16, 2017 Clouds are the Photographers Spice of Life Jan 16, 2017
- Jan 10, 2017 Sunrise to Sunset in Southern California Jan 10, 2017
- Dec 14, 2016 Don Henley was Wrong You can go Back Dec 14, 2016
- Dec 5, 2016 Quests in the Owens Valley are Fun Dec 5, 2016
- Oct 31, 2016 Dia de los Muertos 2016 Oct 31, 2016
- Sep 26, 2016 Tom's Place Sep 26, 2016
- Sep 10, 2016 Another Bucket List Checked Off – Getting to a Sierra Pass Sep 10, 2016
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Canon 5d Mark IV
1
- May 3, 2021 The Case for Lingering May 3, 2021
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Cars
1
- Sep 26, 2016 Tom's Place Sep 26, 2016
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Cemetery
1
- Oct 31, 2016 Dia de los Muertos 2016 Oct 31, 2016
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Christmas
2
- Jan 10, 2017 Sunrise to Sunset in Southern California Jan 10, 2017
- Dec 7, 2016 Update on Operation Santa Dec 7, 2016
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Clouds
16
- Oct 20, 2024 Three Days of Fall Colors in the Eastern Sierra Oct 20, 2024
- May 18, 2023 Cloudy with a 100% of Spectacular May 18, 2023
- Jul 19, 2021 Clouds make my Eastern Sierra Sunset Images Pop! Jul 19, 2021
- Jul 1, 2019 A Different Take on Bodie Jul 1, 2019
- Jun 10, 2019 Heaven Jun 10, 2019
- May 20, 2019 A Perfectly Cloudy Day May 20, 2019
- Mar 25, 2019 March in Like a Lion ( and leave the same way!) Mar 25, 2019
- Jan 20, 2019 Hike Big Sycamore Canyon - Tejon Ranch Jan 20, 2019
- Jan 5, 2019 My 12 Best Images of 2018 Jan 5, 2019
- Sep 11, 2017 Eastern Sierra Early Morning Scramble (ESMS) Sep 11, 2017
- Jul 31, 2017 FIVE SIMPLE STEPS TO ENJOY YOSEMITE ON A CROWDED WEEKEND Jul 31, 2017
- Jul 24, 2017 Mom, why is the sky blue? Mom, Why is the sunset red? Mom, why does it always looks better in the Eastern Sierra? Answers to questions you May have always wanted to know Jul 24, 2017
- Jan 16, 2017 Clouds are the Photographers Spice of Life Jan 16, 2017
- Jan 10, 2017 Sunrise to Sunset in Southern California Jan 10, 2017
- Dec 14, 2016 Don Henley was Wrong You can go Back Dec 14, 2016
- Dec 5, 2016 Quests in the Owens Valley are Fun Dec 5, 2016
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Coastline
2
- Jan 10, 2017 Sunrise to Sunset in Southern California Jan 10, 2017
- Dec 14, 2016 Don Henley was Wrong You can go Back Dec 14, 2016
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Cove
1
- Dec 14, 2016 Don Henley was Wrong You can go Back Dec 14, 2016
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Crowley LAke
2
- Jul 24, 2017 Mom, why is the sky blue? Mom, Why is the sunset red? Mom, why does it always looks better in the Eastern Sierra? Answers to questions you May have always wanted to know Jul 24, 2017
- Jan 16, 2017 Clouds are the Photographers Spice of Life Jan 16, 2017
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DSLR
16
- May 3, 2021 The Case for Lingering May 3, 2021
- Jul 1, 2019 A Different Take on Bodie Jul 1, 2019
- Jun 10, 2019 Heaven Jun 10, 2019
- May 20, 2019 A Perfectly Cloudy Day May 20, 2019
- Apr 1, 2019 My Path to Better Wildflower Images Apr 1, 2019
- Mar 25, 2019 March in Like a Lion ( and leave the same way!) Mar 25, 2019
- Mar 15, 2019 The End of the Line (well maybe) - Keeler Mar 15, 2019
- Feb 26, 2019 Lone Pine the Little Town Below a Big Mountain Feb 26, 2019
- Feb 11, 2019 The Wildflowers are Coming, the Wildflowers are Coming; are You Prepared? Feb 11, 2019
- Jan 5, 2019 My 12 Best Images of 2018 Jan 5, 2019
- Sep 22, 2017 Dad Why Do the Trees Change Colors? Sep 22, 2017
- Sep 11, 2017 Eastern Sierra Early Morning Scramble (ESMS) Sep 11, 2017
- Aug 14, 2017 Another Hidden Gem Along Highway 395 Aug 14, 2017
- Jul 31, 2017 FIVE SIMPLE STEPS TO ENJOY YOSEMITE ON A CROWDED WEEKEND Jul 31, 2017
- Jul 24, 2017 Mom, why is the sky blue? Mom, Why is the sunset red? Mom, why does it always looks better in the Eastern Sierra? Answers to questions you May have always wanted to know Jul 24, 2017
- Jul 10, 2017 The Streams are Alive Jul 10, 2017
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Day of the Dead
1
- Oct 31, 2016 Dia de los Muertos 2016 Oct 31, 2016
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Dead
1
- Oct 31, 2016 Dia de los Muertos 2016 Oct 31, 2016
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Dia de los Muertos
1
- Oct 31, 2016 Dia de los Muertos 2016 Oct 31, 2016
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Dodger Stadium
1
- May 22, 2015 Some Things Age With Grace May 22, 2015
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Dodgers
1
- May 22, 2015 Some Things Age With Grace May 22, 2015
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Eastern Sierra
28
- Oct 20, 2024 Three Days of Fall Colors in the Eastern Sierra Oct 20, 2024
- May 18, 2023 Cloudy with a 100% of Spectacular May 18, 2023
- Jul 9, 2022 Channeling Huell Howser in the Eastern Sierra Jul 9, 2022
- Jun 24, 2022 Quiet Moment - Waterfall Jun 24, 2022
- Jan 17, 2022 Best Images 0f 2021 Jan 17, 2022
- Dec 12, 2021 Owens Valley: The Tule Elk on Hwy 395 Dec 12, 2021
- Nov 5, 2021 Five Reasons to Buy a Wall Calendar Nov 5, 2021
- Jul 19, 2021 Clouds make my Eastern Sierra Sunset Images Pop! Jul 19, 2021
- Jul 12, 2021 Sound of Silence Jul 12, 2021
- Jun 7, 2021 Sunrise, Sunset Jun 7, 2021
- May 17, 2021 Early Morning Around the Loop May 17, 2021
- May 3, 2021 The Case for Lingering May 3, 2021
- Jul 1, 2019 A Different Take on Bodie Jul 1, 2019
- Jun 10, 2019 Heaven Jun 10, 2019
- May 20, 2019 A Perfectly Cloudy Day May 20, 2019
- Mar 15, 2019 The End of the Line (well maybe) - Keeler Mar 15, 2019
- Feb 26, 2019 Lone Pine the Little Town Below a Big Mountain Feb 26, 2019
- Feb 11, 2019 The Wildflowers are Coming, the Wildflowers are Coming; are You Prepared? Feb 11, 2019
- Jan 5, 2019 My 12 Best Images of 2018 Jan 5, 2019
