Butterflies

At around 7000 feet, in the Big Elk Meadows area west of Lyons, CO.  Some species were feeding on flowers, others on the sap of trees or the damp ground in the bottom of the gulch.​

Hoary Comma, Polygonia gracilus



Lupine Blue (Plebejus icarioides)

Lupine Blue, Plebejus icarioides

Fritillary

Perhaps Speyeria atlantis, the Atlantis Fritillary.



Callophrys gryneus (Cedar Hairstreak)

Cedar Hairstreak, Callophrys gryneus



Streamside Checkerspot (Chlosyne nycteis)

Streamside Checkerspot, Chlosyne nycteis



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White Admiral, Limenitis arthemis



Small blue butterflies.

Lupine Blues, Plebejus icarioides, and Silver-studded Blues, Plebejus acmon, gather to feed on nutrient-rich water in a drying stream bed.

Foxes

I had the privilege of sharing several days early in the lives of five fox kits and their parents. And I was able to shoot some photos and video of the whole gang.

Fox kits play follow the leader.

Follow the leader.



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The kits were about 3 weeks old when these photos were taken and still had their blue eyes and dark coloring.



Fox and kit.

Greeting.



Two kits.

Siblings. Faces are starting to fill in with some of the red color that they will carry through adulthood.



Mom nursing kits.

Time for a snack.

More Eagles

The same Eagles as yesterday, actually. At least I think so.

Better light today, but not as much flying around. In fact, both eagles stayed perched the whole time I was watching them - about half an hour. They did do a bunch of calling and posturing right around the time the sun came up.

Bald eagle
Bald eagle

Bald Eagle

Bald Eagles

My usual commute has been carefully chosen to take me through farmland, horse pastures, and the occasional cluster of suburban dwellings - "the road less traveled by", as it were. Although I hardly get the car up to 50 mph at all along the route, it still only takes half an hour, and is a peaceful, contemplative, and mostly scenic drive. Nothing to do to get from point A to point B except watch the road and listen to the radio.

From time to time I have glimpsed what I thought was an unusually bulky bird flying low over the fields and wondered if it was an owl or an eagle, but have never been close enough to tell. That changed a couple of days ago when passed directly under an adult bald eagle sitting in a tree at the edge of one of the small lakes I pass.

So yesterday I geared up and left the house a little early, and spent an hour or so watching the TWO eagles take the occasional pass over the lake and come back to their favorite perches at the shore. It was completely overcast, so the light was no good, but I got a couple of shots anyway.

In flight over the lake.

Flying over the lake.

Perched.

Perched.

I am going out early again this morning - it is going to be a clear day and I hope the eagles are there.

Daybreak - Meeker Peak and Long's Peak

A time-lapse sequence of 345 still images, shot every 10 seconds between approximately 6:40 and 7:40 AM.

The viewpoint is Lyons, Colorado, and the two snowy peaks on the horizon at center are [left to right] Mount Meeker [summit elevation 13,911 ft/4,240 m] and Long's Peak [summit elevation 14,259 ft/4,346 m].

The rising sun [behind the viewer] illuminates the sky around Mount Meeker and Long's Peak - the highest point in Rocky Mountain National Park.

Birds in flight

A few shots from the "Free Flight" program at the Arizona Sonora Desert Museum: Great Horned Owl

Great Horned Owl.

Great Horned Owl, flaring for landing

Great Horned Owl in the flare for landing.

Ferruginous Hawk

Ferruginous Hawk.

Ferruginous Hawk

Ferruginous Hawk.

Chiracahuan Raven

Chiracahuan Raven.

And, not in flight:

Anna's Hummingbird

Anna's Hummingbird.

Dead Horse Point

I always wanted to see this well-known photo destination. Given its popularity, I thought I would get there early to make sure I had a good vantage point for some photos. So I got up in time to be at the entrance when the Dead Horse Point State Park officially opened at 6 AM.

It was about a 40-minute drive from downtown Moab, in total darkness. There was nobody in the gatehouse when I arrived at the park entrance, so I put my ten dollar entrance fee in the provided envelope and dropped it in the designated slot, then drove to the parking lot at the end of the point.

I need not have worried about beating the crowd - the place was desolate. Fifteen degrees Fahrenheit and a bit windy, and still pitch black. So I grabbed the flashlight and walked across the dry layer of crunchy snow to the overlook. Couldn't see a damned thing - just a void between the line of rosy light along the southeastern horizon in the distance and wall marking the boundary of the overlook.

