When we arrived at Logan Pass in Glacier National Park, a couple of large Bighorn sheep were in the parking lot. I layed down on the ground with a 70-200mm lens to take the parking lot and spectators out of the composition.

Welcome to my photo travel blog. I am a landscape and night photographer who conducts photography workshops in some of America’s most exotic landscapes. I just completed a travel guide to the best landscape photography locations in Southern California, to be available in September 2015.
Bannock is smaller than California's best ghost town Bodie, but a huge plus is that they allow you to go into the buildings. It's also open 8am-9pm, so as long as you don't visit in late June, you should be able to catch a sunset there.
Be forewarned though, the mosquitos are ferocious!
Forest fires in Yellowstone break up the lodgepole pine monoculture and open up land for other plants and animals.Bighorn sheep feeding above a cliff of columnar basalt in Yellowstone National Park.
We spent last night at ghost town of Bannock, MT, and didn't see single ghost!
This morning we dug for quartz crystals at Crystal Park, and now we're in Missoula, on our way towards Glacier National Park!
Evening is a great time to walk the geyser basins. If you catch an eruption and place the sun at your back, you can catch a rainbow in the spray!
This is Beehive Geyser, one of the more intermittent geysers in the Old Faithful Geyser Basin, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.
Sorry I've been offline so much this week... Yellowstone was established as a national park on March 1, 1872, but it seems no more likely to get Internet service now than was did then!
Hopefully a new vendor will replace Xanterra's vice-grip on 1900s-era concessions and services in the park will end some day, or perhaps the new head of the Department of Interior, Ken Salazar, will bring the parks into the 21st century? If so, better late than never!
Sometimes you're good, and sometimes you're just plain lucky. Most of the time I'd rather be lucky than good! I found this rainbow shortly after sunrise at Schwabacher's Landing.
We spent several stormy days in Grand Teton National Park, discovering that the tent we used for years in California is not exactly waterproof! Who knew that it could rain during camping season?
Light Painting (and HDR) highlighting ice crystals near the mouth of Lava River Cave in Newberry National Volcanic Monument near Bend , Oregon.
Unfortunately I dropped one of the colored filters that came with my Maglight, so my options for more shots like this are greatly reduced on this trip!
After waking up at Harris Beach on the Oregon Coast, spending a gray morning at the Battery Point Lighthouse in Crescent City, California then exploring the Stout Grove in Redwood National Park, we made our way to Crater Lake. We arrived just in time to catch sunset over these interesting snow melt channels.
The light over Crater Lake wasn't great in the right directions by the time we reached it, but the next morning we had a blast exploring Lava River Cave in Newberry National Volcanic Monument near near the town of Bend.
A funny stop on the way to Yellowstone from California, but the forecast of partly cloudy skies on the coast told me to go this way to catch the light.
We caught sunset at Harris Beach just North of Brookings, Oregon, but the woke to solid gray skies, so we headed back South to Redwood National Park, and turned towards Crater Lake National Park and the Bend area.
"Toto, I don't think we're in the Sierra Nevada any more."
We're off... on the way to Yellowstone... by way of the Pacific Ocean of course!
Saw a sign to the falls on Interstate 5, and made the short hike!
We caught sunset at Harris Beach in Oregon last night, but the coast is gray so we're heading to Redwood National Park, then most likely towards Crater Lake.
I headed out late to squeeze in a few more scouting days before my upcoming Mountain Light Workshops trip, so I stopped a couple of hours down the road in Hope Valley. After a couple of mediocre stops I found this large, steaming vernal pool with a moderately large rock in it for foreground interest.
I've had this image for nearly 3 years but never produced an edit that was good enough to show anyone. The original RAW file was pretty low in contrast straight out of the camera, and the gray on gray color tones didn't enable the funnels to stand out well enough. The standard dodge feature in Photoshop was an awkward tool to try to use accurately.
My first epiphany upon rediscovering this shot this week was to try the Automate -> Singel File Conversion feature in Photomatix 3.1 (HDR) software. That allows you to perform tone mapping (detail and contrast enhancement) on a single file.