- Sep 11, 2017 Eastern Sierra Early Morning Scramble (ESMS) Sep 11, 2017
- Aug 14, 2017 Another Hidden Gem Along Highway 395 Aug 14, 2017
- Jul 31, 2017 FIVE SIMPLE STEPS TO ENJOY YOSEMITE ON A CROWDED WEEKEND Jul 31, 2017
- Jul 24, 2017 Mom, why is the sky blue? Mom, Why is the sunset red? Mom, why does it always looks better in the Eastern Sierra? Answers to questions you May have always wanted to know Jul 24, 2017
- Jul 10, 2017 The Streams are Alive Jul 10, 2017
- Jun 27, 2017 Water Everywhere! Jun 27, 2017
- Jan 16, 2017 Clouds are the Photographers Spice of Life Jan 16, 2017
- Dec 5, 2016 Quests in the Owens Valley are Fun Dec 5, 2016
- Sep 19, 2016 Unbelievable - Time again for Fall Colors Sep 19, 2016
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El Matador State Beach
1
- Jan 16, 2017 Clouds are the Photographers Spice of Life Jan 16, 2017
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Elk
1
- Dec 12, 2021 Owens Valley: The Tule Elk on Hwy 395 Dec 12, 2021
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Fall
2
- Sep 22, 2017 Dad Why Do the Trees Change Colors? Sep 22, 2017
- Sep 19, 2016 Unbelievable - Time again for Fall Colors Sep 19, 2016
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Fall Colors
5
- Oct 20, 2024 Three Days of Fall Colors in the Eastern Sierra Oct 20, 2024
- Jan 17, 2022 Best Images 0f 2021 Jan 17, 2022
- Nov 5, 2021 Five Reasons to Buy a Wall Calendar Nov 5, 2021
- Sep 22, 2017 Dad Why Do the Trees Change Colors? Sep 22, 2017
- Sep 19, 2016 Unbelievable - Time again for Fall Colors Sep 19, 2016
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Fog
1
- Dec 14, 2016 Don Henley was Wrong You can go Back Dec 14, 2016
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Forest
5
- Jul 31, 2017 FIVE SIMPLE STEPS TO ENJOY YOSEMITE ON A CROWDED WEEKEND Jul 31, 2017
- Jul 24, 2017 Mom, why is the sky blue? Mom, Why is the sunset red? Mom, why does it always looks better in the Eastern Sierra? Answers to questions you May have always wanted to know Jul 24, 2017
- Jul 10, 2017 The Streams are Alive Jul 10, 2017
- Sep 19, 2016 Unbelievable - Time again for Fall Colors Sep 19, 2016
- Sep 10, 2016 Another Bucket List Checked Off – Getting to a Sierra Pass Sep 10, 2016
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Ghosttown
1
- Jul 1, 2019 A Different Take on Bodie Jul 1, 2019
Five Reasons to Buy a Wall Calendar
With all the technology we have at our fingertips why would anyone want to buy a wall calendar these days. Think about it. We have calendars on our phones, calendars on the computer, calendars in our Email application, calendars on our watches, and even the date on our car stereo.
The wall calendar should be as dead as a doornail. Yet the more accurate phrase is “the wall calendar is dead, long live the wall calendar!” What magic gives this lowest timekeeping device alive and well?
With all the technology we have at our fingertips why would anyone want to buy a wall calendar these days. Think about it. We have calendars on our phones, calendars on the computer, calendars in our Email application, calendars on our watches, and even the date on our car stereo.
The wall calendar should be as dead as a doornail. Yet the more accurate phrase is “the wall calendar is dead, long live the wall calendar!” What magic gives this lowest timekeeping device alive and well?
Here are my top five reasons the low tech “wall calendar” thrives in this technology-driven society:
In our high-tech screen-driven world, images and information are fleeting. This creates a human desire for something physical and more permanent. We have two calendars in the house. One in the kitchen and one in the main bathroom. I usually make two calendars, one of the Eastern Sierra and one of Dodger Stadium. We catch ourselves regularly stopping and looking at the images. It takes us back to places and experiences we love.
It is like having Christmas twelve times a year. The calendar in the kitchen is too high for my wife to reach. On the first of each month, one of the first things she asks me to do is to flip the page on the calendar. She looks forward to seeing what the next image is going to be. It’s like opening a present! Some of the images have a special meaning because, as my “Photographer’s Assistant” she told me to take them!
Wall calendars bring people together. You can write something on a calendar for a specific date. From that point on everyone can see it without having to ask Alexa. We have a group of longtime friends with who we get together several times a year. With kids, sports, and work it is hard to schedule things. We have a planning party every year to map out the things we want to do together for the next year. You should see the calendars come out at that event. If you have a friend that really likes a particular topic a quality wall calendar on that topic is a great way to provide an inexpensive gift that still has a very personal touch.
I think having a wall calendar hanging up is also a character statement. Let me give you an example. In the Book Blue Highway, the author takes a trip around the US trying to drive only on “Blue” highways, meaning back roads. In the book he stated he could predict the type of meal he was about to have by the number of calendars the restaurant had on its walls:
“No calendar: Same as an interstate pit stop
One calendar: Preprocessed food assembled in New Jersey
Two calendars: Only if fish trophies are present
Three calendars: Can’t miss on the farm-boy breakfast
Four calendars: Try the ho-made pie too
Five calendars: Keep it under your hat, or they will franchise”
Now think about it. The last road trip you made. If the joint had a calendar or two, usually of a local youth sports team or a local business, the food was pretty good and the service was friendly. Now think about the last time you saw a calendar at a McDonalds. Enough said.
