My Favorite Unpublished Photos of 2019

Favorite photos of 2019

Happy New Year! Patti of Pilotfish has presented us with a delightful yet difficult challenge this week -Favorite Photos of 2019. How do you choose? It isn’t easy.

I got distracted a lot as I browsed through thousands of photos, with an image catching my eye and sending me into a memory. Focus, Di, focus! Don’t go down that rabbit hole! Is it really one of your 10 best of the year?

In the end, I couldn’t do it. I could narrow it down to 40 or so, but 10? Impossible!

So I took a page from NatGeo’s book. I COULD narrow it down to my favorite 10 unpublished photos of the year, ones that for one reason or another had not made it onto a blog post.

I’ll do this directionally. I’ll start in the northwest and make my way down towards the southeast.

Favorite Photos of 2019
Matanuska Sunrise

Matanuska Valley, Alaska

I had an early morning doctor’s appointment. However, it was a 7-hour drive from my home in remote rural Alaska to the doctor’s office. So I left after work, drove part way, slept in the back of my truck, and continued on my way just before the crack of dawn. My reward was a beautiful sunrise over the Matanuska River, one of the most spectacular sunrises I’ve ever seen. My photos don’t do it justice, but here’s my best shot at it.

 

Wrangell-St. Elias National Park
Life in the Wrangells

Wrangell-St. Elias National Park

We have some really big mountains in the Wrangells. In fact, Wrangell-St. Elias has more mountains over 14,500 feet than anywhere else in North America. Furthermore, unlike Colorado’s 14-ers, Alaska’s mountains start from a lot closer to sea level!  They are REALLY big mountains. I like this image because you get an impression of just how big they really are.

 

Stone Mountain Provincial Park
Stone Sheep

Stone Mountain Provincial Park, British Columbia

My favorite day when I drive the Al-Can Highway is the day I drive through Stone Mountain and Muncho Lake Provincial Parks. They are both home to the somewhat rare and beautiful Stone Sheep, and if I’m lucky I might see one. This year I was able to shoot this environmental portrait of a ram doing what Stone Sheep do best, climbing cliffs.

 

2019 Favorite Photos
Swallowtail

Electra Road near Jackson, CA

Although I’m usually raving about the wildflowers in the desert, by the time April rolls around you’ll find fantastic wildflowers in the Sierra foothills, too. That’s where I captured this image of a swallowtail butterfly sipping nectar from a flower.

 

My favorite unpublished photo of 2019
The Mighty Ocean

Point Pinos, California

I think this is my new favorite photo of 2019. I don’t know why I never noticed it before. I was trying to capture the power and fury of a winter storm on the Pacific coast. Big waves. I can watch them all day.

 

Elephant Seals
Lovers

Piedras Blancas, California

One of my favorite photographic experiences of 2019 was watching the elephant seals at Piedras Blancas. It was a true wildlife drama, with hundreds of seals birthing, mating and fighting just yards away from their human voyeurs. As I watched, the seals struck me as some of the most ill-tempered animals I’d ever seen, always fighting and arguing – all of them, not just the bulls. Mating, in most cases, seemed exceptionally harsh and brutal. This couple was the exception. They seemed, dare I say it, actually content and peaceful with each other! I tried to capture that feeling.

 

Joshua Tree National Park
Pink-Flower Hedgehog Cactus

Joshua Tree National Park

If you follow my blog at all, you know that no roundup of my favorite photos of 2019  would be complete without at least one closeup of a desert wildflower. I love getting up all close and personal with cactus blossoms. They’re exquisite. I found this one in Joshua Tree National Park.

 

Anza Borrego State Park
Sunrise in Coachwhip Canyon

Anza Borrego State Park, California

Because my little Toyota truck is only 2 wheel drive, sometimes my dispersed camping options are somewhat limited. I find myself returning to one particular campsite in Anza Borrego again and again. But even though flowers are going crazy in the rest of the park, there are usually very few or no flowers in my favorite canyon. This year was different. This year, my camping canyon was one of the park’s wildflower hotspots. I took this photo from the hill behind my camp.

