Category Archives: Photo Travels

Struggling and Starving Artist

IMG_0180 How many trips does it take to the same location to get the photographs you want? The answer is, as many as it takes. When one’s desire to accomplish the completion of a photography related project becomes an obsession with perfection, one forgets that sometimes nature does not cooperate.

I am struggling “big time” with photography at City of Rocks, Idaho. Why? Because Mother Nature has not been in a cooperative mood lately.

I am starving for the right set of photographs from this area for a project I am working on with Dave Seeram. It is our first major project together and my hope has been to provide him with my very best work. The problem? A hang up related to getting just the right photos from my perspective.

In my journal I have noted this frustration and will visit the entry often. Here is why. With this trip I took my good friend and fellow photographer Paul Dennison.

We ventured out in to the “wild”, which “ain’t really so wild”, and found it beautiful. However, the drama I looked for in the scenery that surrounded us failed me. Part of the failure is found in me, because I set expectations for myself way too high.

Paul and I had a great time. We made photographs like crazy. We stayed up late for a sunset that never transpired and got up early for a daybreak that broke our hearts.

IMG_0114So what does one do when these types of circumstances arise? One goes back until he or she gets it right. In this case City of Rocks is very close, so I really am able to return to it multiple times to get what I am looking for in the way of dramatic scenery.

There is a question, however. What of the places I will travel to soon where I will not be able to return multiple times? I believe a change in the way I prepare my attitude to visit a location is in order.

I must begin taking in to account that the weather, environmental conditions, and scenery may not live up to my expectations. I scold myself on this point, and then laugh, because although I know I cannot control these things, I still become frustrated with them when they do not turn out the way I think they should. Arrogance? Naw… Dumb thinking and the fact that I am still an amateur.

We struggling and starving artists, me in particular, need to get over the frustrations found in making photographs. “Life ain’t perfect” and neither is the process by which we capture the scenery around us. It is a good lesson and one that I am taking with me in the future for all photographic adventures.

Planning and preparation are a necessity, but remember that when shooting in a place you cannot always control what is happening in that place. As matter of fact, you cannot control it at all if you are relying on nature to fill the area with dramatic moments. That is just the way it is and we must, I must, make the best of it by seeking out those things that we believe are not dramatic when they really are.

Later this week there will be two more articles on the latest trip to City of Rocks. There is a tale to be told in what Paul and I experienced. Some of that tale is related to self-inflicted pain and sleeplessness. It was simply AWESOME! I will be sharing a few of these moments, so look for them later this week.

In the meantime, stop being so hard on yourself. More for me than you, but maybe you too.

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Featured in the photographs above is Paul Dennison. Good friend and fellow traveler.


City of Rocks Planned Revisit

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Tomorrow morning The Wog (Paul Dennison) and I will venture to City of Rocks National Reserve in Idaho. My first there was just several weeks ago and Paul’s first will be this trip. It will not be like the last venture I made into that area. We will be spending a full weekend there.

I am looking forward to this revisit. Why? There are a few reasons, but first is simply spending time out photographing with a buddy. Second is a desire to capture the golden and blue hours of the area. I was not able to do that on my last trip.

Finally, I am working on a project with my good friend and colleague Dave Seeram and the photographs from this visit will be used in it. It is important to have significant projects to work on in life. It is not that they give you full meaning in life, it is rather that they give deeper meaning.

It is going to be a great trip with great moments to make wonderful images. I will try to update everyone on Twitter and Facebook as we go. I hope you will take time and go do a little photography over the weekend. It might renew your spirit and soul in doing so.

Tweet you on the go soon, so look for it.


Apply Point and Shoot to Your Walls

IMG_0088Sm Father’s Day it rained. It rained a lot. As evening approached the weather man said that the storm would began breaking apart producing scattered showers. That was my queue to get out and shoot.

There is an area of Utah that I have come to love for its beautiful scenery and with the storm beginning to wane I decided to revisit this area. Off I went with The Traveler. He carries me everywhere I want to go to find and make the photographs I want to.