Well, maybe one last point for my Highway 395 friends. Our first impression of the Aberdeen Resort was a Margie standing in front of a wall calendar hanging next to a rotary phone. The food was off the chart.
Aberdeen Resort
5. The benefits of buying from a local or small-time artist that focuses on a place or thing you love.
In my case the Eastern Sierra. You are supporting a local artist. That artist will put some of that
money back into the local economy of the place you love. If that was not enough, the calendar will
bring you back to your happy place all year long.
We have several calendars up on the walls of our house. The connection between calendars on the wall and good food that the Blue Highway author makes is true. The BBQ at the Kent house is pretty tasty.
Reverse Seared Rib Eye
After reading this you have the desire to buy a wall calendar of the Eastern Sierra check out mine at the link below.
Begin 2026 with the Eastern Sierra Calendar from Bob Kent Photography—beautiful photos showing the area’s wild beauty and changing seasons. Each month displays colorful skies, tall mountains, and classic landscapes, bringing the Eastern Sierra’s charm to your home. A year-round tribute to nature’s beauty.
This year has something new. QR code that leads you to the story behind the picture!
The Case for Lingering
Getting to a location early and lingering afterward lets you see this incredible transition from darkness, to blue, to gold, and then finally to daylight. The same scene can look totally different and tell a completely different story, all within an hour. Same place, same stream, or trees, or mountains yet in a matter of a few minutes it “feels” totally different.
I was watching a landscape photography video from Roman Kurywczak called “For the Love of Landscapes.” In the video, he reminded me that to be a good landscape photographer you must have discipline.
Specifically, the discipline to get to a location early and stay late. To linger.
For a sunrise, you should get there an hour before the sunrise and stay for an hour after the sunrise. This is not a message I like to hear, as it means getting up at 4:00 AM or earlier to get to a location in time. However, it is a message that I need to hear regularly because he is right, and it is worth it.
He is right because a lot of the beautiful magic happens well before and after the actual sunrise. Roman correctly points out, if see something happening before you are there, you have already missed it. Unfortunately, I know this from experience. Countless times seeing the clouds turn while driving to a location and knowing no matter how fast I drive I am too late.
Getting to a location early and lingering afterward lets you see this incredible transition from darkness to blue, to gold, and finally to daylight. The same scene can look totally different and tell a completely different story, all within an hour. Same place, same stream, or trees, or mountains yet in a matter of a few minutes it “feels” totally different.
You don’t have to be a photographer to enjoy this. If you go to a location, especially in the afternoon, take your time. Linger.
Owens in Blue
There is a transition that is worth the price of admission to watch. At a lake, many times, the transition follows a pattern. In the afternoon it mostly calm with flat colors, then just before sunset the wind kicks up, the water is choppy, and the colors have this golden cast. It is the day taking its last breath. Finally, after the sunset there is this stillness that descends upon everything. The water goes still, it gets quiet, and if you’re lucky the high clouds catch on fire with yellow and oranges.
Owens in Purple
To experience this, you don’t have to move locations you just have to linger in one place for a while. While sometimes you get duds, many other times you get one heck of a show.
Owens in Gold
The series of images in this post of the Owens River in the morning transition is a perfect example. If you want to see another incredible transition at Lake Tenaya, message me.
A Different Take on Bodie
Instead of taking images that were documentation in nature, I wanted to have my images tell a story. A story about what it must have been like to live in a rough town with hostile environment. Nature gave me a bonus by providing this incredible cloud show the day we went to emphasize the hostile weather.
You can be civilized but not very civil. Despite having all the institutions of of a modern city: Barber, fire department, and a school Bodie was a rough town that was not very civilized.
I am teaching a composition photography class in September at the Mono Arts Gallery. In researching the material for the class, I have learned a lot of new composition concepts that are having a positive impact on my own photography. When we had a friend come to Mammoth who had never seen Bodie it gave me the perfect reason to go and to look at Bodie differently than in previous trips.
Porch with a view. What amazing stories this porch could tell!
Instead of taking images that were documentation in nature, I wanted to have my images tell a story. Stories about what it must have been like to live in a rough town with a hostile environment. Nature gave me a bonus by providing this incredible cloud show the day we went to emphasize the hostile weather.
Sometimes there is only a thin pane of glass that protects us from the harsh elements. An analogy that our society is fragile and could come crashing down with all the heightened tensions in our world today.
If you look back too much you can get stuck in one place and become a relic.
As I researched for this blog post I wanted to include some interesting Bodie trivia to go along with the images. Just like my attempt of changing the composition nature of my photography my research netted me a different take on Bodie. Instead of a lot of fact and figures about when the town was started or how much silver was mined I found this story about the “Curse of Bodie.”
Live a good story. Could you use any of this stuff today? A reminder that it is not the things we own that are important but the experiences we have.
You would expect the curse to be about the ghost of some innocent who was killed by a gunfighter or some small child that died too young from disease. Instead the curse is a modern day invention “created” for a specific purpose just like the town’s name. The town’s name was changed from Bodey to Bodie so people used the correct pronunciation. (A much more fun theory is that an illiterate painter misspelled Bodey as Bodie on the side of a building and the misspelling became the defacto official name of the town.)
Look at your everyday world as if it was art. You will be a much richer person for it.
The town’s name was created from a necessity. So, did the “Curse of Bodie.” The State of California keeps Bodie in the state of “arrested decay.” What that means is the State tries to keep the town looking exactly like it did when people abandoned it. They will do repairs but only to the extent to keep it looking like it did when folks left. If the building is leaning they will fix the roof or keep it from leaning more but won’t try to straighten the building up. Here is where the invention of the “curse” came in.
Man vs. Nature. Nature always plays the long game and In the end will prevail.
In this arrested decay condition there are artifacts that were randomly left everywhere. When people left they had to travel long distances and did not have the capability to take things with them. Dishes are still by a sink. An oven door is outside leaning against a building. In that environment visitors have a natural desire to take a souvenir. One item missing is no big deal but with thousands of people visiting Bodie every year lots of stealing would have a major impact.
In your life build a safe heaven to provide shelter in the storm. I have found the best shelters from life’s problems are good friends.
