Just because the leaves have fallen doesn’t mean the autumn color is over.
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Just because the leaves have fallen doesn’t mean the autumn color is over.
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If you look very carefully in the middle left portion of the image, right where the sky meets the top of the canyon, you can just faintly make out the end of it’s tail. I was estimating this particular comet would be in more of a westerly position and a bit higher in the sky for this shooting location, but sadly, not to be. But hey, the moon came up, lit the canyon, and I got a fairly pleasant picture. Sometimes even the failures can be successful (with right attitude of course)
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Every year about his time, I try to hike up Devils Bathtub trail in Spearfish Canyon, South Dakota to capture the creek and the autumn leaves. This flat and tranquil section of the stream reflects the vibrant fall colors while providing a subtle peek of what lies just below the water’s surface.
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Another image from our trip to the Wyoming Bighorn Mountains, A five mile out and back hike along a very pleasant trail takes you to an overlook that’s definitely worth the trip, the highlight being Bucking Mule Falls. This is a handheld picture I shot while getting as close to the abyss as I dared.
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Between the small Wyoming towns of Burgess Junction and Lovell on hwy 14, there is a pull out that overlooks the Bighorn Basin on the western side of the Bighorn mountains. It’s a magnificent view and no photograph can do it justice, but this is my humble attempt.
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This is what the sun looks like as it rises through smoke from wildfires out west. Is this what they mean by the “hazy days of summer”?
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I returned to the spot I shot my last post, this time looking for a starry night sky to compliment the lake and Bear Butte. Instead, I was surprised by a little aurora action. I’m not complaining.
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The question isn’t, “what’s more appealing, black and white or color”, but what makes each appealing. The answers will be different for each observer.
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I went to the place where I shot the image a couple of posts ago looking for a new composition. I found and shot several, but when I got back to my vehicle I discovered I didn’t have my phone. Panicked, I tried retracing my steps to all the places I stopped to photograph but couldn’t find it. Later I came back with my wife hoping we could use her phone to call mine and locate it that way. Nope, no service, so after searching most of the afternoon, we gave up.
That night I went through the images I shot and discovered one place I hadn’t looked so I printed that photo and, with very low expectations, set out the next morning for another search. As you can see by the image, the area was covered with thick ferns so I had to get down on my belly to see under the canopy, and after several minutes of crawling around like this, what do you know, I FOUND IT!!! I guess life can sometimes be fair after all.
This year hasn’t been one for the record books as far as rain is concerned, but you couldn’t tell it by how lush the foliage is in the Black Hills this summer. This image was made at Iron Creek in Spearfish Canyon, South Dakota, and is a perfect example of what I’m talking about.
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Not usually plentiful in the Black Hills, but this year large groves can be found if you know where to look. This very large growth provides a thick canopy over the forest floor almost like a jungle in itself. Be sure to tread lightly though, as the plant stems are very fragile.
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You’ll have to get in the water and wade up stream to get to this spot on Iron Creek in Spearfish Canyon, South Dakota, but it’s worth it. I love the way the mossy rocks almost glow green and yellow in the summer.
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Well not actually cabbage, but similar. Still playing with the light and close-up of leaves in Spearfish Canyon.
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Shot literally feet from an earlier post in Spearfish Canyon, this composition features the same foliage but the little flower at the top seems to be overseeing the chaos of the surrounding leaves. A challenge in this image was balancing lights and darks to keep the flower from blowing while still maintaining enough light in the shadows so detail in the leaves stood out.
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After shooting the milky way and the landscape, I patiently waited for a car to pass by in order to capture some retreating tail light. Instead, (and surprisingly) an eighteen wheeler rumbled by. Even better!
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One of the most challenging things for me when it comes to capturing close ups of wild plans and flowers is identifying a subject that brings together a subject that brings together various photographic elements that makes the image interesting and pleasing to the eye.
For me the star of the show is the smaller leaf in the center. It has a more vibrant yellow color and is nicely framed by the twig coming in from the right. The larger leaves seem to be milling about randomly while giving the little guy some space.
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This massive cotton wood tree is long since dead, but when it saw a lot of ancient history when it was alive and growing.
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The winter wheat in central Nebraska, not far from the town of St. Paul is looking pretty good.
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This image was made in the middle of May of this year at the Roughlock Falls picnic area in Spearfish Canyon, South Dakota and except for a little green grass and a few leaf buds, you’d never guess we were a month into spring.
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This is my third in a series of images I’ve taken in the exact spot at Upper Roughlock Fall in Speadrfish Canyon to capture the seasons of the year. Here I wanted to depict the early spring foliage emerging after a long cold winter. You can see the other photos in this series here
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