Morgan, Utah was our destination. At least the area around Morgan. The weather man did not disappoint in his prediction of what the storm was going to do and the sky was perfect for the photographic venture I had in mind.

Evening light, shadows, and clouds can make for some very dramatic imagery especially after a storm clears the air of smog and “juck”. This was what I found when I arrived. Clear air and mountain views as far as your eyes could see.

I intentionally took only my Canon SD1400 IS (Digital ELPH point and shoot) and left my Digital SLR at home. I wanted to get in some practice with the little camera I carry on my hip everyday. I also wanted to see if I could make high quality images with it.

Composition played a major role in using the camera. Second to that was finding the right lighting. I waited at several stops for long minutes to allow the clouds and sun to move into the correct position for the shots I envisioned.

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In the end I came away with some wonderful photographs proving something to me that I really had known all along. It is good to have the right equipment to do the right job. That equipment does not necessarily need cost thousands of dollars.

In my case the only equipment I needed for this venture cost less than $300 and is smaller than most smart phones. Still it did what I asked it to do and I found that my brain was the real tool in making the imagery I did. Knowing the rules for great image making was a real asset.

Some have said that “it is the photographer that makes the photograph and not the equipment”. I am inclined to agree with that most of the time. In the case of the Morgan, Utah area and me, as “photographer”, it applied fully I believe.

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There is application in this for you too. It does not take an expensive camera or oodles of photographic equipment to make great images to put on your walls. It is you taking the time to learn how that inexpensive camera works and striving to understand how images are best made from those who have made them the best.

Why not get out and shoot when that next storm comes your way. Wait for it to subside and then utilize the morning or evening light. Allow the clouds to paint shadows on the scenery before you.

Shoot away at what you see no matter the camera you have in your hand. When finished, take your very best and hang it on your wall, so that others can see it and you can remember the thrill of being there in that time and place. Who knows? It just might turn out to be some of the most dramatic scenery you have ever captured.

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City of Rocks, Idaho

City of Rocks, Idaho is one of the most impressive places experienced by this individual. Granite edifices dotted over the landscape jut toward the sky creating what appears to be a literal city of rocks. The power that forced the creation of such a place is incomprehensible.

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Now a National Reserve, named by James F. Wilkins in 1849, once served as a resting place for the pioneers who sought opportunity in California. Aside from the prominent granite edifices so prominent, are the names and dates of those who traveled here long ago. Found, is a registry of sorts. Their names and the dates of arrival to this “silent city” can be found in multiple locations through out the Reserve.

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The nature sculpted beauty of the area is incredible. There are many features and attractions unique to this area located in southwestern corner of Idaho. Here are just a few.

TWIN SISTERS

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At south exit to the Reserve stands two huge granite features known as Twin Sisters. They are an impressive pair. They reside about a half mile from Pinnacle Pass where those on the California Trail departed the City of Rocks headed West.

The history found in the place is a seeker of the past’s paradise. A portion of the California Trail can be explored, as well as a section of the Boise-Kelton Stage Route. If you make your destination here, plan on spending several days just exploring its abundant trails rich in scenery and history.

ELEPHANT ROCK

One of the major attractions to the area is rock climbing. There are other things one can do here, but the primary activity is climbing and repelling the large structures scattered throughout the Reserve. Twin Sisters, above, is climbed and explored, but the main attraction for the climber is Elephant Rock.

To call this a “rock” requires one to appreciate just how much understatements in fact thrive in our sometimes sarcastic culture. It is gigantic. It is clear to even the casual observer why this “little” piece of the area might be attractive to the climber. However, do not believe for a moment that this area is for the amateur.

Climbs featuring edifices named Rabbit Rock, Morning Glory Spire, and Bread Loaves attract climbers from all over the world. Highly technical climbs to less technical exist and according to the National Park Service boast climbs that rival those in Yosemite National Park. So, if you are a rock climber, especially one interested in a piece of historical United States of America, then this place is absolutely for you.