 

Favorite photos of 2019
Arizona Sunset

Tucson, Arizona

There’s a reason Arizona is famous for its sunsets. Just sayin’.

Well, I had a hard time picking my favorite. And I find it hard to be objective. Each image is colored by the experience that accompanied it.

How about you? Which one is your favorite? Let me know in the comments.

.

2019 Photography Destinations – A Baker’s Dozen of My Personal Favorites Part 2

Favorite 2019 Photography Destinations

The countdown continues. A few days ago I posted spots 13 through 7 of my favorite 2019 photography destinations.  This week, I list the best ones of all, the destinations that rated 1 through 6 of my personal best.

6) Joshua Tree National Park

Superbloom. Joshua Tree had one this past spring. Need I say more? This coming spring should be fairly good, too. It’s been raining and snowing with more rain and snow in the forecast. Even if the flowers aren’t as spectacular as they were last spring, Joshua Tree is still a great place to visit. It is also home to some very cool rocks. One of these days I plan to spend more time in the rocks – when I’m not so distracted by the flowers.Lupines, Joshua Tree National Park

5) Anza Borrego State Park

Anza Borrego also had an excellent wildflower season. It was definitely one of my favorite 2019 photography destinations, as I got to visit not once, not twice, but three times! I saw different plants blooming each time. I even saw my favorite campsite in the park in bloom, something I’ve never been lucky enough to catch before.

Yucca Blossoms, Anza-Borrego State Park, CA
Yucca Blossoms, Anza-Borrego State Park, CA

4) Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge

It’s all about the birds. And the peace. And the serenity.

Each winter vast numbers of sandhill cranes and snow geese descend upon the refuge for the winter. There are lots of other birds and wildlife, too.

It’s a great place to polish your craft. It has become one of my new favorite places.

Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge
Northern Pintail

3) San Simeon

Since I had a couple of different housesits on the central California Coast,  Piedras Blancas and San Simeon became one of my favorite 2019 photography destinations. I spent a lot of time camping at San Simeon; before, in between and after my housesits.

Down on the beach right below the campground, there is a bird sanctuary. I took advantage of the wonderful opportunities for checking out the shorebirds there. And then there’s Cambria, just a few miles south. I love that little town, and I especially love Moonstone Beach, with all the pretty pebbles.

I’d been to San Simeon before and loved it, but never at the prime time for the elephant seal action. January and February are when the elephant seals at Piedras Blancas, just a few miles up the coast, are birthing, fighting, and mating.  It’s a true wildlife extravaganza!

Piedras Blancas Elephant Seal Rookery, California
They’re so grouchy!

2) Carrizo Plains National Monument

This is definitely one of my new favorite places. Most of the year you’d never give it a second glance. But when the flowers bloom in the springtime, this land is amazing. Possibly the best wildflower display I’ve ever seen, and that’s saying something. The most incredible thing, though, is the fragrance. In some places, the blend of different floral scents is pure nirvana. Take lots of deep breaths. The huge swaths of color, whole hillsides dyed pink, purple or yellow from acres upon acres of blooms can be pretty dang impressive, too.

Carrizo Plain National Monument
Owl’s Clover & Goldfields

1) Wrangell-St. Elias National Park

There’s no place like home. Especially when your home is possibly the most spectacular place in North America! When I look at the view I get right from my front porch, it’s a wonder I ever leave the place!

Wrangell St. Elias National Park
This is my commute!

I hope you enjoyed checking out my favorite photographic destinations for 2019. 2020 will bring a host of new experiences. Some of my favorites will remain the same, but I’m sure I’ll find a treasure trove of new favorites, too. Where do you plan to go in 2020? Let me know in the comments.