Somewhere in the past a few rangers “created” the “Curse of Bodie.” They said that if you took an artifact, rock, or anything from the site you would be cursed from then on with bad luck. They thought the story of the “curse” would deter folks from taking stuff. While it has kept folks from stealing, something else happened. People who did take artifacts blamed bad events that happened to them on the curse. Rangers get letters every week from folks who took items from Bodie that blame the “curse” for breakups in relationships, the deaths of family and friends, even simple things like flat tires. Some go as far as to send the item they took back to the park in hopes of lifting the curse.
"Please find enclosed one weatherbeaten old shoe. The shoe was removed from Bodie during the month of August 1978... My trail of misfortune is so long and depressing it can't be listed here."
Letter to Bodie, undated
Some of the most beautiful paintings are right in front of you. Take the time to stop and enjoy.
Today the Rangers no longer like to speak of the curse because if someone does send something back they have to treat it as a theft and file charges. Not something they really want to do. Besides once an item is removed it loses its historical context that cannot be regained. An example is a piano that was taken and then returned. No one knows what bar or house it came from. It now sits in the town hall like an orphan who does not know where she came from.
Get outside and into the world around you. It is much more colorful than being cooped up inside.
Please enjoy my visual “different” take of Bodie. Enjoy Bodie when you go but remember the “curse of Bodie.” It may be made up but lots of people believe the bad luck of the Bodie “curse” is very real. Let the artifacts lie where they are so others can enjoy them for many years to come.
Bodie is so mean it will even spit at you (rain) on you when you leave.
Please leave comments to let me know if I succeeded in creating a different take on Bodie than you have seen before.
Source Article about the Curse is from KQED see it here.
If you are interested in taking my Photography Class it is on September 28th in Mammoth from 3-6. On the 29th we will do a group photo safari in the morning to put what you learned in action. Sign up here.
Heaven
A few years ago, I experienced a drought of clouds for what seemed like an eternity. Every time I went on a photo expedition it was nothing but blue skies. It was frustrating as I love clouds in my landscape images. Well this spring ended the cloud drought in a spectacular way!
Spring or 2019 - Wildflowers, snow, and winter that won’t go away!
A few years ago, I experienced a drought of clouds for what seemed like an eternity. Every time I went on a photo expedition it was nothing but blue skies. It was frustrating as I love clouds in my landscape images.
Now the cloud “drought” was not all bad as any day in the Eastern Sierra is a good day; with or without clouds. The lack of clouds forced me to experiment with new compositions and subjects which made me a better photographer. In the end I still wanted clouds.
That is were we are heading to!
I am here to say with the Spring of 2109 my cloud drought is over. The last couple of meanderings has been off the charts. There were clouds, and I mean awesome clouds, everywhere you looked. They weren’t high clouds, so they didn’t go orange and red at sunrise and sunset, but it didn’t matter. Their size, complexity, brutishness made them totally photogenic. The main key to getting great images was to just get out there, and stay out there, capturing the clouds as they morphed throughout the day. All the while I was in heaven.
The road and clouds inviting us to explore!
I am doing research on a photography class I am going to teach at the Mono Arts Council in the fall. The class will not focus technology but on using personal vision, style, and composition to create “remarkable” photographs. During this cloudfest I started to apply some of the things that were newly learned from my research.. It was difficult to do things differently.
I may be biased but it made a huge positive difference in the impact of the images I was able to create. I will have to wait to see if the peer reviews from my fellow photographers agree with my self-assessment.
In any case sit back and enjoy my vision of heaven on earth, even though it is extremely cloudy.
Storms over the Eastern Sierra. Lots of snow still on Mammoth!
Symmetry in Nature
and on and on and on! Truly Heaven on Earth!
FYI, as I mentioned above I will be teaching a Photography Composition class at the Mono Arts Gallery on September 28th. Then on the 29th will facilitate a field trip to put what you learn into practice. You can sign up here. Would love to see you there!
Feel free to comment and share!
A Perfectly Cloudy Day
Me and my camera took off for the high country. When we got there, it was cloudy. Perfectly cloudy to be exact. You see lots of people love blue skies, but photographers think blue skies are boring and long for partly cloudy skies. Especially Cumulus, Cumulonimbus, Stratocumulus, and Lenticular clouds. The first three are what the Lord gave me this “I got to go” trip.
We live in LA, wait we live in Mammoth. Yes, we are one of those folks, but our Mammoth place doesn’t stay vacant much. We are not skiers, so we take a winter hiatus during the snowiest part of winter and let the ski people enjoy our place. The winter withdrawal this year was worse than usual. Work has been intense, and I needed a John Muir soul “refresh.” I told my better half “we have to go now.” She said she had to work but was an angel for letting me go without her.
The entrance to Hot Creek Never looked so good!
Me and my camera took off for the high country. When we got there, it was cloudy. Perfectly cloudy to be exact. You see, lots of people love blue skies, but to photographers blue skies are boring. We long for partly cloudy skies to add impact to our images. Especially Cumulus, Cumulonimbus, Stratocumulus, and Lenticular clouds. The first three cloud types are what the Lord gave me this trip. It was like he was saying good decision to come on this trip!
Green Church with Clouds! FYI, this is the first time I captured an image of the Green Church I liked!
As a teenager and when my kids were young I remember afternoon thunder clouds while camping at Silver and Twin Lakes. This trip was like a Deja vu. There were afternoon clouds and thunderheads all around. Over the whites, over the Eastern Sierra, seemed like they were everywhere. I needed something to frame the clouds. Off to Hot Creek I went.
This one huge cloud kept morphing as the afternoon went on. I followed it for an hour or so. After I had chased the clouds for hours and thought I had gotten my fill, I headed off to Tom’s Place to get a JoJo margarita. She makes a mighty fine margarita. On the way I kept having to stop because I would see another awesome thunderhead rising above a mountain ridge line here then there.
Either this is what Moses saw in the desert of aliens are coming! :-)
The afternoon was just gorgeous
Tree with a crown of Clouds
The amazing thing about the trip was with all this weather activity, the water on the lakes in the June Lake loop was so still that the lakes looked like mirrors. Since still water is another of my favorite things I got a twofer on this trip!
Silver Lake Glass (a Blog post in its self)
What a great weekend. So glad I decided to heed the “calling” of mountain’s to go!