PHOTOGRAPHY

 

There is room for the photographer as well. If you love dynamic landscapes and have a desire to make a few photographs to add to your portfolio this is certainly a place to do it. At your disposal are long sweeping vistas that provide layer after layer of differing foliage back dropped by impressive granite rock and pine covered mountains.

For those who seek a unique natural subject for their portfolio there are trees and foliage of various kinds that have made their way through the cracks and crevices of stone. They simply sit and wait for the image maker to pass their way. They scream, “LOOK AT ME! LOOK AT ME!” as one passes by.

And of course, there are the climbers. They are a built in feature for those photographers seeking to display a little danger in action. They need no direction as models, because their poses are always perfect. You may have to wait just a little while to catch them at just the right moment though.

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City of Rocks National Reserve in Idaho is a place that would be well worth your time to visit. Whether you are looking for adventure, history, a unique experience in a unique place, or to simply make some photographs, the investment in travel time and expense would not be wasted. Consider it and then expect to be thoroughly impressed by what surrounds you when you arrive.

(Note: Information on City of Rocks National Reserve was collected from information provided by the National Parks Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, and the Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation. You can find more information on City of Rocks National Reserve at http://www.nps.gov/ciro.)

 


Sometimes a Priority, Never a Minority

Recently I noticed something about the time I spend in photography. I have been overly focused on it. To be perfectly honest, I never thought I would ever become so fully absorbed by it. None-the-less, I have. When I say, “absorbed”, I refer to the time required to prepare for a photographic trip, project, special request, and the photography itself.

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Two weeks ago my wife, Rhonda, said, “Let’s go some place.” She suggested Bear Lake, Utah. I thought it was a wonderful idea.

My initial thought and response was, “Great! It will give me a chance to do some spur of the moment photography there.” My response was not met with the enthusiasm I expected. Here is why.

Although my wife loves to travel with me, she is not a proponent of the hours, and sometimes HOURS OF, stop and go travel when on a “photo-adventure” with her husband. There is much of that when my purpose is to capture the areas I encounter. There can be long periods of quiet in the cab of The Traveler as I seek that particular spot to stop and set up.

Further, there is that long period of waiting after setting up. Why? Because, I want to make the photographs I gather worth the time that I invested in that single spot.

As you can imagine this type of thing does not make for a great trip for those who may not have the kind of interest you do in photography. This is the case with my wife. She loves seeing the country we travel through. She loves spending time with me (and that is reciprocated).

She loves seeing the end product of the images made while we traveled. However, from her perspective something is lost in the time that we spend together when I am so focused (absorbed) in “the shot”.

In regard to our trip to Bear Lake, I took my camera, but it never came out of my bag. Why, because there just was not time for it. The priority in making the trip was to spend some time focused on her; on us.

Did I take a few photographs? Yes, but I used my point and shoot and phone to take them. The focus was on her and not the scenery. Although, I consider my wife some of the best “scenery” around.

We had a wonderful time and we came away with some photographs that will serve to help remind us of the time we spent together that day. The point is this. Know your purpose in traveling as a photographer and then consider the feelings and purpose of those who might be with you. Better than this, consider it before you ever leave the house.

Certainly there will be times when traveling where the trip might be a once in a lifetime experience. In those cases it is hoped that understanding and compromise can be established, so that everyone’s needs can be met. Remember, where your relationships are concerned and travel required there are priorities that must never be determined a minority in the greater scheme of things.

Be absorbed, but know the absorption must be directed correctly based on the circumstances you find yourself in. This requires photography to “take a backseat” sometimes, provided your truck has one. If not, put it in the cooler, so that when it is time to picnic you can capture some great personal moments. The smiling images you may capture will be those you will remember for a lifetime.

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So-Far-Ee: The “Big Lonely”

What can adventure bring to the photographer? We see professionals heading off to this or that exotic place and maybe to the amateur there is a sense of being left behind. Just maybe there is a desire to travel to those places and “live the romantic notion” of the photographer extraordinary.

