I never thought I’d have much use for the movie function on my Nikon D90 (being a still photo snob) but boy, for these kinds of subjects, you can’t beat it. It’s the next best thing to being there. I think you’ll be seeing more of these as I go. This one is very short, but the file was huge to upload, so I’ll have to film them at a lower resolution from now on.
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Yellowstone is truly amazing
I am so glad that I finally made it up here after living in the US for almost 20 years.It was a long drive yesterday from Jackson at the southern end of the Teton Park, up to Gardiner at the north entrance of Yellowstone. The roads are narrow and winding, and there are still a lot of RV’s and tour buses about, so I don’t think I would want to be here in mid Summer.For today’s entry, I’m just focusing on my images taken at Mammoth Hot Springs. What an incredible place. If you go in the evening or early morning, there are very few people around, and you almost imagine you are on another planet.Tomorrow I am leaving Gardiner and heading for West Yellowstone, from where I will cover the geyser basins on the west side of the park, the most famous one being Old Faithful. For more images than I can upload to this site, please see my photo gallery, current work, at www.vanessak.com.
This is hard work!
I had great intentions of journaling each day with details of where I’ve been and corresponding images. After all, what else was I going to be doing when the light melted into darkness and photography was no longer feasible. Well, come to find out I would be exhausted. I don’t know how many miles I’ve put on the rental car in the last 48 hours, but I’ve already had to fill up the tank.Taking the photos is only half the story. They have to be sorted, cataloged, uploaded to my online gallery, then I have to do my blog …. Not that I’m complaining.I am still on east coast time and although 5.15am is better than 4.45 as an internal wake-up call, I am hopeful that tomorrow I will sleep a little longer. No plans for a pre-dawn shoot.I am moving on up to Yellowstone for a few days. There is a storm expected to move through the region overnight, and snow is forecast for the upper elevations, which is great for photography.The fall color hasn’t really kicked in here yet, and I’m counting on the expected cold snap to accelerate the process.I plan to photograph the amazing display of geysers and other thermal displays and then head back south for my last few days here, by which time the fall color should be close to peak.In the meantime, here are today’s “quick pics”
I’ve a feeling we’re not in Charleston anymore ..
This is my second night at the Antler Inn, Jackson, Wyoming. Last night I crashed after spending the best part of the day in planes and airports. This morning I woke up at 4.45am which would be normal if I were still on the east coast, but very early for mountain time.Anyway, since I couldn’t go back to sleep, I made some nasty coffee, grabbed a breakfast bar and hit the road.I didn’t get back again until after 7pm and I must have put a good couple hundred miles on the rental car, which is by the way a Kia Sportage, same as mine. That was convenient since I didn’t have to learn where all the controls were when I picked it up last night and headed into the dark unknown.Anyway, the Teton National Park is beautiful. The colors are still a good 10 days away from peaking here, so I’m going to leave for Yellowstone earlier than planned, then return for a couple of days, hoping that the aspens and cottonwoods will all be yellow.Here are some of the pics from today’s activities.
Early morning at Ripley Light Marina
3 days and counting … so long Lowcountry!
This image is of the flooded marsh, taken this evening from my deck during an unusually high tide. It is not particularly noteworthy, except that it will probably contrast sharply with the images I post over the next couple of weeks. Can’t wait – really need that change, to re-charge batteries. I’m just a tad burned out right now. Big sky country, here I come!
Early Saturday morning on Folly Beach
Yesterday Cosmo got the idea in his head to make a pre-dawn trip to the old coast guard station end of Folly Beach. He knew I wouldn’t pass up an opportunity for some sunrise shots, and I happily agreed. We pumped up the bike tires, loaded photo stuff into baskets and were on the beach before sun-up. Part of it was beautiful – just like Folly should be, and the other photo shows the aftermath of a party last night, where folks just left trash, beer cans, and a cooler strewn across a wide area of sand. Shame on you, whoever you are!
Some “catch-up” (9 days and counting!)
I have been very slack with my blog – apologies if there’s anyone out there that has noticed! So many of my days are routine though, so it gets old to keep taking multiple photos of my regular commute to work, walking the dog in his usual park, working out at my usual gym.. you get the picture (ha ha). Anyway here are a couple of “catch-ups”. I had lunch with Marty today, so he was my victim. I thought I would use my fisheye lens for a slightly different perspective. He’s going to kill me when he sees the close-up.
Still chasing that moon ..
Last night I had planned to make a second attempt to catch the moonrise, although it was later than last night and the sky was darker, so not optimun conditions for photography, but all that was moot because I stayed too late at a social event and missed it again. I resolved instead to catch the moonset in the morning but again I was a day late, because the moon was still too high in the sky as the day broke, so it was very blah. I still have this ultimate shot in my mind’s eye, the big yellow moon setting behind the shrimp boat rigging, reflected in the calm waters of the creek … Dream on. Maybe next time.
The call of Folly Beach
I am always amazed at how much the beach can change from week to week. Dunes appear where previously there were no dunes, tons of sand disappear revealing features long buried, and familiar features get buried – for the moment. I was wanting to capture the full moonrise scheduled for 7.32pm, but the bank of clouds on the eastern skyline thwarted my plan. Anyway, Logan and I got a good dose of sea air and some exercise, and of course a few more photos (moonless).