FYI, I will be teaching a Photography Composition class at the Mono Arts Gallery on September 28th. Then on the 29th will facilitate a field trip to put what you learn into practice. You can sign up here. Would love to see you there!
My Path to Better Wildflower Images
I am now on a quest to take the best wildflower image I ever have. This post is a combination of my experience so far this season combined with the research I have done to help my images get better. I thought it would be good to share before the 2019 season comes to an end. Here goes.
2019 - Flowers from here to infinity
This is my second post this year touching on how to take great wildflower images. Why two posts?
My forte’ is landscape pictures, mostly on a grand vista scale. I have had less success in taking pictures of flowers that are good enough to print and hang on my wall. Like a million other folks, this year’s abundance of wildflowers has got me hooked on photographing flowers. I am now on a quest to take the best wildflower image I ever have. This post is a combination of my experience so far this season combined with the research I have done to help my images get better. I thought it would be good to share before the 2019 season comes to an end. Here goes.
Environment
There biggest environmental factor that can improve your image is taking the flowers under the best light. Most people want to view wildflowers on a bright sunny day. This is probably one of the worst environments for taking wildflower pictures. The light is strong causing harsh contrast, saturated color tones, etc. You want to actually use soft diffused light. Like the light from an overcast day, or at sunrise/sunset because the light is softer and warmer. This diffused light gives the wildflower a much more pleasing look. As a bonus to taking pictures early or late in the day tends to mean less wind to move the flowers around.
I love this composition but the harsh sun makes it unusable
It was an overcast day when this was taken and the diffused light makes these poppies much more appealing
Speaking of wind. If it is windy, sometimes the best approach is use it as an element in your image. Slow your shutter speed setting down and use the contrast of the moving flowers against the sharp background in the distance to add interest in your image.
Subject Matter
What flowers you choose to take a picture of is very important. If you are taking close ups, you want a prime specimen, not one where pedals are decaying, eaten by bugs, etc. Remember you are probably in a huge field of flowers, you can and should be selective.
I love the shape of this Poppy but you can tell from the leaves it has seen better days
This flower is in perfect condition and is the type of flower you should look for
Composition
Memorable images have the ability to tell a story that evokes emotion in the viewer. You already know the story and why it evokes emotion within you. Folks who will look at your image later weren’t there. They didn’t experience the same emotions you did while you were there. Your image has to tell your story in order to evoke the emotions in others who were not there. When you take the image, work to create a composition that will tell your story. It could be you caught a butterfly resting on a flower or lots of other people around you enjoying the flowers.
In this one image I tell the viewer the whole story of my visit. That the flowers were all around, it was a cloudy day, it was easily accessible, close to the highway, and you would have enjoyed being there.
The people in the image tell the story of how we were exploring the beautiful countryside
Even in this colorful chaos your eye tends to end up looking at that one unopened poppy in the middle. When you create a focal point that the eyes can focus on your viewer will spend more time exploring the rest of the image .
From my experience and research I believe there are three go to composition approaches that will help make your wildflowers ones to remember:
1. Shoot Low to the Ground. Shooting from a standing position at wildflowers close to you is almost guaranteed to give you a mediocre image. The same goes true for taking pictures of dogs. Have you ever seen a dog picture that was taken from a standing up position that you really liked? Probably not. It is always when the photographer gets down to the dog’s level that creates a memorable image.
Taking this image from a higher perspective dilutes the impact of the flowers.
Shooting lower, at the flower’s level, increases the impact of the image dramatically
2. Shooting parallel to the plain of the flower. If you’re taking a close-up of a flower, what is in and out of focus is a big deal. This is usually referred to as depth of field. If you shoot parallel to the plain of the flower you minimize the amount of distance or depth of field that must be in focus. Let me explain.
If you take a picture of a flower from the side, to keep both the front and back of the flower in focus you need to keep a greater amount of distance in focus . Now take a picture of the flower from directly overhead. The front and back are at the same distance from your camera, so you need less depth of field to keep everything in focus.
Notice the front of the flower is out of focus
If you shoot parallel to the plain of the flower the amount of distance to keep in focus in considerably less
3. Use the flowers as a foreground element. How many times have you seen an image of this huge field of gorgeous wildflowers and not been moved by it? As humans we like structure. Our eyes want to focus on something, anything. Fields of wildflowers are pure chaos. There is not a single subject for our eyes to focus on, so our minds don’t process the image in a way that creates an emotion.
One way to create emotion is to use the wildflowers as the foreground element but have a strong background element as well. Have the wildflowers at the bottom of the frame but have a hill, lake, mountain, or something in the top background element. If you are successful at creating a link between the two you will naturally create emotion in your viewer as they look at your image. FYI, a cloudless blue sky does not count as a strong background element. In fact, it dilutes the viewers interest factor.
Using the flowers in the foreground against the canyon’s super bloom creates a focal point for the viewer’s eyes to focus on, yet tells the story that there was color all around you. It creates an emotional impact
The rock and the flowers in the foreground anchor the image and give a sense of proportion that evoke emotion from viewing the image.
Equipment
As always, the best rule is use what equipment you have at the moment. One hundred percent of the time, having a picture is better than no picture at all. So use what you have available. I went with my wife on a wildflower tour and one of the images she got on her iPhone was better than 90% of what I took with my Canon DSLR. The reality is however, bringing the right equipment with you can have a huge impact on the quality of your image. Here are some examples:
Camera with Controls
We talked about the importance of selecting what is and is not in focus. A camera that gives you control over aperture and shutter speeds gives you way more flexibility to capture the image you want.
Camera with a Zoom
As a landscape photographer my favorite lens is a wide angle. I tend to leave a 16-35 lens on my camera all the time. It was counter-intuitive to me that many photographers said their favorite lens for shooting wildflowers was a long telephoto lens. Like 300-400 long lens. I tried it and they were right. For isolating a specific flower with a small depth of field you cannot be a telephoto lens. Either having multiple lenses or having a good zoom lens will give you a huge amount of flexibility and control to create the image you want.
The zoom lens lets you blur the background of the rocks behind this flower. If the rock in the background was in focus its strong contrast pattern would have been very distracting
Tripod
Earlier in the post I said you need to be picky about the flower you chose to take pictures of. It is as equally important to take time to compose the image of that flower. To do that ,you need to be able to hold the camera at the right spot/angle while you adjust your focus or wait for the wind to die down, etc. That is the job of a tripod.
