Ann & Dan’s Excellent Adventures

December 2018 Adventure - Death Valley
Uncategorized Dan Uncategorized Dan

December 2018 Adventure - Death Valley

The next morning found us up and early driving down 20 Mule Team Canyon Road by moonlight.  Given that it was a full moon and the moon was out (unlike when we were driving around in the Alabama Hills), we could actually see where we were going and, more importantly, whether we wanted to make any stops before we hit our GPS pinned photo locations.  It was like driving through an alien landscape, simply incredible!

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December 2018 Adventure - Alabama Hills and Death Valley

December 2018 Adventure - Alabama Hills and Death Valley

Heading down to Death Valley for our December 2018 Adventure was Ann’s idea, and what a good idea it was!  Ann had been working her butt off at work and really needed a good break.  Given that Christmas was on a Tuesday, her office was shut down for Christmas Eve, and Ann’s usual Friday off, that meant we could maximize a longer trip and get a whole week off while only using two vacation days.  Even then we couldn’t help ourselves and left after work on Tuesday to head out of town.

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December 2018 Adventure - Accepting What You're Given
2018DeathValley Dan 2018DeathValley Dan

December 2018 Adventure - Accepting What You're Given

Ann and I took a December holiday adventure again, except this year it was the week before Christmas.  Our destination was Death Valley (great recommendation Ann!) and, as is often the case, it was full of surprises and lessons.  One lesson we were reminded of was a familiar one - accept what you’re given.  Except this time it was kind of like a slap in the face - very unexpected.  But hey, if you have enough sense to follow the lesson, you just might have a bit of fun!

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Photographing with Intention

Photographing with Intention

On our excursion to Point Sublime in Grand Canyon National Park, we unfortunately arrived in the worst part of the day - it was nearly noon.  Plus it was a very hazy day.  And while the view was, for lack of a better word, sublime, and the clouds were offering a dance of sunlight across the landscape, the conditions were not exceptional for photography.  This was not going to be one of those instances where one could simply pick up the camera and make knock-out images, and we could not wait until sunset to make photographs.  So, after waking around the point a while and examining what was being offered to me, I decided that I was going to be very intentional with my image making, and would develop each image I made from Point Sublime to completion (read: to print).  In some ways it was a test of how discriminating I could be if I tried to hold myself to the highest standards possible.  I wound up making three images.

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Phase 4 - Of Flats, Cliffs, Canyons and Domes Part 3

Phase 4 - Of Flats, Cliffs, Canyons and Domes Part 3

While at Snow Canyon we had to figure out the very last part of our trip.  We had an extra day on the schedule because we’d moved the two nights of camping and day trip to Yant Flat up in the schedule, so now there was a gap to be filled.  I tossed out doing Yant Flat again, or Cathedral Gorge in Nevada again, or stopping by the Alvord Desert in Oregon.  None of those options seemed quite right.  Then Ann said, “What if we headed the other direction, towards California?  Death Valley?”  I replied, “No, I’d like to do more than just a day there.”  “Well what about Yosemite?  Do you think the Tioga Road is still open?”  We checked on the internet and it was.  Our route home was settled.  

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Phase 4 - Of Flats, Cliffs, Canyons and Domes  Part 2

Phase 4 - Of Flats, Cliffs, Canyons and Domes Part 2

We took our time upon arriving at Snow Canyon because we had plenty of time there, right?  We slowly checked out potential photo locations on the drive in, checked into our campsite, took showers, and had a late lunch/early dinner.  We even took an exploratory hike, without our camera backpacks to check out a potential morning photo location.  All was going fine until I started feeling aches in my joints. . . . Not again!

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Phase 4 - Of Flats, Cliffs, Canyons and Domes  Part 1

Phase 4 - Of Flats, Cliffs, Canyons and Domes Part 1

About 6 months before our trip, I got an e-mail from Ann asking, “Have you ever heard of Candyland?”  She’d been sending me possible locations to stop at on our trip and, at first, I thought this was just another one that we’d check out, put on a list and not think much more about once we’d given it a good look.  But that night as I was making dinner, Ann pulled up the website where she’d seen images and I realized that this place was a bit different.  “Where is it?”  “Apparently somewhere near St. George, Utah.”  “We should check it out.”