So I went back to the car and rewarmed until there was enough dawn light to try again. I still couldn't see the shape of the land below from the overlook, but the camera could. So I took a couple of long exposures to figure out where to point the camera for the composition I wanted.

Hope you like the photo - waiting until the sun rose high enough to kiss the top of the point, I froze my @ss off to get it!

Dead Horse Point at sunrise.

Utah

Southeastern Utah and Castle Valley, near Moab.

Rock formation near Dewey, UT

Rock formation near Dewey, UT.

Fisher towers from the Northeast approach to Moab.

Fisher Towers, framed by mesas notched by the Colorado River, on the approach to Moab, UT from the Northeast. The La Sal Mountains stand in the distance.

Castle Valley.

Castle Valley.

Ghosts #1 - Castle Valley snow showers.

Ghosts 1: The ghost of Parriott Mesa [6155'] rises behind a gnarled tree during a Castle Valley snow storm.

Ghostly rock formations during a Castle Valley snow storm.

Ghosts 2: The ghost of Parriott Mesa [6155'] rises behind a gnarled tree during a Castle Valley snow storm.

Orange and Gold - Cub Lake

A warm weekend in Colorado - but the signs of Autumn are all around.

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Sunrise and aspens on Fern Lake Road, Rocky Mountain National Park.

Aspen-lined road.

Aspens along Fern Lake Road.
 

Looking west towards Stones Peak and Nakai Peak

Looking west towards Stones Peak and Nakai Peak.

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Moraine Park.

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Cub Lake.

Cub Lake.

Duck on Cub Lake.

Orange and gold.

Orange and gold.  And blue.

Aspens along the trail.

River and sumac.

Sumac along the Big Thompson River.

Glacier Gorge, Rocky Mountain National Park

Not much to say, except that it was another fine weekend along the front range of the Rocky Mountains.

Black Lake panorama

Black Lake panorama.

Alberta Falls

The rocks surrounding Alberta Falls glow pink in the pre-dawn light.

Falls and canyon.

Canyon above Alberta Falls.

Near Mills Lake.

Near Mills Lake.

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Early in the morning, the sun reaches the eastern-facing slopes but the river bottoms remain in shadow.

Mountain stream.

Later in day, as the sun reaches deeper into the canyons and valleys.

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Looking downstream from near the upper end of Mills Lake.

Black Lake from above.

Looking down on Black Lake.

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Cascade and flowers above Black Lake.

High country.  Looking north back down Glacier Gorge.

High country. Looking north back down Glacier Gorge.

Rocky Mountain National Park loop

Boulder - Lake Granby - Estes Park - Boulder

Loop around Rocky Mountain National Park, from Boulder to Black Hawk to Empire to Estes Park and Lyons, and back to Boulder.

Not much photography this week. I figured the trails would be pretty crowded with Labor Day Weekenders grabbing their last handfuls of summer before the kids go back into school.

So instead I took a drive. A sort of big loop around and through Rocky Mountain National Park. I left Boulder around 6:00 AM. We've overpopulated and overdeveloped such that the names of places and streets become ironic: so many places named after birds and animals probably haven't had a trace of their namesakes for fifty or a hundred years. However, it's probably going to be millennia before Boulder's Canyon Boulevard loses its aptness. The street funnels you right into Boulder Canyon - a deep, deep gash carved by the creek that runs from Barker Reservoir into the City of Boulder.

I drove through the canyon towards Nederland, stopping to snap an old cabin and some thistles on the side of the road.

Cabin and thistles

Cabin and thistles.

Climbing south out of Nederland, near the Los Lagos reservoirs, I came upon mist rising off the surface of this pond as the sun started to hit the trees on the opposite shore.

Mists rise of the warm waters of a pond as the sun strikes the treeline.

"Sea smoke", the mist that forms over bodies of water as cold air passes over warmer water.

Ducks enjoy the warm sun.

Ducks enjoy the warm sun after a cool night in the mountains.

Out of the roadside village of Rollinsville, I snapped the creek reflecting the brightening eastern sky as the sun reached the flanks of Starr Peak.

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Creek near Rollinsville and Starr Peak.

The city of Black Hawk, one of Colorado's old mining towns, looked interesting, but the massive casino hotels all but covered the approaches to town - I drove on through, down to Interstate 70, where I shot this photo of Stanley Mine buildings before I turned north on Rt. 40 towards Lake Granby and Grand Lake, where I had a nice breakfast at the Grand Lake Lodge.