In reality the romantic notions found in photography revolve around some seemingly non-existent ideal, but we each have an imagination whether that imagination works for or against our endeavors in the craft. Still there is that sense that an adventure is needed to really capture outstanding photographs. Of course, we really do not need to travel far for adventures in world of photography.

Recently I had a personal experience with this desire to be adventurous with my photographic work. I have long wanted to travel down a road located in northern Utah that starts around Snowville (Highway 33) and ends in Oasis, Nevada (Highway 233). I had heard that along the way the mountains of Utah’s west desert and Salt Flats could be seen, so with that in mind I struck out for Snowville, Utah one early Saturday afternoon.

After arriving in Snowville, I fueled my truck and made my way to Highway 33. There, and onward, it was not long before I came upon site that absolutely begged a photograph. It was lone Juniper tree, the only tree for miles around I might add, standing in the middle of a field of prairie grass. This scene, and its subsequent capture, literally set the mood for my day out photo-adventuring. Of course, what I did not know at the time was that the day would be treacherous and that I would learn a very valuable lesson, or two, from my experience.

Down the highway I went when I came upon a dirt road that led south. I had seen this road on the map I had with me and it looked like it connected with another dirt road, which would lead me back to Highway 33. Left turn and I was on my way bouncing down one of sandiest roads I had ever been on.

It was not long before I realized that the road I was on was not the road I had seen on my map. When I say it “was not long before”, of course I really mean four hours later with multiple dirt roads in my rearview mirror. I could not find my way back to the road I had come in on. Remember, I had set out to make my way down Highway 33 in to Nevada and it was at the four hour mark that I realized I would not be able to complete the scripted trip. But the photography was wonderful, so I continued on knowing that eventually I would find a road that would take me back to the Highway.

Along the ride, I thought of you my reader and of my fellow photographers who I wished were with me. Why? Because it is this area of my state, Utah, which I had apparently long neglected, that now revealed to me a beauty that was so overwhelming. I wanted to share it with you right then. Not by blog or by photo-share, but in person. I wanted you and me alone in the wild capturing the magnificence of that place I came to call the “big lonely”.

One of the lessons that came from my trip in to the “big lonely” was that even when there seems nothing to capture of significance, there is a photographic story to be told in that insignificance. In the wide open and expansive places where life is harsh and the whole world seems completely barren there is found a purpose for every photographer. That is, to reveal to others what you feel and then convey a story that your mind alone has imaged enhanced by the emotion that you have experienced.

The “big lonely” is a place of imagination and emotion. It is place where a photographer’s creative juices can really flow. You are forced to look for the story that must be told with little at your photographic disposal except for the feelings you are experiencing.

There is of course some things that can help you along the way in the “big lonely”. For instance, there is a history to all places that you and I may travel, barren or not. If a story cannot be told by the scenery around you, then there may be a history there that few have thought to tell.

An example of this is found in a road I eventually traveling down that was actually the old rail bed for the trains that traveled to and from San Francisco, California. As I made my way west, looking for the Highway, the rail bed provided me with some great photographic opportunities and a few thoughts about those who in the very late 1800’s and early 1900’s traveled down the very bed I was on to reach whatever destination they were seeking.

I imaged cowboys making their way west with their cattle on board heading for the markets of California. I saw in my mind a wife with children in tow making their way to their husband and father who had gone west for the gold rush. I felt the man headed east who had failed to find his fortune and chose to return to his home having exhausted everything material that he owned.

On I went and the travel was rough and smooth at varying times, but it was completely fascinating no matter the terrain. Then I made a bend in the road and was immediately overcome with emotion. My eyes fell to and before me laid the northwest shore of the Great Salt Lake with its blue water and gigantic “beaches”.