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Phase 3 - Winging It.  Part 2

Phase 3 - Winging It. Part 2

The next morning I woke with excitement flowing through my veins.  We had decided that, while on our way to Fire Point, we would take the long down-and-back detour to Point Sublime.  And while the main road to Fire Point was a fairly good Forest Service road, the road to Point Sublime wasn’t - the Kanabownits Road is listed as a 4WD road on the maps, even worse than a high clearance road, and we were warned that it lived up to its rating. I was going to get to do some technical driving!  Just not where we’d planned.

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I am a quoter.
Uncategorized Dan Uncategorized Dan

I am a quoter.

Over time I’ve come to realize that I am a quoter by nature.  I’ve never thought of myself as particularly smart, or clever, or creative, but at least I’m intelligent enough to recognize bits of brilliance or genius when I see it.  So I quote things, noting them down or annotating them when possible.  

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Phase 3 - Winging It.  Part 1

Phase 3 - Winging It. Part 1

It pretty much rained all night.  Often hard.  We checked the forecast the next morning;  nothing had changed - rain off and on for a couple of days.  Time to implement the plan!  The nice thing about southern Utah is that there is so much to see and visit.  The bad part was that so many of the places we really wanted to go to entailed going off-road, and that just wasn’t an option.  So we decided to make a radical decision, to go to a place we hadn’t even considered going to for this trip (so didn’t even have the paper maps for) - head to Arizona and the north rim of the Grand Canyon! 

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Phase 2 - Of Goblins, Hurricanes and Devils.  Part 3

Phase 2 - Of Goblins, Hurricanes and Devils. Part 3

Spending the night hooked up to shore power did the trick.  We woke up the next morning with a set of fully charged house batteries.  The question then became what to do with the free day we had before we had to be back to the shop for the alternator replacement?  Given the rains we had, most of the locations we were hoping to visit in Capitol Reef were either closed, or would be muddy messes.  We decided to call Capitol Reef a bust and to make up for the lost repair day by heading back to the Boulder area to see what we could cobble together.

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On Photography
Uncategorized Dan Uncategorized Dan

On Photography

Photography, itself, became for me a new landscape.”  Paul Caponigro

On this day of giving thanks, I want to give thanks to photography.  Naturally I am ever thankful for Ann, my family, friends, the wonderful world I live in and my great fortune to have the life I am able to live.  But this week my mind has been on how thankful I am for what photography has given to me over the years and continues to give.

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Phase 2 - Of Goblins, Hurricanes and Devils, Part 1

Phase 2 - Of Goblins, Hurricanes and Devils, Part 1

Our morning photographing the aspens of the Pando Forest had been superb.  It was time to start the second phase of our trip, which would take us to the more desert-like environs to places we’ve been to before, places we haven’t, and new routes in-between.  In our planning, this was the part of the trip where we were supposed to stay in one general location for at least a couple of nights at a time so that we could explore an area deeper before moving on.  Well, that was the concept at least! The best-laid plans of mice and men . . . .

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More November Adventure - Four Images and One I Regret Not Making
Uncategorized Dan Uncategorized Dan

More November Adventure - Four Images and One I Regret Not Making

On the third day of our November adventure, I thought about something that struck me during our fall trip (like, whenever someone would walk up next to our tripods and press the shutter of their DSLR, which was in sports rapid fire mode so they would fire off 20 or so images within a couple of seconds and then just walk away).  Compared to a lot of photographers, I don’t make a lot of images when I go out.  That doesn’t mean I don’t make a lot of exposures (I habitually take at least 3 frames of each image that I want to photograph - a habit from my film days when a film holder could have a light leak or a negative could get scratched when being processed).  And, of course, if I’m photographing moving water I make a lot of exposures just to get the timing and texture of the water right.  But in the end, I often don’t make that many different images in a day, even if I’ve been out photographing for several hours.   Sunday I made 4 images, though I should have made 5 and even made a test image for that last one.  I’m going to show you all of them!

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