Monochrome Photography – It’s Not All Black & White

Monochrome Photography

Patti challenges us with monochrome photography in this week’s Lens-Artists  Photo Challenge. Thanks, Patti! Monochrome photography is an interesting way to interpret the scene for a photographer like me who somewhat depends on a splash of color. I’ve had fun with it!

To meet this challenge,  I thought I’d share with you a short travelogue of my journeys over the last year. I spend my winters petsitting through TrustedHousesitters, and it’s taken me to some fine, fine places.

What’s Happening Now

I’m currently spending a little time in Colorado. It’s a blast from the past, an opportunity to get back to my roots, revisit landscapes forever held deep in my heart, spend time with family,  and heal. I was fortunate enough to land a housesit in Allenspark, in the southwest corner of Rocky Mountain National Park, which made this sweet sojourn with a land I love possible.

Rocky Mountain National Park
I spent a couple of weeks watching the deer and elk in Rocky Mountain National Park, my first mountain home, last month.

Winter On The West Coast

A year ago today, though, I was on the Long Beach Peninsula, Washington State. I was housesitting a very sweet dog and cat in a lovely old home just 4 blocks from the beach. It was wonderful to spend a whole month immersing myself in the Pacific Northwest, an environment I’d never before had the opportunity to really experience.

Lens-Artists Photo Challenge
They call it Long Beach for a reason. You could walk forever.

Long Beach wasn’t my only coastal refuge this past winter. I spent most of the winter on the central California coast. I had a housesit in Monterey

Lens-Artists Photo Challenge
Monochrome sunset on the beach at Carmel

and one in Goleta, where I mourned the loss of the Monarch Butterflies.

Black & White photography
Eucalyptus blossoms in the butterfly groves

I even drove the Big Sur Highway a few times. It is amazing that this road even exists!

Lens-Artists
Pampas grass along the Big Sur Highway

In between house sits, I spent a lot of time camping at San Simeon. It was an unexpected wildlife treasure.

monochrome
The elephant seals were the main draw, but the phenomenal birding was an unexpected bonus.

I finally visited Mystic Hot Springs in Utah, which had been on my bucket list for years.

Monroe Hot Springs
Sitting in the hand of God at Monroe Hot Springs

Spring In The Desert

I visited four deserts, with a wonderful house sit in Tucson giving me a taste of the Sonoran,

Monochrome photography
I really loved my time in Tucson!

a bit of quality time spent on the Colorado Plateau,

Lens-Artists Challenge
The Colorado Plateau is still my favorite desert.

and, as always, following the flowers in the Mojave

Joshua Tree National Park
Superbloom in Joshua Tree this past spring

and the Lower Coloradoan Desert.

Anza-Borrego State Park
Yucca flowers in Anza-Borrego

Summer In Alaska

I always come back to the Wrangells, though. It’s true – there’s no place like home!

Wrangell-St. Elias National Park
This is just a part of the view right from my front porch!

Filling the Frame – Lens-Artists Photo Challenge #66

Tidy Tips fill the frame in Carrizo Plain National Monument

Thanks, Patti, for bringing us this week’s Lens-Artists Photo Challenge. Filling the frame is such an important photographic concept. I would like to use a few images from last spring’s desert wildflower bloom to illustrate my take on filling the frame.

Sometimes you may find that just documenting a scene or an object falls flat and doesn’t really capture the essence of your subject, as in this image of a yucca plant in bloom.

Yucca in bloom, Anza-Borrego State Park, CA

Moving in closer may be one way to capture that essence.

Yucca Blossoms, Anza-Borrego State Park, CA
Yucca Blossoms, Anza-Borrego State Park, CA

Think about what is in your frame. Is it all necessary to express what you want to convey with the image?

The cactus flowers are beautiful, but do I really need that white rock in the photo? Isn’t it kind of distracting?

What do you find most compelling about the object/scene? For me, it was the silky translucency of the pink petals and the way the color blended into the beautiful brown shade at the center of the flower. I was also intrigued by the complexity revealed in the heart of the bloom.