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Stanley Mine buildings.

Breakfast at the Grand Lake Lodge.

Breakfast with a view.


Entering Rocky Mountain National Park, I drove through Kawuneeche Valley [Coyote Valley] before climbing up onto Trail Ridge Road. Lots of traffic up there, and lots of cars at all of the stopping points. I stopped for a few more photos before crossing the Continental Divide and descending into Estes Park and turning back southward for Boulder.

Trail Ridge road near the Continental Divide.

Trail Ridge Road near the Continental Divide, looking back westward towards the 12,000-foot Gore Range.

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Looking across Forest Canyon towards Mt. Julian and Mt. Ida.

Lakes of the week

It's a good habit, getting up early. I did it in Japan, too. Problem was, my ability to get anywhere before the first trains started running at 5:30 or 6:00 AM made it impossible for me to catch the sunrise any time except the dead of winter.

Japan lies so far towards the eastern edge of its time zone that the sun comes up at around 4:15 AM during the summer. Even in the dead of winter, I had barely enough time to get on the train to Izu Kogen station and then race down the path to the Jyogasaki Coast before the sun rose over the island of Izu Oshima.

Living in Tokyo I never wanted or needed my own car. Getting almost anywhere in the city is convenient, safe, and not too expensive if you are willing to use the trains and do a little walking. And getting a driver's license is a hassle for Americans. Brits and Kiwis and license-holders of other favored nations that have a national permit system can apply and automatically receive a Japanese license. But because licenses in the USA are obtained within the State of residence, I guess a such reciprocity cannot be arranged, therefore US citizens must take a written and vehicular drivers test to get their Japanese license. And you can't use the so-called "International Drivers Licens" you get at triple-A if you are a resident of Japan.

So I never bothered with a car, or the time and expense of getting a Japanese driver's license.

But down the coast in Ito, a car would have made sense and would have given me a lot more flexibility to explore - especially around the edge of the light where a landscape photographer take advantage of the changing contrast and color around sunrise and sunset.

Landscape Photography's Biggest Secret

I figure the biggest secret of "daylight" landscape photography is this: If you are not in place 30 minutes before sunrise or 30 minutes before sunset, you lose. Sure, there are exceptions. But in the great majority of places, the element that really makes the scene extraordinary is the light.

Take Saturday morning, for example. Here's a shot taken at 8:08 AM at Dream Lake:

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8:08 AM: Dream Lake after sunrise.

A pleasant scene. But here is a shot from about the same place, exactly one-and-a-half hours earlier:

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6:38 AM: Dream Lake as the rising sun strikes the mountain backdrop.

The orange peaks against the blue sky, the reflection in the dark surface of the lake, and the deep sloping shadows framing the scene make for a much more interesting and dramatic view. All thanks to the light.


More from the same morning

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5:30 AM: Crescent moon - more like "sliver moon" actually.

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6:26 AM: Mountain stream. Leaving the shutter open for a quarter of a second gives the flowing water a misty dreamlike quality.


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6:46 AM: The sun appears.

Deadwood along the margin of Emerald Lake.

Deadwood along the margin of Emerald Lake in black-and-white.


Well, just because you missed sunrise or sunset doesn't mean all is lost: there is still a lot you can shoot any time of day. On my morning hikes, I try to get the expansive landscape shots around the "magic hour" around sunrise, then do closer-in shots after the sun is up. Macro photography especially benefits from plenty of light.

Wild flowers and downed wood.

Wildflowers and downed wood.

Stream and peaks.

Stream, wildflowers, and peaks.

Trees reflected.

Trees reflected. Despite the harsh sunlight at the top of the image, there is lots of deep color in the reflections in the water.


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Same planet, different world.

Relocation

In the last 5 weeks, I have:

  • Moved out of my apartment of 6 years in Ito
  • Left Japan after 10 years, two-and-a-half months of residence
  • Shared goodbye meals with some good friends with the hope that it won't be too long before I see them again
  • Been living out of a suitcase, a hotel, and a rental car

During my residence in Japan, I had the chance to visit the USA at least a couple times a year, and during my years working with the Reno Air Races, I usually spent about two weeks in September immersed in American culture.

While in Japan, those visits to America always seemed like a dream, and while in America, Japan seemed like a dream. Maybe that's because I have so few friends who have straddled both worlds.