I was laying on the trail and had got the perfect focus and composition but had to wait several minutes for the wind to die down long enough for the flower to stop moving. No way could I have done this without a tripod.
Knee Pads
Remember some of the best picture angles of wildflowers are down low. That means a lot of kneeling. The reason the wildflowers look so good at the location you are shooting at is because there is water there. Knee pads makes it much more comfortable to kneel and keep your clothes from getting dirty or wet.
Diffuser
You are stuck taking pictures of wildflowers mid-day. There is hope. A diffuser is a filter that softens the harsh sunlight passing through it.. You can buy a diffuser or very cheaply make your own.
Conclusion
If you are in the hunt for that “perfect” image of a wildflower hopefully these suggestions on light, composition, and equipment will help you succeed! I would love to hear from you if these tips or others not mentioned helped you on your quest!
Wish you luck in your hunt for the perfect wildflower image
March in Like a Lion ( and leave the same way!)
For me this was a March for the history books! For me March has been a Lion all the way through. I cannot remember a March in which I experienced such a diversity of photographic experiences.
March roars in like a lion
So fierce,
The wind so cold,
It seems to pierce.
The month rolls on
And Spring draws near,
And March goes out
Like a lamb so dear
Lori Hill
March roars in like a lion
So fierce,
The wind so cold,
It seems to pierce.
The month rolls on
And Spring draws near,
And March goes out
Like a lamb so dear
Lori Hill
March is a transition from Winter to Spring - Reservoir on the Tejon Ranch
The theories on the origins for the saying “March in like a lion and leaves like a lamb” are multiple. Some are based on folklore describing the shift from winter to spring in the northern hemisphere. March is usually the month where winter shifts from winter to spring. So it usually starts off cold and stormy and ends calmer and warmer. Usually is the key word as there is nothing totally predictable during the transition between seasons. Which makes them so wonderful.
Another theory is based on the stars in the beginning of March Leo (the Lion) on the horizon at sunset but is replaced with Aires (the Ram) on the western horizon.
The most interesting insight was a Christian interpretation. It follows the thought that Jesus came into the world as a Lamb and will return as a Lion - in weather language means having a false spring.
Anyways for me, this March has been a “Lion” all month long. Its been one for the history books! Normally, March is kind of boring. Its cold, it rains, you stay inside. This March is different, I cannot remember one in which I experienced such a diversity of photographic experiences. It started off with a wonderful hike on the Tejon Ranch.
A storm had just broken up the night before and its remnants were hanging around the mountains. The result was this beautiful sunny day blessed with wonderful clouds that kept changing the light and shadows on the ground. A friend on the hike quipped “you could stand in one spot for the day and the scene would change a thousand times.”
The light kept changing creating these beautiful scenes
Beautiful Day
Beauty as far as the eye can see!
Then during my once a week work commute between LA and San Diego, Waze directed me out to the I-15. Well, from the I-15 there is no missing , the now infamous, Walker Canyon “super-bloom.” Luckily, I stopped to enjoy it weeks before the massive crowds made it a zoo.
Walker Canyon and I-15
The Hills are alive
Poppies prove that if small things join together they can make a big difference
Mountains, Clouds, and Spring Flowers what more could you ask for?
Even with spring wildflowers starting to bloom the March “Lion” was not finished yet. We took a trip up to the Eastern Sierra to check out how much snow was left. Oh my. We tend to be summer/hiking folks and don’t get up to the Sierra much in the winter months. 2019 has been an exceptional snow year and based on the snow still left on the ground and the fact it is still snowing the “Lamb” part of March missed its flight and won’t get into town till April.
First Light on Snow Covered Sierra
Closed for Winter! ::-)
All Roads Lead to Snow
Finally, I took a trek out to Death Valley to see the military pilots practice low level flying in a canyon nicknamed Star Wars Canyon (or called by the Pilots “the Jedi-transition.”) Talk about coming in like a Lion! The best description I can give about this canyon, other than “Oh sh*t”, it is the only place I know that you point your camera lens down to take a picture of a jet going by at several hundred miles an hour.
You can read the names of the pilots on the side of the plane!
Reminds me of a scene at the end of the “Dragnet” movie
I would call it tree top flying except there are no trees…
Hats off to these pilots they have a lot of “huevos” and I am glad I am on their side
While March still has few days left it will be snowing in Mammoth so I am not sure we will see the spring “Lamb” until April.
With a March like I had I cannot wait to see what April brings!
If you enjoyed this please share. Comments are always appreciated.
The End of the Line (well maybe) - Keeler
On the east side of the dry Owens Lake, southeast of Lone Pine on Hwy 136, is town named Keeler. I think the best description of Keeler comes from the website Weird California:
“Keeler is practically a ghost town. Many of the buildings are falling apart, the lake it sits on is dry, the mines the town was built to support have been played out, yet still about fifty people live in the town, so a complete ghost town it is not.”
On the east side of the dry Owens Lake, southeast of Lone Pine on Hwy 136, is a town named Keeler. I think the best description of Keeler comes from the website Weird California:
“Keeler is practically a ghost town. Many of the buildings are falling apart, the lake it sits on is dry, the mines the town was built to support have been played out, yet still about fifty people live in the town, so a complete ghost town it is not.”
Owens Lake Silver-Lead Furnace State Registered Landmark
First things first. Thousands of years before Keeler existed there where humans living in the area. The proof is the petroglyphs in the area. The interpretation of these petroglyphs is a bit more interesting and controversial than most other petroglyph sites. Scholar Berry Fell has hypothesized that these petroglyphs were created by early European Celts thousands of years ago. That some of the markings were designed to mark the equinox(s). Many find that hard to believe. For an interesting read see the Equinox Project website.
Owens Petroglyphs
While it does not look like it now, the establishment of Hawley, Keeler’s original name, was based on capitalistic business competition. Mortimer Belshaw who was a miner and a smelter owner in Cerrro Gordo area wanted to bypass the Owens-Lake Silver-Lead Company which had a smelter and the only shipping dock in a town called Swansea. In 1873 Mortimer bought a shipping paddle wheel vessel named the Bessie Bradie. He built his own dock in Hawley (Keeler) just south of Swansea so he could bypass the the struggling Owens-Lake Silver-Lead Company. Things got even worse for the Owens-Lake Silver-Lead company when a flash flood in the summer of 1884 created a mudslide that inundated the town of Swansea.
