Chilkat River Winter Sunrise

Chilkat River Winter Sunrise

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During my recent photography tour to Haines, Alaska, this was the only morning worth photographing landscape images, but the shooting conditions were extreme. I had to lay on my stomach to get low enough to the ground to shoot this composition and the wind chill was at least -10°F. I was also instructing my clients at the same time that I was setting up my camera. For a few seconds, the low angle sunrise light briefly illuminated the foreground wind-blown snow patterns that I chose to frame the mountains. I managed a couple of exposures before the light went back behind the clouds. I continued my instruction until we all agreed that we could no longer feel our fingers or toes. Brrrr!

Chilkat Bald Eagle 100

Chilkat Bald Eagle 100

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I am having a great time with my 3 clients in Alaska on my bald eagle photography tour. They are learning how to be real wildlife photographers. The weather conditions are making it challenging to shoot. There is a foot of snow on the ground and the skies are very dark. There also aren’t as many eagles around this year. However, between my 2 cameras, I still captured over 1000 frames today. I have yet to capture a great eagle in flight shot, but I am trying. So far, this is my favorite image. This eagle posed for me for almost 20 minutes, which was enough time for me to get into a position for a clean bokeh background. To complete the shot, all I had to do was wait for him to disapprovingly glare at me.

Torres Dramatic Sunrise 1

2009 Nature’s Best International Photography Awards

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I am excited to announce that my image “Torres Dramatic Sunrise” will be a Highly Honored Landscape in the 2009 Nature’s Best Windland Smith Rice International Photography Awards!  I created this image 2 years ago while backpacking in Torres Del Paine National Park in Chile.  Most trekkers who have visited this location have done so while multi-day trekking and usually only spend 1 night before moving on.  However, my only goal during my visit was to photograph the Torres in epic light, so I spent 5 days/4 nights camping in the same location so that I could photograph the spires each day.  My last morning was the most dramatic.  You can read more about it in my previous post on the Singh-Ray filters blog.

Crystalline Hills Tundra Pond 2

Crystalline Hills Tundra Pond 2

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While I was visiting Wrangell-St Elias National Park last month, a rainbow briefly appeared above this beautiful tundra pond. It is one of my favorite images from the trip. I am always on the lookout for dramatic weather, clouds, & sun-breaks. I also scout a location in advance so that I can anticipate an image like this. Most of the time I get skunked, but occasionally all the right conditions come together and I capture an amazing image.

When photographing rainbows, the biggest challenge I have found is keeping my lens & filters water drop free. I keep my camera put away or covered until it is worth risking the exposure to the rain. I usually get 1-3 images before the water drops become noticeable and ruin the picture.  At this point if it is still raining it is impossible to dry everything off to continue. My other trick for photographing wide-angle rainbow landscapes is to anti-polarize the light and use a 3-stop soft graduated neutral density filter. A rainbow is polarized light, so I can either make it totally disappear or make it really pop by rotating the polarizer. The grad filter helps balance the overall exposure. I have used this set up many time and it always works.

Fireweed Mt Reflection 1

Fireweed Mt Reflection 1

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This is another beautiful reflection pond that I photographed in Wrangell-St Elias National Park last month. It’s right next to the road, so if you ever drive the McCarthy Road you can’t miss it. As you can see, the fall colors were are their peak during my visit. McCarthy had already closed down for the season, so there were no other people around, let alone photographers. About 99.99% of the time when I am taking pictures, there is no one else around (other than my travel companions). That is just the way I like it.

I am going backpacking the next few days into the Enchantments in the Central Cascades. The larch trees should be at their peak for fall color. It probably snowed up there the last few days, but this week it is suppose to be sunny & warm. Wish me luck!

Backpacker November 2009 Cover

Backpacker Magazine November 2009 Cover

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The November issue of Backpacker is coming out and I have the cover for the 2nd time this year! I photographed these petroglyphs 4 years ago in Saguaro National Park in Arizona. I lived in Tucson from 1990-95 while studying at the University of Arizona (I have a BS in Aerospace & Mechanical Engineering, in case anyone wants to know), and while I was a student I spent a lot of time hiking & bike riding in this part of the Tucson Mountains, though I never visited these glyphs. I have been to this location several times while visiting the last 9 years and this is the nicest morning that I photographed.

Wrangell-St Elias Water Lilies 1

Wrangell-St Elias Water Lilies 1

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During my recent trip to Wrangell-St Elias National Park, I spent several days in a row photographing my favorite tundra pond. Eventually I will post several spectacular sunrise images from this location, but for now I want to share these beautiful lilies. I am best know for my dramatic wild-angle landscape images, but I also enjoy photographing nature’s details when the opportunity presents itself. While I was waiting for dramatic light on the mountains, these lilies and blue sky reflection caught my attention. I normally look for groups that contain odd numbers, but these 4 lilies in a broken circle inspired me to bend the rules.

Matanuska Glacier Sunset 1

Matanuska Glacier Sunset 1

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This image was created last week on the Matanuska Glacier in the Chugach National Forest in Alaska. I spent 2 nights photographing the glacier, and on the second night I caught a dramatic fiery sunset! If you followed along on my recent trip via Twitter/Facebook you might have seen some of my iPhone “sketches”, but nothing beats the “real deal” images from my Canon 5D mkII. Getting to this location on the tongue of the glacier was challenging. It involved crossing ankle-drowning silt and hopping over a few small crevasses. Once I found this precariously balanced rock for a foreground subject, I just waited for something magical to happen and it did.

Crystalline Hills Fall Reflection 1

Crystalline Hills Fall Reflection 1

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What can I say about Wrangell-St Elias National Park? I am spell-bound! It is America’s largest national park at 13.2 million acres, which is 6 times the size of Yellowstone. I did not see another photographer (or visitor!) during my entire trip. A week exploring the McCarthy Road area is not enough time, even with ideal photography conditions. I just scratched the surface. I had everything that a photographer could ask for: cobalt blue skies, brilliant golden aspen trees, crimson colored summits, mirror image reflection ponds, dramatic rainbows, and clouds the size of giant marshmallows. Above is a sample of my new images that I will be posting in the coming weeks.

I am currently in Anchorage waiting for my flight to Yakutat to visit my boat & winterize it. The weather forecast predicts unseasonably perfect conditions the next 2 days. Maybe my photo luck will continue?