Tag Archives: photography

Home Renovation Hades

Man, I can’t remember my last blog post. February I think. Much is going on here at Green World.

First of all, Hubby and I are totally caught up in a whirlpool of home repair and renovation. We don’t do the work ourselves, but dealing with estimators and contractors, researching options, and running to the store to make choices takes up my day.

So far, we have had new sidewalks poured at the side and front of the house to fix dangerously lifted slabs, a trip accident waiting to happen. And we have had the deck repaired, but it STILL hasn’t been sanded and stained.

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This is the new walkway on the south side of the house, and the new redwood fence built by our new neighbors to the south. Our gardener pruned back the jade plants.  I may do something else here, like put in some vertical planters made of old wood pallets (using heat treated, not chemically treated, wood). I might plant some pink jasmine along the fence. I’m also thinking of building a trellis shade structure to shade my office window, the first window along the house. We definitely need a new gate. I think I can build one out of redwood and 2x4s. Which brings me to my next topic: woodworking.

Our garage work area with three new Lou-made drawers in the workbench shelves.

Our garage work area with three new Lou-made drawers in the workbench shelves.

I have taken up wood working. I don’t know why. I guess I have been inspired by Ali’s work on Henbogle and am stumbling along in her footsteps. And then there is Tool Girl. What a cool nickname. I wanted to be a Tool Girl too. But I really blame this new hobby on my garden.

Two years ago, my husband built me some beautiful raised beds out of redwood at the community garden. Construction work was going on all over the garden, so he borrowed a cordless drill to build it. Then stupid Southern California Edison made us remove all raised beds, and I had to disassemble them. I needed a cordless drill. Didn’t own one. Off to Home Depot I went. I didn’t know a thing about power tools, but there was a whole box of Ryobi power tools on sale: drill, circular saw, reciprocal saw, and shoplight, with two batteries and a charger. And it came with a cool carrying bag. How could I pass that up?

This is one of the raised beds that I built for the front yard. Parsley, chard, and flowers are pretty much hiding the wood.

This is one of the raised beds that I built for the front yard. Parsley, chard, cauliflower, cabbage, garlic, flowers and shadows are pretty much hiding the wood.

Well, now I had a drill, two saws, and a lot of nice redwood, so I decided to build stuff. The first project was three raised beds in the front yard, since my tiny back yard is already filled with fruit trees, chickens, and three raised beds. The next project was to build an outdoor plant shelf out of scrap wood from the neighbor’s home renovation project. The low shelves (plant stands) will keep my potted plants off the deck.

Wood Magazine 2013

Wood Magazine 2013

Then I saw this magazine at Home Depot. Look at that cute little tool cart for the workshop. I don’t know why, but that thing spoke to me. I just loved it. I wanted to build it! Keep in mind that I have NO woodworking experience, just a bunch of tools that I had no idea how to use.

My next door neighbor was kind enough to show me how to use a circular saw. I cut the lumber to make my plant shelves (one is assembled, two more to go, none are painted yet).  At that point, I decided that my skills were not up to making the little tool bench on casters, so I decided to make box drawers to go into my existing tool bench. The directions said that the tool cart with all those drawers could be made in a weekend, so how hard could a mere four drawers be? Hahaha!

Step 1 was to build a box drawer with cut-out handle.

Step 1 was to build a box drawer with cut-out handle.

I am now on week 3 of the project and am building fourth drawer. One weekend, my fat fanny!

The box drawers have cut out handles in front and back so i can pull a given box out to get to what is stored inside.

The box drawers have cut out handles in front and back so i can pull a given box out to get to what is stored inside.

Here is a drawer slid out to reveal the contents.

Here is a drawer slid out to reveal the contents.

I hadn’t been able to reach the back of the shelves before because they were so deep (and I’m short, with arthritic knees). Now access is no problem.

I plan to fill the drawer seams with wood putty, and either put on a light stain or oil or polyurethane or something. Like I said, I have no woodworking experience, but I think there should be a finish of some kind on them.

My time recently has been spent in the garage, making sawdust, and turning perfectly nice boards into distressed wood products with nicked and mismatched edges and boogered-up corners. Hey, it’s a hobby!

But wait, there’s more. We are also in the process of interior home renovation. And when I say “we”, I mean contractors. We have had a new shower door put into the guest bath, and new bathroom faucets installed in the master and guest baths. That will hold the bathrooms for now.

On to the KITCHEN. I have have had “range envy” ever since Ali at Henbogle got a five-burner range with convection oven. Lust, lust.