Swansea - This was taken a few years ago today the roof is now gone. One heck a view they had though!
Hawley really wasn’t a town just a transit hub. That was until Julius Keeler showed up in 1879. In 1880 the Cerro Gordo mine was having a revival and Julius wanted to take advantage of it. He started dreaming up plans for a new ore mill and town to surround it. He made his dreams a reality and the mill opened in 1881 and the town was formed.
Good fortune seldom lasts and Julius had some bad luck in 1882. He spent a ton of money to refurbish the Bessie Bradie only to see it catch fire and burn just after the project was completed. The loss of the Bessie Bradie ended shipping ore over the Owens Lake for good.
In 1883, with the arrival of the Carson and Colorado Railroad Keeler again became a freight hub. As with almost all mines the Cerro Gordo began to peak in the late 1880 and 90’s.
No 18 Slim Princess of the Carson and Colorado Railroad
Keeler was resilient however, and was saved in the early 1900’s by renewed mining activity. In 1906 a smelter was built at Keeler to process silver ores. In 1907, zinc mining became king and created another Keeler revival. Mining operating would increase and decrease in spits and spats until the Cerro Gordo mines closed permanently in 1933.
1913 marked another important turning point for Keeler. It was the first year water was diverted from The Owens Lake to Los Angeles. Initially the shrinking lake provided an economic opportunity for Keeler. Soda processing from the dry lake helped Keeler survive after the Cerro Gordo mines closed.
Time was not on Keeler’s side however. In 1960, economic activity had slowed enough that the railroad terminal closed and the tracks were removed. Since then Keeler has slowly deconstructed into what it is today.
Keeler Beach
Currently around 50-60 folks live in the town. Keeler is now part ghost town, part desert outpost, and part eclectic entity. Call Keeler what you want, I call it a cool place to visit.
Eclectic Residence
Old Gas Pump
I have yet found the land marker that has the quote below but somewhere in Keeler there is this historical marker that says”
”Keeler End of the Line
From Mount House, Nevada, narrow gauge rails of the Carson & Colorado reached this site in 1883. As Cerro Gordo and other mines faltered, the rail line fell on hard times, so plans to extend the line to Mojave were abandoned, leaving Keeler as "End of the Line".
Dedicated May 12, 1973 Slim Princess Chapter E Clampus Vitus Inyo County Board of Supervisors”
Keeler Swimming Pool looking out towards the Sierra and Horseshoe Meadow Road
Keeler may be the end of the line but is worth a visit!
For some great old pictures of Keeler check out Owens Valley History - Keeler page.
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Lone Pine the Little Town Below a Big Mountain
I have been going to Mammoth since I was a teenager. Until we bought our place in Mammoth we would do a non-stop drive to Mammoth ignoring all the amazing stuff between LA and Mammoth. With a place of our own we started spending more time in the Eastern Sierra. With that regularity the need to rush straight through to Mammoth went away We started exploring cool things all along Hwy 395. It was then I fell in love with the towns in the Owens Valley. These towns seem one dimensional as you drive through but when you get to know them they have multiple layers that make them gems in their own right. Today’s post focuses on the town I know best - Lone Pine.
I have been going to Mammoth since I was a teenager. Until we bought our place in Mammoth we would do a non-stop drive to Mammoth ignoring all the amazing stuff between LA and Mammoth. With a place of our own we started spending more time in the Eastern Sierra. With that regularity the need to rush straight through to Mammoth went away We started exploring cool things all along Hwy 395. It was then I fell in love with the towns in the Owens Valley. These towns seem one dimensional as you drive through but when you get to know them they have multiple layers that make them gems in their own right. Today’s post focuses on the town I know best - Lone Pine.
Lone Pine has incredible layers both natural and man made
Let’s start with a trivia fact. The famous hills to the west of Lone Pine are called the Alabama Hills. The name for these hills were given by pro-Confederate prospectors They chose the name after the CSS Alabama, the most successful Confederate war ship in the war. The CSS Alabama captured 65 ships, flying the American Flag, and sunk one Union warship. The pro-Union prospectors were not to be out done. They named the pass above the Alabama Hills the Kearsarge pass after the USS Kearsarge which was the ship that sunk the Alabama. Pretty funny when you think about it.
Lone Pine and it’s Alabama Hills are famous for its relationship with the movie industry. Over 300 films have been filmed here over the years including the 1938 classic Gunga Din, countless westerns and famous movies like Spencer Tracey’s Bad Day at Black Rock and Humphrey Bogart’s High Sierra.
You can check out this rich history at the Lone Pine Film Museum.
If you go be sure to watch the film it is pretty cool.
The Alabama Hills are also famous for there unique rock formations that are both beautiful to view but also spark your imagination. Explore enough and you will start to see figures in their shapes.
The Mobius Arch is one of the most famous arches in the Alabama Hills
But it is not the only one.
After a while you start to see images in the formations.
Jabba the Hut
Octopus maybe. If you look close you might find a laughing pig.
Towering above Lone Pine is Mt Whitney. With a height of 14,505 feet it is the tallest mountain in the contiguous United States.
About 9,000 feet up is Whitney Portal. There are camp grounds there and it is the trail head for the hike to the top of Mt Whitney. The portal is a wonderful stop on its own, It has a small pond with trout in it. Many like to fish others just like to sit and relax.
Fishing Pond at Whitney Portal
There is also a gorgeous waterfall as well.
If you don’t want to hike all the way to the top of Mt Whitney a much shorter but rewarding hike is to Lone Pine lake.
Lone Pine Lake sometimes looks like a scene from Jason and the Argonauts
If all this physical activity makes you hungry then the Whitney Portal Store has you covered with their huge pancakes!
Two plates are required to hold these pancakes.
If you want to wait to get back to town to eat there are some awesome restaurants it town. A few of our favorites are:
The Alabama Hills Cafe - Breakfast and Lunch
Alabama Hills Cafe
Seasons - Dinner is a great sit down restaurant.
Lone Star Bistro - Great sandwiches, hot dogs and ice cream
Frosty Chalet - for a quick bite to eat.
There is a nice grass area and shaded patio to enjoy your food at the Frosty Chalet
If you want just to sit down have a beer and possibly meet folks from around the world Jakes is a great little old saloon-. We have met folks from France, England, Australia, and more while we were there.