Pineapple Cactus flower, Joshua Tree National Park

When photographing wildlife, we might quickly grab an “insurance” shot in our excitement at seeing the animal. The result is often less than memorable.

Butterfly on Sand Verbena, Anza-Borrego State Park, CA
Boring!

Filling the frame will often make a much more compelling image. However, we should get closer and fill the frame by using a longer focal length. As I mentioned in last week’s post, we need to respect the animal’s comfort zone. Our actions should never change an animal’s behavior.

Butterfly on Sand Verbena, Anza-Borrego State Park, CA
Better!

Filling the frame does not necessarily mean moving in closer. It means being aware of every element in the composition. It means watching the edges of the photo and making sure everything included is there for a reason.

Carrizo Plain National Monument

Filling the frame is a great rule of thumb, but as with most rules, the beauty of knowing the rules is knowing when it’s OK to break them. Think of your essential questions when composing the image. What are you trying to convey? What is essential to conveying it?

For instance, when I saw this Ajo Lily growing straight out of the rock I was struck by the barrenness of its surroundings. How tough and resilient a flower must be, to blossom straight out of a rock! Including the surrounding sandstone was essential to the meaning of this image. A close-up of the flower, although beautiful, would not convey those deeper meanings.

Ajo Lily, Anza-Borrego State Park, CA
A flower with the resilience to overcome a hostile environment

Most of the time, though, it’s a good thing to remember – for more exciting images, try filling the frame!

Near Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve

April is Desert Wildflowers

Desert Wildflowers crowd a landscape in Joshua Tree National Park

Thank you, Amy, for this week’s Lens-Artist’s Photo Challenge, Hello April!

Desert Wildflowers Joshua Tree National Park
Poppies and Pincushions

Hello April! April is life bursting out all over, wildflowers as far as the eye can see, all manner of joy and celebration.

April is sweet spring skiing, all the sweeter because the tourists have gone home. Walking around is getting sloppy, though. Mud season is nearly here, and it’s time to go to the desert. It’s the excitement and anticipation as I plan my spring adventure.

Artist's Drive Formation, Death Valley
At least the rock in Death Valley is always amazing!

April is breakup. Think mud season on steroids.

April is when it starts to get HOT in the Valley. As temps climb into the triple digits, it’s time to leave the desert.

April has meant many things in my life. This year I’ll combine them all.

April is time for my spring road trip to Alaska. Time to head back home, after a detour south for one more peek at the desert bloom. I’ll joyfully celebrate life bursting out all over, wildflowers as far as the eye can see. I’m excited as I anticipate my spring adventure.

Joshua Tree National Park
Joshua Tree Flower

I don’t usually escape breakup. It generally catches me in Canada. But this year, I just might. Photos from friends on Facebook show bare ground in Alaska, unprecedented in late March. Spring is already happening there, over a month early.

Agave Bloom, Anza Borrego State Park
This lovely flower is over 10 feet tall!

It’s definitely time for me to escape the Valley. I’ve been a bit restless the past few weeks. Way back in September I made a commitment to stay in Death Valley for most of March. I knew it would be an El Nino year and I was trying to position myself ahead of time for a possible spring bloom.

So, of course, everywhere else in the desert except Death Valley got the December rain that led to an amazing bloom. Death Valley got lots of rain in 2019, over 3 inches, in fact, but spring is very late, over a month late.

Goldfield in Joshua Tree National Park
There was a full-on superbloom in Joshua Tree this spring.

I spent three weeks in March stuck in Death Valley while Joshua Tree had a full on superbloom. Anza Borrego had great wildflowers, too. Death Valley had next to nothing. I should have worked at Ocotillo Wells instead.

Death Valley is always great and the rocks are still incredible, but I’m definitely ready to leave.

Joshua Tree National Park
Yucca Blossoms

So this year April is flowers, flowers and more flowers in Joshua Tree. It’s the cactus and agave blooming in Anza Borrego. It’s finally crossing the California Poppy Reserve off my bucket list on my way to Carrizo Plain, which just might be peaking when I get there.

