2019 Photography Destinations – A Baker’s Dozen Part 1

Tucson, AZ

As I look back over 2019, I feel fortunate. I had some incredible opportunities to spend time in a few of our country’s most amazing photography destinations. Some were popular places, in danger of being loved to death. Others were just as special, but not as well known, the kinds of places that creep up on you and get under your skin. Forever.

I thought I’d make a Top Ten list, it being close to the New Year and all. But I found  I couldn’t narrow it down to just ten places. So I came up with a baker’s dozen. Then my post was too long. So I broke it into parts 1 and 2,  the Rambling Ranger’s favorite photography destinations of 2019. Here is Part 1.

13) Elkhorn Slough / Moss Landing

This spot is one of those best-kept secrets. It’s a location that skates by under the radar on a coastline filled with destinations that are a bit TOO popular (Big Sur, Point Lobos, Monterey). Although Elkhorn Slough doesn’t have the flashy scenery of those more fashionable destinations, the wildlife watching here is fabulous. Look for a plethora of shorebirds. The main draw, however, is the sea otters. This just may be the best place on the Pacific coast to observe those cute little critters.

Moss Landing State Beach, California
Sea Otter Waving

12) Death Valley National Park

I spent most of March in Death Valley. I had committed myself months earlier to leading a few hikes there,  before I could predict where the best desert wildflowers would be. The flowers were very late in Death Valley, with only a few blooming in March. It drove me a little crazy to be stuck there, as I knew that both Anza-Borrego and Joshua Tree were experiencing exceptional blooms.

But the great thing about Death Valley is that it is an amazing photography destination even if there are no flowers blooming. The austere beauty and diversity of landscapes offer endless opportunities for inspiration and creativity. I saw a few new places and revisited a lot of old favorites, too.

Mesquite Sand Dunes
Death Valley National Park

11) Southern Colorado Rockies

I had a short housesit in Durango over Thanksgiving this year. It’s always a blessing to spend time in southern Colorado. I love that edge environment, where the mountains meet the desert, giving you the best of both worlds. From the Great Sand Dunes to the many hot springs, from the jagged ragged peaks of the Rockies to the mesas and canyons of the Colorado Plateau, there were so many choices, all within a day’s drive of my base in Durango. The southern Colorado Rockies are another place I find myself returning to, again and again.

Million Dollar Highway
Durango is beautiful.

10) Denali Highway

This is one of my favorite places to see the fall colors in Alaska. And Alaska often has some OUTRAGEOUS fall colors! The blueberries are pretty incredible on the Denali Highway, too! Late August to early September is the time frame to aim for if you want to see the tundra put on its fancy dancin’ clothes. Special bonus: You might get lucky and see that visual symphony, the Aurora, too!

The Denali Highway is a great fall photography destination
Fall colors along the Denali Highway

9) Rocky Mountain National Park

Rocky has a special place in my heart because I lived in both Estes Park and Grand Lake long ago in my younger days. I was fortunate to land a housesit in Allenspark, at the southwest corner of Rocky Mountain National Park, in October. It was a blast from the past, revisiting the environment that first instilled in me my deep love of the mountains.

Rocky is one of the best places in the country to catch the elk rut. It is also home to superb alpine scenery, wonderful hikes, and brilliant aspens.  One thing to keep in mind – like Arches and Zion, this park is in the process of being loved to death. Be aware of your impact. Choose the trail less traveled. Give the animals their space and leave no trace so that we can all continue to enjoy Rocky for generations to come.

Colorado Rockies
My old stomping grounds

8) Point Pinos

Storm watching. Big waves. That’s why Point Pinos, in Pacific Grove, California, made my list. This is the first place I’ve ever been at all successful at capturing the essence of the power of the ocean. The surf here is awesome, in the original sense of that word.

Pacific Grove was also a place of great sadness for me, where I witnessed the crash of ecosystems, both terrestrial and maritime. The near-extinction of the Monarch Butterfly and the exponential effects of sea star wasting and a warming ocean were only too apparent during my stay here. Although it was heartbreaking, I felt it was important to be a witness.

Big wave, Point Pinos, Monterey Coast, CA
Point Pinos is a great place to watch the big waves.

7) Tucson, Arizona

There’s a reason why Arizona sunsets are famous. I swear they’re the most lurid sunsets I’ve ever seen! I love the cacti, too, stately saguaro and crazy cholla. I spent a few weeks in Tucson on a housesit last February and was surprised at how much I liked it since I’m not much of a city girl.  But national and state parks abound, as well as other great open spaces.

Colorful sunsets make Saguaro National Park an excellent photography destination.
Crazy cholla

These were just a few of my favorite photo destinations for 2019. I’ll let you in on the rest by New Year’s Eve. What were some of yours? Let me know in the comments!

 

 

Elkhorn Slough and Moss Landing – Watchable Wildlife Treasure

Shorebirds at Elkhorn Slough, California

I spent a month this winter in Monterey, California. There were a lot of reasons I wanted to explore this part of the central California coast.  I wanted to watch wild waves in winter storms. I wanted to search for sea stars in slippery tidal pools. I wanted to hike skinny trails overlooking precipitous cliffs and crashing surf.  I  wanted to spend quality time getting to know a different environment, one I’d  had little opportunity to experience.  I wanted to commune with the coast.