Meet Big Bertha, our new GE range.

Meet Big Bertha, our new GE range.

Turns out that problem was easily solved. I bought a new range. Our old oven was haunted. The darn thing would beep in the middle of the night, waking us up at 2 pm and asking us to turn it on. Sometimes the oven would turn itself on, which of course is dangerous. We had had it with that possessed beast. We replaced it with this beauty, which sadly sticks out farther than the old one. The kitchen drawers won’t open all the way now. ARG!

Our current kitchen with new stove in place.

Our current kitchen with new stove in place.

Home Depot is solving the problem by refacing our old cabinets and giving us all new drawers, new cabinet doors, and new countertop, plus some custom cabinetry.

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I may try to salvage these pantry doors by building a cabinet for the garage and using these doors. Seems a shame to just shred and compost them.

I may try to salvage these pantry doors by building a cabinet for the garage and using these doors. Seems a shame to just shred and compost them.

We have a new stainless microwave-hood combo, but were told to not install it until after the cabinet work is done. So here it will sit until the cabinet work is finished.

We have a new stainless microwave-hood combo, but were told to not install it until after the cabinet work is done. So here it will sit until the cabinet work is finished.

We chose natural maple for the cabinets and drawers. But this isn't the style. We went with double Shaker, which will go with the Craftsman theme of our family room.

We chose natural maple for the cabinets and drawers. But this isn’t the style. We went with double Shaker, which will go with the Craftsman theme of our family room.

This is our Craftsman/Mission/Shaker family room furniture.

This is our Craftsman/Mission/Shaker family room furniture.

We painted two walls of the family room a light green and hung a mirror and some  Audubon prints.

We painted two walls of the family room a light green and hung a mirror and some Audubon prints.

 

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This is an example of the craftsmanship of the drawers that we are getting. They have chamfered (rounded) edges, dove-tailed corners, and are made of solid maple. The insides of the drawers are going to be fabulous.

We wanted a quartz (Silestone) countertop, but couldn’t find a pattern that we both liked. We compromised on Corian in Platinum, which is gray with white speckles like granite. We are getting coved corners on the countertop and back-splash, a no-drop edge, and a built-in sink of white Corian. None of those features were available in quartz. It should look gorgeous.

Ah, but the cabinet guys don’t do plumbing. They will leave us with a sink that is not connected to the drains. And since the tile with a subsurface is being replaced by Corian with no subsurface, the countertops will be lower.

We were told that it would take 4-6 weeks to get the cabinet work done. Then 6-8 weeks. They claim that it will take only three days once they start. HA. If you believe that, I have a bridge to sell you. And thus we enter Home Renovation Hell. Maybe we will have the kitchen back to functional by mid May.

Meanwhile, the garden harvests continue. Last week, I harvested:

13 oz Navel Orange

1 lb 4 oz Meyer lemon

5 oz Bell Pepper (in February! Can you believe it?)

11 oz Cauliflower

TOTAL

3 lbs 1 oz of produce, plus 21 EGGS

If you had a harvest, visit Daphne’s Dandelions to share the good news.

Photo workshop in Grand Teton National Park, October 2012

I came back from a Nikonian wildlife photography workshop with Jim Stamates with over 2,000 pics. Wow, going through and separating the wheat from the chaff has taken some time.

I’m new to Aperture on my iMac, so I have had a real learning curve. I am still figuring out how to”paint” specific areas of the photos by dodging, burning, and adjusting the saturation, vibrancy, contrast, sharpness, etc., as well as bulk processing of the entire image for various colors individually. And as a beginner to Aperture, I got really creative. Consequently, some of my images got over-processed in my attempts to turn a scene into a work of art that pleased me. I love messing with my histograms!

I now need to pare down the 170 images that I processed to a mere few for this post. I know you don’t want to waste your entire day looking at my pics. Suffice it to say that I had a great time, learned a lot, and highly recommend any Nikonian photo workshop with Jim Stamates. Visit his site at http://www.Stamates.com/.

DAY 1

Dawn on the sagebrush flats by Gros Ventre campground with two bison and a buckrail fence in the foreground.

Cow moose

Cow moose on the left and her boyfriend lying down on the right. Look closely for his antlers.

Bull moose, fall foliage near Gros Ventre campground.

Iconic barn along Mormon Row. Was this the Olmstead barn? It is one of my favorite shots from the trip.

One member of the 800 bison herd in the Tetons.