After that, who knows? I could take the coast, or check out the burn areas in the Sierra foothills. For April this year, I’m following the flowers.

Joshua Tree National Park
Sand Blazing Star

 

 

Desert Wildflower Update

Desert Wildflowers in Joshua Tree National Park

Easter is often thought of not only as a religious holiday, but also as a harbinger and celebration of spring. Well, Easter is late this year. Easter won’t be here until April 21. That’s about as late as it ever gets.

Desert Dandelions, Poppies and Chia in Joshua Tree National Park
Joshua Tree National Park

In a strange coincidence of synchronicity this year’s wildflower season is also running very late. Due to a surprising series of cold fronts and rainstorms, it has been a very wet, cool February. This is both good and bad news for the desert wildflowers. The rain, of course, is always welcome. In some places, though, the wind and cold have proved detrimental to this year’s bloom.

Anza Borrego State Park
Sand Verbena and Dune Primrose

Anza Borrego

There have not been as many changes as I would have expected since my last visit. I think the passing fronts have slowed down, but extended, the flower season here.

Anza Borrego State Park
Lupine in Coachwhip Canyon

Coachwhip Canyon is past its peak, but still has nice displays. The Brown-eyed Evening Primrose is almost done and the Lupines are looking pretty leggy. Caterpillars are making short work of the primrose that are left. There are still a lot of Sand Verbena, although not as much as I found 3 weeks ago. I found wonderful Lilies over the hill in the next canyon to the east. Some Ocotillo are blooming and the Notchleaf Phacelia is looking great.

Anza Borrego State Park
Butterfly on Sand Verbena

East of House Rock Canyon, the Verbena is looking even better than last time. There are lots of Dune Primroses and Lupine mixed in, although not as many Spanish Needles as there were in February. The highlight of my visit to this location was the profusion of butterflies. There seems to be a migration moving through, and thousands of the beautiful insects are out pollinating the flowers and laying their eggs.

Anza Borrego State Park
Ajo Lilies

 

A great place to find Ajo Lilies is near mile marker 33 on S-22, on the south side of the road. You’ll find an amazing field of these beautiful flowers there, but they don’t show up well from the road. Park and get out and walk around. You’ll be surprised and amazed by what you see.

Anza Borrego State Park Visitor Center
Cholla and Phacelia

The Phacelia, Desert Dandelion and Chuparosa near the Visitor Center are stunning. I especially like the way the Phacelia hugs the cholla in the fields. There are superb opportunities to catch backlit cactus wreathed in purple. Dune Primroses are the highlight of a trip down San Giorgio Road and the beginning of the Coyote Canyon Road. There are a few Lilies here and lots of Verbena, but it is still early times for these lower elevation meadows. It will really pop in about a week.

Anza Borrego State Park
Yucca Bud and Manroot Flower, Plum Canyon

Golden hillsides covered in Desert Poppies greet you as you move south towards Ocotillo Wells. Look for Agave blooming on SR-78.

The surprise treasure for this trip was Plum Canyon. The Wild Apricots are in full blossom. Yuccas are blooming, and even the Nipple Cactus have begun to flower. There were Phacelia, Canterbury Bells, Desert Poppies, Golden Evening Primrose and Chuparosa. Belly flowers were looking good, especially Purple Mat and Desert Star. The variety in this unassuming little canyon was surprising, especially since many locations at this altitude have not even begun to flower.

Anza Borrego State Park
Anza Borrego State Park

Anza Borrego will have great flowers all the way until Easter, provided we don’t have an extended heat wave before then.

Joshua Tree National Park

Can I say superbloom? I really think it is a superbloom year for Joshua Tree. The southern meadows are an absolutely incredible patchwork of yellow, purple and white. I have never seen such a profusion of Chia. Lupine are everywhere. There are four different kinds of white Evening Primroses, and tons of Cryptantha. Desert Dandelions, Desert Poppies, Bladderpod, Brittlebush and Golden Evening Primrose provide the yellow. My favorite in the meadows are the Sand Blazing Stars. Big flowers, satiny petals and subtle striping combine to make this flower a winner.