The second productive technique was to bring the output result from Photomatix into Adobe Lightroom 2.3. In addition to an overall contrast boost, there's a preset called "Punch"(in the Library features) that among other things seems to increase local contrast. It may increase middle grays, as opposed to operating strongly on the lightest and darkest areas, but whatever it does, it works. I also used the adjustment brush (in the Develop section) to select the funnel clouds and increase contrast. The adjustment brush tries to identify, help you select, and operate on the content you're trying to modify, so it can be more efficient and effective than a simple dodge or burn.
Lightroom also lets you adjust the radius of the tools you're using simply by rolling your mouse wheel, and its dust spot removal tool lets you see where it's selecting replacement data and pick new data to substitute, making dust spot removal much more flexible, effective, and faster. You can even copy your dust spot removal steps to other photos, since the other photos probably have the same defects (you can go back and modify ones that don't work well due to different underlying image data).
Overall, image editing tools have gotten more powerful, flexible, easy and efficient to use, and more effective.
Coming soon to newsstands... my interview in Photographer Magazine.
No, you can't read it!
Well, probably not.
It's the Ukraine edition! If anyone knows a good Web site translation tool, I'd like to read it myself! The interview article hasn't been posted to Photographer Magazine yet, but I'll publish a link when it comes out.
Exposures of .8, 2 and 5 seconds were combined in Photomatix HDR software to get this result. The longest exposure contributed the detail in the moss and rocks. The middle exposure contributed a lot of the water detail. One advantage of merging in shorter exposures (such as the shortest one) is that you can get a bit of the spray to keep the result from abstracting too much.
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Upper Yosemite Falls Moonbow |
The dogwood are in full boom in Yosemite Valley, with no new buds apparent. The trees have most of their leaves showing, which can obscure the flowers somewhat (for photography it's best to catch them a little on the early side).
Up at higher elevations the dogwoods are just starting to bloom, with a few early ones showing up in the 5000 to 6000 foot elevations as you leave the Valley South through the Wawona Tunnel and on both sides of Crane Flat. I'd give those areas another week or so.
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Russian Gulch State Park |
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Sunset at Greenwood State Beach |
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Church in Bodega Bay |
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Point Arena in the fog, across Stornetta Public Lands |
There have been great clouds in the Mono Basin over the past couple of days. Now that the lake is warming, there's also a lot of algae growing, but the brine shrimp and alkali fly larvae aren't present in large enough numbers to keep up with it, so the water is a very interesting emerald color.
My day started near Mammoth Lakes in the Owens Valley. I was exploring some salt falts and enjoying the sunrise color on the Sierra Nevada.
An area of dried, cracked mud provided nice foreground detail for some vertical images.
At this point I had been working straight for minutes, so I decided that I needed a break, which I took in a nearby hot spring (it's a tough job, but someone has to do it).
While the morning air remained still, I stopped by some nearby vernal pools to see if I could catch a reflection of the Sierras. At one of the bigger ones was lined with a reddish algae, which contrasted particularly well with the blue sky and white clouds and snow-capped mountains.
Later in the morning I met landscape photographer Bill Wight to share a few of my "secret spots" in the Eastern Sierra with him, and to try to scout out a few new ones for the landscape photography workshop we'll be leading here June 3-6. Many sagebrush stripes and undercarriage drags later (my minivan doesn't have the clearance of his pickup truck, but that rarely stops me from trying), we had made our way up to Mono Lake and explored several of the less visited and lesser known sites. First we focused on the exotic "sand tufa" limestone formations which form as calcium-laden water runs through sand.
The sand tufa structures look like intricate and delicate sand castles rising as much as 3 feet out of the ground, up to several feet across.
By this point clouds were building in the sky, so I suggested an area which would provide many opportunities to catch reflections. I experimented with my circular polarizer, using it on some shots to maximize water color and minimize reflections, then rotating it to still help with cloud contrast and definition with minimal interference on cloud reflections (as shown here).
Some of the reflections were found in side pools featuring salt-crusted, cracked mud... a great foreground!
The wind was still up as susnet approached, so I selected a site that would be fairly protected by the wind but still have a decent view of any remaining clouds to the East that might catch color as the sun set. The color show to the East wasn't as intense as I had hoped, but we had completed a long productive day of exploration and photography, so I couldn't complain.
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