But I have always felt like both places had their special strengths and weaknesses, their unique attractions and flavors. And as I reached the decision during the early months of this year to leave Japan and return to the US, I began to focus more on those things that were hard to do in Japan, but easy to do in the USA:

  • Take photos before sunrise: Japan lies at the eastern edge of its time zone, and the sun rises during mid-summer before 4:30 AM. And because I never owned a car, and always used public transport in Japan, it was impossible to be where I wanted to be at sunrise. So, I missed half of the magic hours that photographers cherish, only being able to shoot sunsets, but no sunrises. And since I lived on the east coast of the Izu Peninsula, with a tall range of mountains to the West, shooting sunsets required some travel. In the USA, I can drive to where I want to be whenever I want.
  • Play music: we'll see how this goes. But my apartment in Ito was electronically very noisy. My building being one of the tallest in town, there were a lot of antennas on the roof, and I suspect they were the source of all of the hums and buzzes that I could never get rid of whenever I tried to do some recording in my apartment. I am hopeful that this won't be a problem when I move into a place here. And I also expect I can find some opportunities to play out in town - there were very few live music venues in Ito, and moving equipment was always a problem - it's hard to lug a guitar, much less an amp or anything else, on the bus or train.
  • I can express myself: even after 10 years in Japan, I don't feel like I have the cultural context to express myself the way I can in American English. Not surprising, but still it is a pleasure to be able to speak with shades of meaning, and be playful with my native language, where I may have been only slightly better than, "See Spot run. Run, Spot, run!" when speaking Japanese.

Do I miss Japan? Every day.

Will I go back? I certainly plan to.

But in the meantime, there is lots to do here to get settled again. I feel lucky to be where I am in Colorado - from here in Boulder west across the Rockies into the Four Corners and down into Arizona is an area that contains some of my favorite territory in North America. I am lucky to be able to live here.

Exploration

I have already had some great hikes, and although my best camera gear is in storage awaiting delivery when I am able to receive it, I have been able to scout some places that I want to return to again.

This morning, I left my hotel at midnight, and drove an hour to the trailhead leading up to Long's Peak - one of Colorado's 53 so-called "14-ers" - mountains whose summits exceed 14,000 feet above see level.

I met up with two new friends from Denver [thanks, Glenn and Marble!], and we climbed through the darkness starting at 2:00 AM. By 3:00, we had climbed from about 9,400 to 11,000 feet and were above the tree line.

We were not alone: the parking lot was nearly full and there were lots of other hikers on the trail, getting an early start for the summit. I took this photo at 3:04 AM - the light traces from the headlamps of climbers bobbing in the darkness like giant fireflies.

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3:04 AM: Headlamps of hikers appear like giant fireflies as they pass a stela marking the route to the summit of Long's Peak. Orion's Belt (three equally-spaced stars in a vertical line) floats above the horizon at right.

By 4:00, we had reached 11,500 feet elevation, and the point where the trail to Chasm Lake, our destination, separates from the route to the summit. And by 4:30, we were approaching the Lake, and I turned around to shoot this image of the approaching sunrise.

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4:34 AM: About a quarter mile from Chasm Lake, looking east, and back from whence we came, towards sunrise.

I had just enough time to climb the last 500 feet or so over a hump of slickrock to race around to the east side of Chasm Lake to be in position to shoot this panorama as the sun hit the face of the Longs Peak range.

The rising sun hits

5:15 AM: The rising sun hits "The Diamond" - the east face of Longs Peak - in the distance at right, reflected in Chasm Lake.

After so much climbing in the dark, it was nice to have the sun, and I shot a few more photos during the descent back to the trailhead, arriving there at about 9:30 AM. From there, it was an hour's drive back to Boulder and a nice nap!

Columbine in bloom at about 11,700 feet, on the descent from Chasm Lake

5:50 AM: Columbine in bloom at about 11,700 feet, on the descent from Chasm Lake.

Wildflowers and a mountain stream just below Chasm Lake.

6:00 AM: Wildflowers and a mountain stream just below Chasm Lake.

Yellow-bellied marmot.

Yellow-bellied marmot.

Still above the treeline, at about 10,800 feet.  Wildflowers and a route marker.

7:20 AM: Still above the tree line, descending through 10,800 feet. Wildflowers and a route marker.

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8:00 AM: Back in the shade of the forest. Still an hour and a half to reach the trailhead.