Joshua Tree National Park
Superbloom?

Belly flowers abound on the banks of the washes. Look for Desert Star, Purple Mat and Bigelow Mimulus. Canterbury Bells are all over the washes, and what’s more, they are only beginning. The number of plants coming up astounds me. In 2 weeks, these washes will be filled wall to wall with them, a sea of blue. The first Globemallow are starting to flower. Look for more as the days go by. Common Phacelia can be found under every tree and bush. Pincushions are beginning to show up. All of this is in the last few miles south of the Cottonwood Visitor Center.

Joshua Tree National Park
Sand Blazing Star

Expect to see the endless fields of flowers creep up the Pinto Basin as the days go by and the nights warm up. The bloom farther north is barely beginning, but you can see the signs of bountiful flowers on the way. Smoke Tree and Porcupine Washes are showing some color. Look for Yucca flowers in Porcupine Wash. North of the cholla forest, the varieties change. The ground is covered with Goldfields and Wooly Daisies. Even further north, the Joshua Trees are blooming, too. And it’s still early times here. Expect even more as the weeks go by.

Joshua Tree National Park
Goldfields

Traveling north of Joshua Tree. The Amboy Road is lined with Lupine and Desert Dandelion, making for a very pretty ride.

Mojave National Preserve

Bladderpod
Bladderpod

 

South is where to go for the flowers this year. The northern parks, well, not so much. I think it looked more promising in Mojave 3 weeks ago. The cold and wind have taken their toll. Although there are still a lot of green areas and there are a few Bladderpod blooming, nothing much is going on here.

Death Valley National Park

Purple Mat
Purple Mat

Poor Death Valley. The area did not receive the big December rain the southern parks got to set things off. There has been quite a phenomenal amount of rain this month, more than 3 inches.

Globemallow
Globemallow

A lot of the roadsides are very, very green. Passing through Jubilee Pass, I see lots and lots of tiny seedlings. Looking closer, I notice that there is an extensive variety to these seedlings – Desert Five-spot, Gravel Ghost, Primrose, Gilia… you name it. Brown-eyed Evening Primroses are beginning to bloom everywhere. I found Fremont Phacelia on the east side of Salsbury Pass. If it was late January or the beginning of February, I’d be psyched!

But it’s not. It’s the middle of March. These flowers are running 4 to 5 weeks late. In Death Valley you can’t afford to run a month late.

Brittlebush
Brittlebush

If the weather only heats up moderately, there will be a nice bloom in the southern part of the park. Triple digits anytime in the next 3 weeks will cause many of these tender seedlings to shrivel up and die.

The cold and wind from the last month’s storm systems have taken a toll. Expect nothing at Ashford Mill. The main valley north of mile marker 30 on the Badwater Road is looking especially grim.

It’s kind of like Goldilocks and the Three Bears – too cold, too hot… we need the sweet spot in the middle to have good flowers anywhere in the lower elevations of Death Valley this year. There will be some, but how many and how long they will last depends on moderate temps and not too much more wind.

Anza Borrego State Park
Butterfly on Brown Eyed Evening Primrose

Right now, the best flowers in the park are a few clumps of Desert Gold, Phacelia and Brown-eyed Evening Primrose on Hwy.190 between the Inn and the Ranch. Belly flowers, – Mohavia and Desert Star, are showing up in the southern Black Mountains. Sweetbush is blooming at the mouth of Titus Canyon.

Wild Heliotrope
Phacelia

The higher elevations are a different story. I am expecting a great flower season in the high country later on this spring. If you are looking for flowers in Death Valley, you might try April and head for the hills.

No matter where or when you go, happy flower hunting!

Joshua Tree National Park
Super-sized Canterbury Bell