This bison looks cold. Or maybe it was me that was cold, what with that strong breeze blowing off the mountains.

The Tetons in autumn are spectacular.

I believe that this was String Lake.

I like to mix in closeups with long shots, and intermix shots of scenery with wildlife. This is lichen on a granite boulder.

Autumn leaf floating on String Lake.

Bull elk way off in the distance after the sun had gone down, a near impossible shot, especially since this was handheld. This is what I got with my Nikon P510, which has a telephoto capacity of about 625 mm. Amazingly versatile camera.

The sun drops behind the mountains on our first day, but we still weren’t done. We set off in pursuit of beaver, which come out as dusk.

We were not disappointed. The pair of beavers in this pond had seven youngsters this year. Even though there was precious little light, my trusty Nikon P510 captured this shot.

This shot captured an adult, a juvenile, and their lodge in the background.

Bull moose next to the beaver pond.

DAY 2

We started our day at the Snake River in time to see fog rising over the water. The river was really low, a consequence of this summer’s drought. This is an example of an over-processed photo but I had fun altering specific sections of the picture.

The fall foliage probably peaked on this day. Leaves were falling rapidly all around us. The group went off hiking in search of moose, but I stayed near the parking lot since my knees and lungs are too bad for me to hike much.

There must be moose around here somewhere. Look at this track in the frozen mud of the Snake River.

Yep, there is a bull moose. I hope the group that went hiking got to see it too. :-)

Frost covered all of the plants.

Trumpeter swans and this bald eagle soared overhead.

Oxbow Bend in the Snake River is a “must stop” for photographers. You could stay here all day and not get the same picture twice due to the changing light.

Jim Stamates told us that the best time to take a vertical shot is right after we take a horizontal one.

We saw Dusky Grouse atop Signal Mountain. This one really posed for me. Dusky Grouse were formerly known as Blue Grouse, but became duskies when the Sooty Grouse of the Sierras in California was split from the Dusky Grouse of the Rockies.

A storm moved in late that afternoon, but we managed to stay fairly dry. I don’t remember rain on anything other than the car. We lucked out with weather.

Here is another view of those amazing clouds, and a different treatment of the image to make the foreground show up.

Sunset that night was spectacular.

DAY 3

The low the next morning was 9 degrees. Mark bundled up in seven layers of clothing. The group went for a pre-dawn hike to catch elk crossing the Snake River at dawn in the fog. I stayed in the car with the heater on. What a wuss I am.

Dawn at Schwabacher Road by some beaver ponds along the Snake River. This is my other most favorite shot from the trip.

The best time to take a vertical shot is right after a horizontal one. These were taken with my Canon 30D.

An early morning shot of the beaver dam at Schwabacher Road.

I really had fun playing with the colors in this shot of the Tetons reflected in the Snake River.

Our next stop was this abandoned homestead on Mormon Row. I thought about a large family living in this small house a hundred years ago, probably with ten kids, and all of them traipsing to the outhouse in the back no matter how cold the weather or how dark the night.

Don’t forget to isolate elements of the larger scene for more abstract compositions.

Wildlife comes in all sizes. This Least Chipmunk was busily eating seeds from sage.

Even common birds like this Black-billed Magpie can make good subjects.

Look for unusual angles. Jim said to “See the obvious, photograph the unique.”

Mark is looking for his own unique angle from which to photograph the barn.

I was shooting with my Nikon P510 and Canon 30D on this day. This is the barn and homestead as photographed with the Canon.

Look for opportunities to frame your images with elements of the photo. Can’t you just see the cattle being loaded from this ramp into a truck to go to market?

We saw bison everywhere.

This shot was taken with my Nikon P510 from where we had lunch, either Dornan’s or Jenny Lake Lodge.

This is pretty much the same scene, photographed with the Canon 30D and processed differently.

Chapel of the Transfiguration

Chapel of the Transfiguration with the church bell.

Chapel window. Who says a photo has to be straight? Tip it if it pleases you.

Chapel interior

Chapel interior

View out the front window of the chapel.

General store at Meanor’s Ferry on the Snake River.

Front door of the general store at Meanor’s Ferry. I love to photograph doorknobs and latches. Don’t know why, I just do.

The ferry at Meanor’s Ferry.

The best way to see a bear is to look for a bear jam like this one.

This two-year-old black bear cub is now on his own, preparing for his first winter hibernation without his/her mother. I don’t know what he was finding to eat atop this tree.

I caught a quick glimpse of the bear as he came down to the creek to get a drink. The picture wasn’t all that good to start with, and then I over-processed the greens. Oh well.

