Firefall Photos
This year has been a great year for waterfalls and I’ve been getting some great photos of Horsetail Fall and the firefall. Here are a couple of my favorites… [Yosemite Blog]
Click the title link to visit the original post at Yosemite Blog where photos are posted.
This firefall is “organic” – it appears early in the year when a seasonal waterfall on El Capitan catches the sunset light for a few weeks when conditions are right. I have a pretty good idea where this fall appears, though I’ve never been there to photograph it.
While the major waterfalls of Yosemite Valley are better known, during the early runoff period (before the all of the snow on the relatively low areas just above the Valley melts) there are small but quite beautiful seasonal waterfalls all around the valley. They may lack the overwhelming power of Yosemite, Bridalveil, Vernal, or Nevada falls during peak runoff, but they have a very special charm of their own.
Readers whose history in with the Valley is relatively short may not completely understand the reference to “firefall” in the title. When I first visited the Valley as a kid there was a nightly “firefall” that stopped everything on the Valley floor. A large fire was made on Glacier Point and after dark, accompanined by a cry of “Let the fire fall!”, the embers were pushed over the cliff creating, yes, a fire fall.
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More Snowman News
Yosemite Blog has more information and possibly a photo of the snow man builder:
Dawn sent me [a snow cam photo] of what might possibly be the Anonymous Snowman Maker…
For a long time I’ve thought it would be fun to do something like this, but it never got past the ‘thinking about’ stage. I’m happy to see someone actually go to the trouble of skiing a 20 mile round trip, building snowmen, and posing for an automated photo. :-)
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Snow Much Fun to Be A Snow Man With a Snow Cam
A sunrise photo of the natives cavorting in front of Half Dome. See a sunrise today on the Sentinal Dome Snow Cam in Yosemite.
Yes, I’m smiling! :-)
(Thank you to Yosemite Blog for the pointer.)
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Lunar Eclipse
Those of you on the eastern coast of the US get to see a full lunar eclipse tonight. Although I’ll be out photographing the full moon rise the moon will only be partially eclipsed when it rises here in California. For an interesting tale of some photographers who travelled to Death Valley to photograph an eclipse a few years ago, go here.
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Summer 2007 Starts to Take Shape
(An old article – posted here so as not to lose it during the site transition.)
Every spring (I know, it isn’t spring quite yet) I start to look forward to a summer (and fall!) of trips into the Sierra Nevada.
Some of my favorites are short, relatively spontaneous trips, often lasting only one to three days. Fortunately, I’m close enough to the Sierra that I can actually get to some quite interesting places and back home in one (very long) day. I often do one of these in late May or early June – my so-called “Waterfall Trip” to Yosemite Valley. I’ll likely do something similar once Tioga Pass opens and that part of the high country becomes accessible.
I usually also do at least one longer, more organized trip. This summer it looks like I’ll have at least two of those on my schedule.
The first is a sort of trip I haven’t done since my kids were much younger and would backpack with me. My brother and his wife have three young sons who need to experience the real mountains of the Sierra Nevada. (Yeah, I guess there are some mountains in the state of Washington, too. ;-) They asked me to design an introductory trip for them. My first instinct was to head to the sort of place I like so much – over a 12,000′ eastern Sierra Pass and into the alpine country right around timberline. Fortunately, I thought better of that – small kids with altitude sickness at 12,000′ can wreck a trip quickly – and instead we are going to spend the better part of a week in the area just east of the Minarets and Mounts Ritter and Banner. We’ll do a “base camp trip,” staying at Lake Ediza for a few nights and then shifting over to Thousand Island Lake. These locations will let us explore some very interesting terrain around Ritter and Banner and in the Minarets area.
The second trip is a bit more hard core. The Talusdancers gang are going to enter the Sierra south of Mt. Whitney in the Cottonwood Lakes area and then head north and past the Mt. Whitney vicinity into the upper Kern, eventually exiting over Shepherd Pass. I’ve wanted to get into Shepherd Pass for many years and I’ve come close on the west side of the pass a few times, however the pass has a fearsome reputation as one of the more brutal eastern approaches to the southern Sierra crest. On this trip I’ll get to cross Shepherd… but we’ll use it to exit rather than enter.
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Rain and Tree, Castle Rock State Park
Tree and Rain. Castle Rock State Park, California. February 24, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell. (Sales)
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Creek and Moss, Castle Rock State Park
Creek and Moss. Castle Rock State Park, California. February 24, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell. (Sales)
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4wheelBob on Two-Heel Drive
Tom Mangan at Two-Heel Drive reports:
4wheelbob.com is up and running. Bob Coomber, California Outdoors Hall of Fame Inductee, has his long-awaited Web site up. Bob, as you’ll recall, has a seriously nasty kind of diabetes that makes it impossible to use his legs, so he hikes with his hands, arms and wheels.
“…Challenging oneself to the extent possible is the only way to live. Everything else is simply breakfast at Denny’s, day after day after day…”
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Tour of California
(An old article – posted here so as not to lose it during the site transition.)
The second Amgen Tour of California is presently rolling through the state – pretty exciting stuff! I managed to get to the prologue stage in San Francisco last week, where I shot a number of photographs. (I am also gradually posting them at G Dan Mitchell | Photography.)
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Mystery Snowmen – The Video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bNVvlkYe3kM
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March 7, 2007 Posted by gdanmitchell | Commentary | Comments Off on Mystery Snowmen – The Video