Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Sierra Fall Colors


Colorful Decline, originally uploaded by Jeff Sullivan.

Aspen leaves float in the colorful toxic waste from the tailings of an abandoned mine near Monitor Pass.



Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Fishing the Mammoth Lakes Area

A few notes on fishing in the Eastern Sierra region this week:

I dropped by the Carson River below Hope Valley (in the high gradient section below Sorenson's Resort) last Friday. I found good numbers of small rainbows and browns.

My next stop was Heenan Lake. I had given up on it a couple of years ago after my son Thomas and I walked completely around it and only found one small hole in the weeds to cast form shore. This year the weeds died off and the lake level has dropped, so the weeds are mostly gone, and the few remants that remain are dead and rotten and pull right up (don't catch or break your line).

I fished from shore and hooked one 21-22" Lahontan, but if I recall the recent result charts correctly, most anglers catch several, and the fishing picked up in early October as the weather cooled.

That evening I continued on to the Mammoth Lakes Area. I've fished the Upper Owens River in the short open section immediately above the lake, and although I'm finding good numbers of rainbows and browns (mostly 8-11" with an occasional one to 14"), for the most part the 5-10 pound spawning browns don't seem to have entered the river yet. People say that they move in when the weather turns bad.

I scouted out Convict Creek below Hwy 395 from the green church towards Owens Lake and found that it's very small and has a lot of small (mostly 8") browns, but it has diversion dams that prevent larger fish from moving upstream. I must have walked nearly 2 miles and didn't quite reach its confluence with McGee Creek. I'll probably try walking down McGee Creek instead next time.

I drove by Hot Creek a couple of times, and even on weekdays it's overrun with fishermen. There was a nice hatch going between the hatchery and the Hot Creek Ranch property, and the dozen people fishing in that 1/4 mile stretch of creek seemed to be doing well.

I'm going to try the San Juaquin in Devil's Postpile National Monument next, perhaps hiking a couple of miles to try below Rainbow Falls. Then I'll probably hit the East Walker River on my way back to Heenan Lake this weekend, possibly hitting Lake Davis on my way towards the Pit, Upper Sacramento, McCloud and Trinity rivers later this month.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Need a Director of Photography?



Heenan Lake, originally uploaded by Jeff Sullivan.

Given my passion for producing stunning images I've lately been moving towards motion pictures. I have years of experience producing amateur ski movies on point-and-shoot DV cameras, but I'd love to apply advanced photographic tools and techniques using higher end cameras that allow for more creative control.

I signed on with Potamoi Media Group to help them produce a flyfishing video this Winter, but unfortunately one of the producers has an injury that requires a postponement. I returned from their first shooting location in Missouri to drown my sorrows in 20"+ broodstock Lahontan Cutthroat Trout at Heenan Lake in California.

Now to appease my need to make a film in the meantime... a ski film perhaps? Time will tell...

Saturday, October 04, 2008

California's North Lake


North Lake Morning, originally uploaded by Jeff Sullivan.

Arguably California's answer to Colorado's Maroon Bells, North Lake tends to be slightly less crowded with photographers.












Colorado's Maroon Bells


Maroon Bells Dawn, originally uploaded by Jeff Sullivan.

Over 50 other photographers had lined up along the shoreline, and they were dealing with the windy surface of the lake. I found this calm area and got down in the water and mud to take the wind out of the shot and get a reflection.


I saw the potential for this shot when I scouted the location the night before. Fortunately it required wearing waders, because I was the only one prepared to kneel in the mud when the high wind conditions warranted some unusual shooting positions the next morning.