Mark and I had dinner at the Wort Hotel, beautiful historic building with great food.

I took this photo of the interior of the Wort Hotel with my iPad.

DAY 4

By the last day, I was pretty worn out from those early mornings. We all were getting up at 4:30 in order to meet Jim before dawn. I confess to sleeping in the car until nearly 10 am this last morning while Mark went hiking with the group.

When the sunlight hit that fall foliage, it just brought tears to my eyes it was so beautiful.

If you run out of other things to photograph, take a picture of your own foot. These are my new Merrell hiking boots that I bought for the trip. I am really pleased with them.

More great scenery, but the fall foliage was fading fast.

I loved the sight of this palomino grazing in the field with the Tetons in the background. When I zoomed in on it and then cropped to the horse, the scene turned into an oil-painting-like image. I liked the effect.

Snake River overlook

Bull bison sniffing a cow to see if she is ready to breed.

Another bull got too close, and the first bull mounted the second one in an act of dominance.

The second bull didn’t seem to mind too much.

Two young male bison staged a mock battle in a wallow, stirring up dust.

I liked this mother and calf bison photo.

Another “mother and child” bison photo.

Newborn bison are red for a short time before turning brown. These little guys born late in the season may have trouble making it through winter because they aren’t very big by the time winter sets in.

Water drips from this bison’s muzzle after she’s had a drink.

We knocked off early on the last day to get cleaned up for dinner together at a nice restaurant in Jackson, WY. This was my last shot of the trip.

What a fabulous trip and workshop this was. I am hoping to go with Jim Stamates again someday on another workshop.

On our last day, Mark and I drove to Salt Lake City to fly home. Unfortunately, I had packed my cameras and thus missed some great shots of elk, moose, and pronghorns. But my iPad is always with me, ready for emergencies.

In retrospect, I should have taken out my good camera at the first sign of a decent photograph. All I have is this subpar shot taken with my iPad. Oh well, live and learn.

Hope you enjoyed this vicarious journey to Grand Teton National Park in October.

Scenic Yellowstone National Park, October 2012

My garden took a back seat earlier this month to travel. This is the first of two parts, with the second part being a photography workshop in Grand Teton National Park. But first, Yellowstone.

My hubby, Vic, had to teach college. I was accompanying my photography buddy, Mark Singer. He wanted company on a photo workshop in the Tetons. We wanted to see Yellowstone as well, so took a few extra days before the workshop. We flew from Long Beach, CA to Salt Lake City, UT and rented a car there, driving to West Yellowstone for the first night.

Day 2 began at the Grizzly and Wolf Discovery Center for some photo ops of captive grizzlies and wolves.

Grizzly and Wolf Discovery Center in West Yellowstone is well worth the $10 admission.

Captive grizzly at Grizzly and Discovery Center, West Yellowstone

The keepers hide food throughout the pens so the bears have to hunt for it. They turned over rocks and logs to get to their food.

Captive wolf

The pen had good backgrounds for viewing the wolves. This photo was taken with a Nikon P510.

I was using two different cameras. This photo was taken with a Nikon D90 with 200 mm telephoto zoom lens.

Wolf behavior. One is snarling with ears back and tail down, the other with tail out straight.

Gibbon Falls in Yellowstone National Park

Closeup of Gibbon Falls

Black bear

This bison herd just kept coming and coming over the ridge. I got goosebumps because I had never seen this many bison before, and never on the move like this.

Bison herd near Lamar Valley

Young bison calves are red when they are born. This little guy was born late in the season and may not have the size and strength to make it through winter.

Autumn in Lamar Valley

Autumn along whatever the heck this creek is named. Sorry, the places kind of blended together for me. Near Lamar Valley, if not in it.

Bison were everywhere. In places, the road provided the easiest place for them to travel, so we just snaked along behind them, moving at a bison’s pace.

Bison grooming herself.

We stayed in cabins at Mammoth Hot Springs. I was thrilled to see elk grazing around our cabins in the morning. But there was no time to enjoy them. We had hired a guide for the day to increase our chances of seeing wolves.

Day 3, we met our guide from Yellowstone Safari at dawn at the Roosevelt Gate near Gardiner.

Immature golden eagle soaring overhead. We saw bald eagles as well.

Our guide found wolves for us. There is one resting out of sight under the aspen. We saw two black wolves and a gray from the New Pack, but I was too excited looking at them to remember my camera. We got a good look as they trotted up the game trail at the lower right, and crossed over to the left behind the aspen and out of sight. They had a fresh elk kill beyond the trees and out of sight to the left.