I did all those things. I also found another special place, an unexpected treasure.

Elkhorn Slough
This place is for the birds!

Elkhorn Slough

Did you ever know someone who was quiet and unassuming, easy to overlook, but pure gold when you got to know them? Elkhorn Slough and Moss Landing are like that. They’re easily overshadowed by the flashier natural attractions nearby. This region to the north of Monterey doesn’t have the dramatic scenery of Big Sur or Point Lobos. It’s not a place where you can stop at a viewpoint, take an Instagram selfie, and say you’ve been there. You need to take your time here. Its power is more subtle.

 

Managing Elkhorn Slough means removing exotic eucalyptus trees and planting coastal oaks.
Lovely old oak at Elkhorn Slough

Elkhorn Slough is a mosaic of private and public land united in the effort to protect the estuary and restore it to a pristine environment. The Nature Conservancy recognized that this could be one of the last great places and got the ball rolling. The lands are now managed by the non-profit Elkhorn Slough Foundation. The waters within the slough are managed by the state. It is a State Marine Reserve and Conservation Area and a National Estuarine Research Reserve.

Elkhorn Slough is the second largest freshwater estuary in the state of California. surpassed in size only by San Francisco Bay. You might be beginning to understand why I consider this place a national treasure.

Moss Landing State Beach, California
Sea Otter napping

This is where the sea otters hang out. Elkhorn Slough hosts California’s largest concentration of sea otters. That’s right, those adorable, ultra-cute, playful little critters that melt everybody’s heart. Sea otters.

Theirs is another great comeback story. Sea otters used to range from Baja California to Alaska. They were hunted to the brink of extinction for their fur, the thickest, most luxurious fur in the world. The southern population came especially close to extinction. By 1938, only about 50 survived, living in remote waters off Big Sur.

There are nearly 3,000 sea otters in California now. They play a vital role in maintaining a healthy coastal ecosystem. They keep the kelp forests alive by eating sea urchins. The urchins’ population has exploded because their main predator, starfish,  has declined catastrophically  due to sea star wasting disease.  Sea urchins are decimating the kelp forests along most of the Pacific Coast, but Monterey Bay’s kelp forests are surviving due to the otters.

Sea otters alone are a good reason to visit Elkhorn Slough. But there’s more. Elkhorn Slough is also a birder’s delight. It provides habitat for nearly 350 different species of birds. Wading birds rule here. There are ducks galore and dozens of different kinds of shorebirds. Raptors to hunt them all. Songbirds, woodpeckers, hummingbirds, the list goes on and on.

Elkhorn Slough
Whimbrel

You would think a place like this would be overrun with visitors, but it’s not. If it had National Park or State Park after its name it would be, but there’s protection in anonymity. I visited on a Saturday and was the only participant on the ranger-led nature walk.

The best way to visit Elkhorn Slough is by kayak. Although, of course, you need to give the animals their space, you can really immerse yourself in their environment when you’re on the water.

Moss landing State Wildlife Area
Willet and Least Sandpipers

If you are visiting by land, be aware of the tides when you come. If it’s high tide, that’s the time to see the otters. Elkhorn Slough at high tide is an especially good place to see momma sea otters with their babies. If there is a king tide, though, you may not be able to reach the best blind for the sea otters. Pay attention to the tide table and the weather!

Low tide is best for bird watchers. It was low tide when I visited. The birds were fantastic, but I was a little disappointed that I’d missed the sea otters. The ranger empathized and let me in on another little known wildlife watching hot spot.

Moss Landing State Beach, California
Sea Otter Waving

Moss Landing

Moss Landing State Beach and State Wildlife area is home to a bachelor gang of sea otters. Yup, hanging out with the boys is something sea otter males do. You can find them there practically any time. They are very entertaining to watch. They have a few different games they like to play. One is wrestling, and then there are a couple they play solo; endless somersaults and continuous barrelrolling. Their favorite activity, though, seems to be napping.

Moss Landing State Beach
Snowy Egret Fishing

Moss Landing State Beach is another great birdwatching location, especially at low tide.

Walk over the dunes to the actual beach, and that’s where the surfers go. You can watch another kind of wild life there!

Moss Landing State Beach is easy to overlook. If you wait for the sign, you’ll miss it, and it’s a busy two-lane highway. It’s hard to turn around, as the traffic is often nearly bumper to bumper. If you’re coming from Monterey, look for the sign that says “Jetty Road” after you pass by the tiny village of Moss Landing.

Moss Landing, CA
You can see seals, here, too!

In the town of Moss Landing, there is yet another great wildlife watching opportunity. Salinas River State Beach and Wildlife Area is at the end of the road.

If you’re in the Monterey area, take a day off from the flashier destinations and head north to Elkhorn Slough and Moss Landing. You’ll be glad you did!

Great Blue Heron

 

Great Blue Heron
Heron Fishing