Love the rock and snow combos!
# 2 needs to be huge on your wall!
Great pictures. Really love the 2nd one.
Nicely done. Junipers are tough buggers aren’t they? And great stove wood to boot. We cut dead standing ones for the woodstove. Wonderfull for that.
Great shot and perspective.
Very nice, Cany. Looks like your enjoying some of the fog we had in the Phoenix area over the last couple of days.
--Bob
Cany143 wrote:
Canyonlands Nat'l Park.
Marvelous images, thank you for being there to capture them.
rmalarz wrote:
Very nice, Cany. Looks like your enjoying some of the fog we had in the Phoenix area over the last couple of days.
--Bob
No clue what it might've been like in the Phoenix area these past days, but here (in Ootah) its been something of a conundrum. In town, its been uniformly gray (i.e., boring), but at elevations a few thousand feet higher its been.... well.... interesting now and then. Or, better put, fleetingly, now and then. As the crow (or as the more usual trickster, the raven) flies, sometimes its possible to be above the fog, sometimes not; sometimes half in/half out; other times both in measured moments that last or don't, and waiting or predicting or hoping is a fool's game.
Today was an
extremely uncommon day for me; I didn't go to shoot somewhere alone. I went where another shooter --who weirdly enough is a strictly film (egads! never progressed beyond being a 35mm film!) shooter-- wanted to go, and for the most part, all I did was tag along. The guy was fixated on getting something I knew was not going to occur, but who am I to say that whatever he shot wouldn't be quite precisely what he was after?
More absolutely stunning landscapes. You are the master at this.
pesfls wrote:
Nicely done. Junipers are tough buggers aren’t they? And great stove wood to boot. We cut dead standing ones for the woodstove. Wonderfull for that.
Don't know what it might be like in your area, but around here, juniper is one of the mainstays of the wood stove cabal. Only problem is, there's been a proliferation of little two-tracks that lead off into nowhere (a.k.a., wood gathering) areas that over time have left me a little disoriented. Back 'in the day' I knew that the way to get to the place I wanted to get to was to turn left at the third two-track along the such-and-such trail, but now there's fifty-eight other little 'roads' in that selfsame area that weren't there just a few years ago. Maps, Google Earth, local lore; nothin' works any more. I haz a sad!
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