Bison were everywhere. So exciting to see so many of them, especially since the Yellowstone herd used to be culled to keep the population at 300. Now it numbers about 5,000.

Fall along the Gardner River. The river and town are spelled differently. Don’t know why.

Dipper in the Gardner River. This little bird hunts for invertebrates under water.

Female pronghorn. The males were still busy keeping herd on their harems. They marked their territories by pawing the ground, urinating and then defecating on the pawed spot.

Dozens of robins were migrating along the Gardner River, feeding on juniper berries.

While we were in the park, I renewed my membership in the Yellowstone Association. They lead great tours of the park, and do a lot of good work there. Their headquarters is here in Gardiner.

After Mark and I dropped off our guide in Gardiner, we went back into the park to look for elk and other things to photograph.

A large number of elk hang out at Mammoth Hot Springs, so it was no trick finding them.

This bull elk was surrounded by photographers. It was difficult to get a photo without tourists with little point and shoots right in his face. It’s a wonder more people aren’t killed or maimed. People have no sense around wildlife.

Black-billed magpie. After the sun went down, we had dinner at the Mammoth Hot Springs dining room. I think I ate elk or bison nearly every day on this trip.

Day 4 was a travel day from Mammoth Hot Springs to the Grand Tetons. Because we stopped at nearly every photo opportunity, the short trip took us all day. This is Mammoth Hot Springs Terrace.

Roaring Mountain hissed with steam. Pretty awesome.

We stopped at a few geothermal features, but not all of them having seen them on previous trips.

Raven

Yellowstone River in Hayden Valley

We stopped to watch this coyote hunting for mice. It’s called mousing.

He/she was really intent on finding a mouse or vole, but we didn’t see any success in its hunt.

We traveled pretty slowly along Yellowstone River, finding Canada geese, mallards, scaup, and Barrow’s Goldeneyes along the way.

Male Barrow’s Goldeneye on a windy day.

We stopped for a picnic along Yellowstone Lake. This Clark’s Nutcracker was very interested in our lunch.

Gray jays wanted their share of our lunch too.

I’m going to stop here most of the way through Day 4 because the next photos were taken in Grand Teton National Park. That will be another post. Hope you enjoyed this brief tour of Yellowstone. Great trip.

Catching up; last week’s Harvest Monday

I am so far behind, mostly because I have no clue how to process photos with my new iMac (and I work two part-time jobs, and have a community garden plot that is filled with weeds and rocks, plus all my new raised beds at home = OVERLOAD!!!) . Here is an attempt to catch up with what is going on in my garden.

This may be the same possum as the baby possum that i showed earlier, but we did catch two of them. i photographed the raccoon with my other camera, and pics are still in that camera.

Caught another opossum plus a HUGE pregnant raccoon and relocated them. The night critters will devastate my garden if I don’t keep trapping and moving them. I’m growing my garden for me, not them.

This is the only Snow Queen nectarine that has set fruit. :-(

Discovered why my Snow Queen nectarine tree has LOTS of new branches on the bottom and almost no leafing out on the established and stronger upper branches. I left the tag on too long. The string was polyethylene, not cotton string, and didn’t degrade. The string has cut the bark of the growing tree, nearly girdling it. The bark has grown around the plastic string, so I can’t remove it now. The upper part of the tree is getting almost no nourishment. I may have ruined that tree, which is too bad because it had a great shape. Consequently, we are getting only one Snow Queen nectarine this year.

Our first red tomato, Mortgage Lifter. It isn’t red enough to harvest yet, but it’s close.

Mortgage Lifter has won the race for which tomato is going to ripen first. It beat out Early Girl. Others that are full sized but still green are early Girl, Box Car Willie, Amish Paste, Big Russian Paste, and Black Plum. The others are straggling and struggling.

The first eggplant has set fruit. This one is Millionaire.

Ah, this one is in focus. I can’t see the tiny, tiny thumbnails on my iPhoto library well enough to see which one to choose.

My first butternut female flower, not yet open. This has a long way to go before harvest time.

My pumpkin patch. I planted one each Rouge Vif d’Tampes and Queensland Blue for each of my three little granddaughters who live in San Diego. My two big granddaughters are in college in the Seattle area, so I can’t grow Halloween pumpkins for them. 

A typical strawberry harvest, just enough for a bowl of cereal.