I was about to learn another lesson in my travel through the “big lonely”. Down to the shore I went, only the shore was at least two miles large to the water’s edge. Out of my truck and on to the sandy flats of the Great Salt Lake and there I learned a photographic lesson that seems ridiculous to me know, but was profound then.

Strewn about on the sandy flats were remnants of long ago trees, their roots exposed, lava rock, and driftwood. I immediately began composing my shots and found that there was no elevated angle from which to create the drama I was seeking for my story. To my belly I went and there was imagery I was looking for. In that belly flop was the simple lesson that I apparently needed.

The lesson? You have to get dirty. The photographers I mentioned in opening this piece, you know the pros, are all willing to do whatever it physically takes to get that photograph that tells that story they have in their mind. In my case, what it took to tell part of my story was to simply lay down and roll about in the sand.

However, there were consequences to this decision. I was absolutely miserable the rest of the day, because the sand had gotten in to everything, especially my shirt and shorts. It was worth it though; because I was able to make one of the most dramatic photographs (seen above) I have ever had the opportunity to make by doing what I did.

On I went, venturing further in to the “big lonely”. I just knew at some point I would run in to the Highway. As the time past and light began to fade I realized that I would be taking fewer and fewer photos. My nervousness about the amount of fuel I had and the fact that night was quickly coming was a tremendous distraction.

Just when I thought that maybe it was time to turn around, I rounded another bend in the road and below me lay one of the most desolate places I have ever seen before. It was the Salt Flats of the Great Salt Lake Desert and much like my earlier experience with the Great Salt Lake itself, I was once again overcome. It was at this point that I realized that it was not just the significance of the insignificance of the place where I had ventured that tugged at my photographic heart, but the fact that I was so insignificant compared to that which had revealed itself around me.

One feels very small in the “big lonely”. The land is big, the land treacherous, the land is expansive, and the land does not care. The land is the land; it has no emotion, it has no feeling, it has no compassion, and there is no sense from the land that you matter. It simply IS and how one deals with that “ISness” is how one deals with the preciousness of life.

My troubles intensified a little as I continued on. The Salt Flats screamed “shoot me, shoot me!” I obliged and noticed that I had not been paying attention to what was transpiring in the western sky. A storm began rolling in and with it came rain, lightning, and thunder.

As a photographer you know that such instances in weather change can bring opportunities for some really fantastic image making, so I stuck around and photographed the storm as it came closer and closer. By the time I was done with what I wanted to capture, darkness loomed and the storm blotted what little light that was left. It was time to find my way out.

I back tracked, or attempted to and found myself a little panicked, because the roads in did not look the same as they did going out; naturally. I did eventually make it out as must be obvious, because I am writing this article about my experience. The road out was wet and even more lonely than the road in, because at least on the way in I had the scenery around me to keep me occupied. I guess you could say that the “big lonely” is even lonelier when night invades and we are left to imagine the worst of possibilities without the benefit of landmarks.

For me this experience was one that brought a lot of understanding related to how I approach the art and craft of photography. Yes, there were those lessons that I learned, but more importantly I was taught a truth that I will keep with me where ever I may travel in capturing images. It is this; sacrifice is required.

This sacrifice can come in many forms and can manifest itself in different ways, but it is the thing required to prove one’s motives in making images. I set out that day to discover a Highway and in the end I discovered a mettle that I was not fully aware that I had in regard to my image making. I survived the “big lonely” for an afternoon and night and with that survival came a sense of great accomplishment.

Will I do it again? Oh yes, I will and my hope is that I am able to find myself lost in many other places unique to my state as well. Will I do things differently next time? Most certainly, and I will take those very precious lessons I learned on this wonderful photo-adventure with me when I go.

Until Next Time…

CbyM

A Note to the Photographer: Here is tip for those of you who may choose to venture out and have a real desire to capture what you think and feel as you traveled. Take with you a small digital recording devise or a pen and notebook. Being able to capture what you think, feel, and experience while on the move can assist you in your image making. It can also be a very valuable tool if you write about the photographs that you make.


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