Bud sign at Jakes
Just north of Lone Pine is Manzanar one of the WWII Japanese Interment camps. It is now a National Historic Site where you can see both the hardships endured and the courage that our Japanese citizens displayed.
A barracks at Manzanar
I hope you see there is much more to do in Lone Pine than grab a burger and gas. Next time you are heading up 395 plan to spend time in Lone Pine!
Mt Whitney and the Alabama Hills always look good in snow!
The Wildflowers are Coming, the Wildflowers are Coming; are You Prepared?
It’s February and raining and snowing a lot. The skiers in the Eastern Sierra are in heaven, but what are the non-skiers to do with our time? Prepare for the wildflower season of course. The flowers are already popping up here and there already. I wanted to provide a list resources to help you plan your wildflower hunting season. We will cover:
Where to look for wildflowers and websites that track the wildflower blooms
How to know what you are looking at. Yes, there is an app for that and I found a great website.
Tips on how to take great wildflower pictures
It’s February and raining and snowing a lot. The skiers in the Eastern Sierra are in heaven, but what are the non-skiers to do with our time? Prepare for the wildflower season of course. The flowers are already popping up here and there already. I wanted to provide a list resources to help you plan your wildflower hunting season. We will cover:
Where to look for wildflowers and websites that track the wildflower blooms
How to know what you are looking at. Yes, there is an app for that and I found a great website.
Tips on how to take great wildflower pictures
Forgive the length of the post but it gives you a lot of info.
Locations
Tripsavvy has a great list. I suggest you check the website out because they also have resources by site. Here is an overview of their list and excerpts of their descriptions:
Anza-Borrego Desert: January through March - located south of Palm Springs, Anza-Borrego State Park often puts on the best desert wildflower show in California.
Death Valley: February-April - when they show up, Death Valley's wildflower displays are eye-popping because they occur in a landscape so devoid of color the rest of the year.
North Table Mountain: February-April - in a good year, North Table Mountain is decked out in more than 100 kinds of wildflowers.
Valley of the Oaks: March-April - west of King City that is little changed since Spanish colonial days. The land has never been cultivated, making it a great place for spring wildflowers.
Carrizo Plain: March-April - the wildflower displays that follow a rainy winter there are some of the state's best. During that time, docents lead tours to see them.
Antelope Valley: February-May - in a good year, the carpets of orange-hued California Poppies…
Hite Cove Trail: March-May - most visitors speed right past the Hite Cove Trail on their way to Yosemite, but the number of cars parked near a seemingly insignificant trailhead is a clue. In fact, the Hite Cove Trail is one of the most spectacular places in the Sierras in late spring. Some say it's the best wildflower hike in California.
Eastern Sierras: May-July - the iris blossom between late May and July, depending on elevation They start first around Bishop and bloom later near Mammoth Mountain.
Resources
Modern Hiker is a great site and it is not surprising it has a great page on wildflower resources. Here is a summary of the resources they recommend:
The Theodore Payne Foundation’s Wild Flower Hotline – this reader-submitted flower update covers most of Central and Southern California and is often a good place to start your search.
DesertUSA’s Wildflower Reports – DesertUSA kicks off their wildflower reports in January, which gives people plenty of time to start planning their trips as well as researching early predictions on which areas look like they’re experiencing the right conditions for good blooms.
What’s Blooming in the Santa Monica Mountains – This list focuses on the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area. Here, the reports are divided into different parks and even specific trails within those parks.
Park Specific Sites – Many of the better-known wildflower viewing areas have their own park-specific reports, with varying degrees of regularity and specificity.
Finding Out What You’re Looking At:
There are smartphone apps that help you identify what you are looking at. This page gives a review of several of them out there.
Desert USA has a great page that has pictures and descriptions of a ton of desert wildflowers
Photography Tips
Now that you know some good California locations and how to check how the blooms are doing. Here are some tips on how to take pictures that will wow your friends.
Fields and Flowers – There are two basic approaches to taking wildflowers.
Use objects in the foreground and background to provides a sense of scale
Fields of Dreams - One approach is to take an image of the field. With hundreds and possibly thousands of bright colored flowers make for an incredible scene. To take these scenes over the top try placing something in the foreground of the image to give the viewer a sense of scale. You can also build a layered composition. For example, you could have a tree in the foreground, wildflowers in the midsection, and a building way off in the distance.
See with the flower on the right how fast things get out of focus. On the left the camera was perfectly aligned with the plane of the flower and everything is in focus
Individual Superstar – Some of the most impactful images are of individual flowers. First, pick a good flower that has not been beaten up. Second pay attention to the background. If you have an adjustable camera use an aperture setting to blur the background. Your viewer’s eye will immediately concentrate on the part of the flower that is in focus. Plan out what you want in focus. The front, center, or all the flower. If you want all the flower in focus, make sure your camera is in parallel with the main plane of the flower.
Shutter Speed – Wildflowers are delicate, any amount of wind will begin to blow them around. If you have an adjustable camera set your shutter speed to 200 or 400. It is better to increase your ISO and get a slightly grainy but sharp image than one with no noise that is blurry.
Weather – It may be counter-intuitive, but an overcast day is probably better than a sunny day. Sunny days create harsh shadows and blown out color.
Best Time of Day to Shoot – Early morning when the sunlight is low and there is no wind. One thing to know some flowers don’t open until they get sunlight.
Equipment
Tripod – the flower is moving which means your camera shouldn’t be.
Telephoto Lens - the longer focal length will help you isolate a wildflower in front of a blurred background. It's important that your telephoto lens has a very short minimum focusing distance (at most 5 feet), so you can get close enough to flowers to fill the frame.
Use a telephoto to blur the back ground and put the focus on the flower
Remote Shutter Release – again the flowers are moving so your camera should not be moving. Pushing the shutter release on the camera tends to move the camera. Don’t have one, don’t worry. Just set your camera’s delay timer to 2 or 10 seconds.
DSLR or Mirrorless Camera – Don’t mean to sound snooty but these types of cameras have more options, shutter, aperture, ISO, etc. that gives you more control making the image you want. Don’t have this type of camera don’t worry go anyways. It’s better to go and take pictures, with whatever you’ve got, than not going at all.
Happy hunting!