The pumpkin that I thought was going to be a New England Pumpkin looks like it is going to be a Kuri. Not a pumpkin at all, but a winter squash. Don’t know yet if it is a Red Kuri or a Green Kuri. I had seeds of both in my compost pile, from whence it sprang. The other mystery “pumpkin” is producing an oblong squash of some kind. Very interesting shape. This is not a pumpkin that I have grown, but a parent of a hybrid methinks. It remains to be seen how big it will get or what it will turn into. I’m thinking that it is a banana squash or maybe a spaghetti squash. Time will tell (I hope.) I would post photos, but I can’t tell what is what in those itsy bitsy thumbnail photos.

One day’s harvest last week of yellow squash, snow peas, lettuce, half my Dutch Redhead radish crop, and some oregano.

I’ve missed the past two Harvest Mondays, but I have had harvests. Small ones, but with a nice variety of veggies and fruits. I would love to upload my processed photos of said harvests, but I can’t figure out how to upload from Aperture, which is where I process the photo as best as I can. Maybe I have to put the photo back into iPhoto to upload it to WordPress. Arg, is there no end to the frustration of learning a new computer system? I can edit my pics in Aperture, but can’t seem to upload them from there. So these are my unadulterated photos from iPhoto. Bear with me.

A day’s harvest of chard. I only harvest as much as i want to cook that day. Otherwise it just goes bad. Oh look, there is a yellow squash hiding in that photo. Didn’t see it on the thumbnail.

I can’t remember when I last did a Harvest Monday post, but here is what I harvested for the week ending June 10. Don’t laugh, my garden is small.

FRUIT

8 oz Apricots (the entire harvest from my tree)

13 oz Avocado

5 oz Lime

1 oz Strawberries

Subtotal Fruit 27 oz

VEGETABLES

1 oz Basil

8 oz Chard, Rainbow

2 oz Lettuce

3 oz Radish, Dutch Redhead

10 oz Snow Peas, Mammoth

10 oz Squash, Yellow Summer

Subtotal 21 oz Vegetabes

TOTAL 3 lbs PRODUCE plus 4 eggs (two out of three hens aren’t laying)

Visit Daphne’s Dandelions to see what others harvested.

Trip to Big Bear California, Part 1

Vic led a birding trip to Big Bear Lake, California last weekend. We mostly drove around on dirt roads in the mountains, then walked a short distance to Bluff Lake. Wildflowers were spectacular. Here are some shots.

Santa Ana River at Middle Control Road near Angelus Oaks

Next to Santa Ana River

Santa Ana River

Santa Ana River by Middle Control Road, near Angelus Oaks

California wild rose

White Yarrow

No clue what these flowers are

Close-up of corn lily flowers

Corn Lilies

Did I mention that it was COLD? Yes, it was August, but there were ice crystals on the grass

Ice crystals on a sage leaf

A sunflower of some sort

If this were spring, I'd say that this saprophyte was snow plant. Others thought it was named pine drops.

Here is the group of birders that Vic was leading. I don't think he's in the picture. Oops, yes he is. Both he and our son Scott pointed out that he's in the red jacket in back. Hey, I'm working with a 2-inch photo, gimme a break.

Backlit Jeffrey pines. If you sniff the deep cracks in the bark, you can smell vanilla.

Western fence lizard

Purple asters. They may be called Showy Asters.

Vic (in red jacket on left) and his group of birders

Our first view of Bluff Lake

Bluff Lake

Bluff Lake

Northern Bluets (I think)

A bumblebee shows us his heinie, and the stuffed pollen sacs on his legs

Rangers Buttons

Paintbrush

columbine

Corn Lily at Bluff Lake

Saprophytes, maybe pine drops

female mallard

Bluff Lake

A saprophyte, maybe snow plant

Old log cabins by Bluff Lake

Can't remember this flower, maybe loosestrife

corn lilies

Scarlet bugler, I think

Lemon Lilies

California wild rose

Great trip. Part II will cover where we stayed.

A Brief Tour of the Mojave Desert Preserve

Much of the Eastern Mojave Desert is now protected as the Mojave National Preserve. Motorists tend to zip by it on their way between Los Angeles and Las Vegas without giving it a second glance. But the prettiest parts are off the interstate.

The preserve has over a thousand miles of roads, many of them paved, which makes exploration easy. The Automobile Club of Southern California (AAA) has a great map of the area. The National Park Service also has a great map, but you have to know how to get to their visitor center at Kelso Depot to pick it up. Just take Kelbaker Road out of Baker, CA to get there.

