Ann & Dan’s Excellent Adventures

Eclipse Adventure - Part 1
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Eclipse Adventure - Part 1

Come on now, you really didn’t think that Ann and I could live 20 miles from the totality of a solar eclipse and not figure out a way to experience it did you?  And us being the way we are (see how I very not-so-subtly made this a collective trait), us figuring out a good way to experience the eclipse turned into an adventure.

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There's a reason it's called landscape orientation.  Right?
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There's a reason it's called landscape orientation. Right?

I’ve always used the term vertical and horizontal to describe the orientation of my framing of photographic images.  However, many use the terms portrait and landscape orientation, to the point where I’ve actually read someone argue that if a photograph of a landscape is not oriented horizontally, it’s not a landscape photograph.  Face it, even Microsoft Word refers to the orientation of a page as either “Portrait” or “Landscape.”  So there’s got to be something to it, doesn’t there?

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Fissure
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Fissure

Lately I’ve been reading a lot of Charlie Waite, a landscape photographer from Great Britain, studying his images and thinking through what he has to say about them.   Regarding one image, of a stark white tree and an old barn in front of a forest backdrop, he says: 

“I was drawn by the peeling paint, the windows, and the milky roof.  The red paint contains a whiteness that echoes the silvery silhouette of the tree.  Remember what it was that first drew you to an image, and retain a sense of that in the final photograph.”

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Fresno - The Long Way Back
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Fresno - The Long Way Back

After three days of 100+ degree temperatures and with Beast all fixed up, Ann and I were more than ready to start making our way home.  

While in Fresno, we’d had several conversations with people about places to go and routes to take home, so we had a few options.

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Fresno - The Long Way Down
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Fresno - The Long Way Down

Our July trip was a maintenance trip to Fresno to get Beast’s mud room sprayed with waterproof liner (an item that didn’t get completed before our April pick-up date) and to repair a couple of things that worked loose during the May expedition.  Everything was covered under warranty while Ann and I spent 3 days telecommuting from a hotel room while Fresno experienced 100+ degree days.  But as is our way, we made the trip down there and back another adventure.

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Weekend Getaway - Painted Hills
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Weekend Getaway - Painted Hills

It didn’t take us very long after we got back from our May expedition to be mentally raring to get out again.  It took us a couple of good weekends to clean Beast  after 3 weeks on the road, but by the end of that second weekend we were starting to go stir crazy.  So where to?  The Painted Hills naturally.

This was the first of what we hope will become the normal pattern with Beast - a long weekend to somewhere nearby that gives us an opportunity to focus on photography and generally get away from it all.  That’s why we bought the Sportsmobile, so we could easily get up and go.

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Great Basin National Park

Great Basin National Park

After our morning shoot at Snow Canyon, we took a hot shower and then headed up through Cedar City (to stop off for some great pizza) on our way to our next stop, Great Basin National Park.  The drive from Utah into Nevada was interesting and we timed our entrance into the park as several vehicles were departing the campground.  

Yet again, we found ourselves another great campsite (of which we’ll say more later), at the campground nestled at the bottom of a canyon between two mountains.

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Snow Canyon - at 100 degrees

Snow Canyon - at 100 degrees

The next day was laundry day, but the big question was where.  Our next big destination that we’d decided to keep was Toroweap on the north side of the Grand Canyon.  We had a 2-night camping permit I secured a few months earlier.  However, given the (mis)adventure and the screws issue with the small pantry, I decided to give the route description a careful read.  The high clearance vehicle issue wasn’t a problem.  Nor was the description that the last half mile would require a 4 wheel drive vehicle.   Unfortunately, the description also said to expect at least a couple of hours of very heavy washboard road.  After discussing it a bit, we decided to play it safe and not put Beast through that sort of ride until we got her fixed up.  So where to?

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Kodachrome Basin State Park and Bryce Canyon

Kodachrome Basin State Park and Bryce Canyon

The next leg of our journey would take us to Kodachrome Basin State Park and thereabouts.  This was one of the fixed points from our schedule that we’d retained (with at least one night reserved at the campground in Kodachrome) so it was time to move.

We were exhausted from the previous day’s shooting, so took our time getting up and out of the Grand Staircase-Escalante.  The drive was beautiful from Escalante to Cannonville - as I said, Hwy. 12 is one of the most scenic stretches of road you’ll find.  In Cannonville we wound up stopping by the Cannonville Visitor Center and walked away with big smiles on our face for a couple of reasons.

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Shooting the Shooters - Grand Staircase-Escalante Edition

Shooting the Shooters - Grand Staircase-Escalante Edition

Given that the day photographing at Devil’s Garden along Hole in the Rock Road was so productive, it shouldn’t surprise you that the day provided us with great examples for our shooting the shooter series.

The first pair of images comes from early in the day as the sun’s first rays were catching the clouds.  I’d noticed the clouds behind me after I finished another image in the other direction and I swung the camera around, framed an image, shot it and realized that Ann was by the left-hand edge of the frame (hopefully nice and warm in her bright red down jacket).

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The Grand Staircase-Escalante - Part 2

The Grand Staircase-Escalante - Part 2

This is going to be a fairly lengthy, image intensive post with over 25 images.  As I was going through my images to see which ones lept out at me, or would otherwise help me tell the story of the day, I wound up working on lots of different images.  None said, “this is the image of the day” though many were not bad at all.   Ultimately I wound up thinking that it had been a mighty fine day of photography.  About as good as it gets short of realizing you’ve made one of the best images you’ve ever made.  So I decided that the post would not just be about what happened that day, but about how a day can progress photographically, if things are working out well.

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Interlude - Not the Same Photograph

Interlude - Not the Same Photograph

I wish I’d taken a moment to step back and photograph the row of photographers along the Snake River at Schwabacher Point or Oxbow Bend during our morning photo shoots at Grand Teton National Park a few years ago.  While the images we made those mornings were beautiful, what wasn’t shown was quite disturbing (not to mention the attitudes of some of the photographers).  It left us with the question of whether everyone was making the same photograph at the same time.  You can repeat that same concern about any number of places like Yosemite and elsewhere around the world.  

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Hanksville and Beyond

Hanksville and Beyond

We decided not to get out and photograph the next morning because it had rained and was was heavily overcast.  So after a quick stop at the Ranger Station to fill up on water, we headed out.

As we exited Natural Bridges National Monument and hit Highway 95, we turned right instead of left.  Out the window went our planned trip to head down Comb Ridge on its eastern side, stop in Page, Arizona to do laundry, camp at the base of the Vermillion Cliffs at the namesake national monument, camp at Point Sublime on the north side of the Grand Canyon, explore the Paria area of Vermillion Cliffs, and then drive up Cottonwood Canyon Road to Kodachrome State Park.  Instead, it was on to Hanksville and beyond, the only fixed destination being to wind up in Kodachrome State Park four days later.  Instead of heading south, we wound up going north.

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