Tag: Landscape

  • Abandoned in Colorado

    Abandoned in Colorado

    I mentioned last week that I was going to show off some of the random gems that you can find just driving around the San Luis Valley. One of the first I found was the wonderful abandoned house above. At the time we were driving towards the Great Sand Dunes, which start just off the

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  • San Luis Valley

    San Luis Valley

    Alamosa, Colorado, sits in the middle of the vast 8,000-square-mile San Luis Valley. The valley floor is at an elevation of over 7,500′ and is surrounded by mountain ranges that feature 14,000′ peaks. The valley is primarily agricultural—lots of ranching and farming—and there is a fair amount of open space, as is pretty clear in

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  • Southern Colorado Gold

    Southern Colorado Gold

    My wife and I are on a mission to see the entire state of Colorado. This isn’t happening at a breakneck pace, mind you, but we are making steady progress. Whenever we drive somewhere new we color in the roads with a pink highlighter on our rather beat-up paper Colorado map. At this point, there

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  • Western Virginia in the Fall

    Western Virginia in the Fall

    Two weeks after my shooting day in New Hampshire, I was staying for the week in Norton, Virginia, which offers plenty of fall color of its own. The image above is just a tiny piece of endless forests bursting with color. Unfortunately, I was only free for a couple short forays into the woods that

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  • The New Hampshire Challenge

    The New Hampshire Challenge

    I have alluded to this in the previous two posts, but there was a distinct challenge during my one-day New Hampshire photographic marathon: so many trees with so many colors. Unlike the forests in the Western US where evergreen trees dominate, in New Hampshire the deciduous trees hold the overwhelming majority. When confronted with the

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  • Streamside in New Hampshire

    Streamside in New Hampshire

    As I continued my one-day photographic road trip around New Hampshire, the rain tempered a bit, but the skies were completely cloudy the entire day. I usually don’t complain about the light—different lighting conditions just give you different things to work with. Since there was no direct sunlight, backlit leaves weren’t going to be on

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  • A Little Pond in New Hampshire

    A Little Pond in New Hampshire

    I recently had the opportunity to spend an October day—an entire day—photographing in New Hampshire. If I had to live the same month over and over again, Groundhog Day style, I would hope for October because it is pretty much the best month everywhere. (Except Arizona. There it is February.) Certainly in New England, October

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  • Mammoth Hot Springs

    Mammoth Hot Springs

    After spending most of the day photographing in the Paradise Valley, Montana, I found myself at the north entrance to Yellowstone National Park. It was late in the afternoon and Yellowstone is a massive park, but I knew that Mammoth Hot Springs was only a few miles from this entrance. It was going to be

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  • Fences in Paradise

    Fences in Paradise

    Late last week I drove my daughter to Pray, Montana, so she could attend a wedding. The perk for me was that I had a full Friday to photograph in a pretty area where I had never been. It is so pretty, in fact, that it is called Paradise Valley. The valley runs pretty much

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  • Ocotillo Cameo

    Ocotillo Cameo

    Cameo? Be sure to read to the end! I mentioned two weeks ago that I missed the Arizona summer monsoons. (Note that the emphasis there is on the word monsoons, not summer, but of course you don’t get one without the other.) The Sonoran desert is the wettest desert in the world, and the summer

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