Housing at the Desert Studies Center

Vic and I led a field trip for his birding class out there last month. We stayed at the Desert Studies Center in Zzyzx, an adventure in itself. Guests provide their own bedding, towels, soap, shampoo, etc. The bathrooms are open air community bathhouses, mens and womens, with hot and cold running water, curtains on the shower and toilet stalls, and coffee cans over the toilet paper to keep mice from using it as nesting material.

Our room at the Desert Studies Center. We brought our own bedding (sleeping bags) and towels.

Dawn at Lake Tuendae, an artificial pond at Zzyzx

Dawn at Soda Dry Lake

A mirage on Silver Dry Lake. There is no water.

Silver Dry Lake north of Baker, CA

Fall foliage at Horsethief Spring

Antelope Ground Squirrel

Tarantula

Freight train going through Afton Canyon

The Mojave River flows above ground in only three places: Afton Canyon and Upper and Lower Narrows in Victorville. The water flows under the desert sand everywhere else along its course.

Dawn at Zzyzx, day 2

Breakfast in the dining hall. The food was really good.

Corriente cattle are a Mexican breed that is adapted to dry desert life. Unlike other cattle breeds that eat grass and hay exclusively, they can eat browse (tips of bushes) like a deer.

Juvenile Western Fence Lizard

The chef at the Desert Studies Center prepared a nice box lunch for our group.

Red-tailed Hawk

Pancake Prickly Pear

The Visitor Center at Hole-in-the-Wall has no electricity, but it does have running water.

Because this was a birding trip with Vic's class, not a photography trip, I had to grab this shot of Wild Horse Canyon out the car window.

Cooper's Hawk

Animal tracks at Kelso Dunes

Two hikers atop Kelso Dunes

Kelso Dunes at sunset

Providence Mountains at sunset

Sunrise at Soda Lake, day 3

One of Vic's students in a tiny dorm room.

Dawn at Soda Dry Lake

View of Lake Tuendae and Soda Dry Lake from the dorm balcony

Vic's Irvine Valley College bird class in front of a smoke tree.

Pygmy Blue Butterflies in Afton Canyon

Variegated Meadowhawk in Afton Canyon

Fall foliage along the Mojave River in Afton Canyon

Another tarantula

The Mojave River at Harvard Exit near Camp Cady is just drifting sand

Camp Cady, an historic stop along the Mojave Trail

We spent four days out there and barely scratched the surface of things to see and photograph. And this was November! Imagine how pretty it will be with spring wildflowers.

Last day, Bridgeport, Bodie and home

Grasses by Fred's Bait Shop, Bridgeport

October 29, our last day on the photo trip. Although we certainly could have found more things to see and photograph in the next two days, I was tired and quite ready to go home. But not until I got some pictures in Bridgeport and had my fill of photographing the weathered old miners’ houses in Bodie State Park.

Sunrise from Murphey's Motel in Lee Vining

I liked the morning light on these little houses in Lee Vining. It's a scene that I'd like to paint for my watercolor class.

A pastoral scene of sheep in the sagebrush outside Bodie State Park.

Bodie State Park

Old mine buildings at Bodie State Park

Rusted cans, Bodie State Park

Roof, Bodie State Park

Wheelbarrow, Bodie State Park

Old bedframe, Bodie State Park

Road from Bodie

Mule deer

Tule elk

And that’s the day from the point of view of the Nikon. Here’s how the Canon saw it.

Courthouse in Bridgeport, CA

Mallow outside Fred's Bait Shop, Bridgeport

Dun horse, view 1

Dun horse, view 2

Dun horse, view 3

Pinto horse, Bridgeport, CA

Farmhouse, Bridgeport, CA

Bridgeport Community Church

Virginia Creek Settlement Restaurant

Lamp, Virgina Creek Settlement Restaurant

Railing, Virginia Creek Settlement Restaurant

Church, Bodie State Park, CA

White stool, Bodie State Park

House interior, Bodie State Park

Bottles in the window, Bodie State Park

Shadow on the linoleum, Bodie State Park

Kitchen, Bodie State Park

Virginia Lakes

Aspen at Lundy Lake

What a great trip. But I was happy to get home. I miss my hubby when I go on camera outings with the club. I love sharing my photos with him. And with you! Hope you enjoyed them.

Day Two, photographing Mono Lake and Yosemite with the Canon D30.

Dawn at Mono Lake

Mono Lake

Aspen by Mono Lake

Frost on aspen leaves

frosted leaves on sagebrush

Historic 1922 roadhouse by Mono Lake

roadhouse

Wild California rose

leafy path just outside the eastern side of Yosemite National Park

Lee Vining Creek

Path through the aspens by Lee Vining Creek, late October

Lee Vining Creek, late October

leaves in creek

Ice crystals by Lee Vining Creek, late October

Rainbow colors on ice crystals

Logs in creek

Clouds over Yosemite

autumn foliage over creek

Road in autumn just outside Yosemite National Park

Ice on twigs

Ellery Lake, Yosemite National Park

Tree

Creek

winter grasses

Creek coming out of Saddlebag Lake

Fish Creek Hot Springs near Mammoth

June Lake Loop

Aspen along June Lake loop, late October

I hope you enjoyed this little tour around the Mono Lake and Yosemite National Park areas. Next post will be Bridgeport and Bodie on the next and last day of the trip.

Day Two, photographing fall foliage from Mono Lake to Mammoth

We got up before dawn to get shots of sunrise over Mono Lake. We were at the visitor center, which didn’t have the best foreground. Apparently the rest of the club was at the South Tufa Towers. Live and learn. Either place, the sunrise was spectacular.

The colors of this sunrise were spectacular, and ranged from hot yellow-orange-red to cool pink and blue, depending on camera settings.

By letting in a lot of light, the foreground shows up, but the colors in the sky got washed out.

sunrise at Mono Lake

These colors are fully saturated.

I loved the grays and yellows of sunrise over the Panum Craters.

With the intense colors of sunrise over, we moved to another location closer to the lake.

Frosted plant on frozen mud. Did I mention the temp was 19 degrees F?

Deergrass in morning light at Mono Lake

Golden grasses in morning light at Mono Lake

Tufa towers in morning light, Mono Lake, CA

Coyote tracks frozen in the mud

Historic 1922 roadhouse, Mono Lake

Roof with leaves, historic 1922 roadhouse, Mono Lake

 

Mono Lake in morning light from historic roadhouse

 

red bark

 

Yosemite National Park, eastern side, near Tioga Lake

 

Pinecone, pebbles and ice, Lee Vining Creek, Yosemite National Park
I think I’ll put the photos from the Canon of this day’s shoot in a separate post.

Autumn photo trip from Lone Pine to Bishop California, Oct. 27, 2010

I just returned from a great trip to the Eastern Sierras with my camera club, Photographic Society of Orange County. We stay in the same motel and go our own way during the day, taking whatever pictures we like. We meet for happy hour and dinner, and occasionally run into each other while out taking photos.

I carpooled with fellow club member Mark Singer. We took pictures on the way up last Wednesday and all day Thursday. But then Mark received news that there had been a death in his family,. We headed back home on Friday, cutting the trip short by two days. We did join the club on Friday morning for a photo shoot in the ghost town of Bodie before heading back.

I took 844 photos with my Canon EOS D30 and 330 with my Nikon Coolpix P90. I got those narrowed down to 321 pictures that I worked with on my computer using Corel’s PaintShop Pro. Out of that batch, I really like 207 of them. Somehow I’ve got to narrow that down to something reasonable that I can post on my blog. Here are photos from the drive up, which includes the stretch of Hwy 395 that runs from Lone Pine to Bishop and beyond, including Tom’s Place.

The Eastern Sierras in October viewed from Diaz Lake.

 

Cottonwood at Diaz Lake near Lone Pine, CA

Yerba Mansa and autumn grasses at Lake Diaz near Lone Pine, California

Milkweed

View of Crowley Lake from road leading from Tom's Place

The shots above were taken with the Nikon. The ones below are from the Canon.

Rocks at the Alabama Hills outside of Lone Pine, California

Closeup of lichen on granite

Grasses between rocks of the Alabama Hills, Lone Pine, CA.

The lighting is better in the early morning. This is what the Alabama Hills look like closer to noon.

The Alabama Hills were favorite locations for TV westerns and movies.

Cottonwoods, black poplars, copper birch and aspen had turned yellow.

Round Valley near Bishop.

Cottonwood leaf on rabbitbrush.

Rabbitbrush in autumn

Honeybee on rabbitbrush

Round Valley near Bishop, CA

Creek near Tom's Place

Copper birch leaves

Pack mule

Mark and a pack mule confront each other. I love the light splatter in this photo.

Wild rose hips

Aspen trees

Path through the October woods near Tom's Place, CA

And that concludes Day One of our trip.