In winter various birds congregate on the ponds just behind our house.
One photographer complained that he had to travel 50 miles to photograph birds and some people find them in their backyard! I am fortunate to live by two ponds, a nature area, and a golf course. Sometimes I see something and go for my camera. Other times I take the camera on a short walk and see what I can find.
I attended a workshop where all the participants took turns shooting drops of water falling into a crystal bowl with colorful cloth under and behind the bowl. Working with a flash we tried to capture the droplets in focus and well lighted. I had no idea how entertaining and challenging the process would be and how beautiful and varied the results would be. I may play with this again in my studio with a close-up lens, a tripod, sustained lighting, and various bowls and backdrops.
I didn’t know until I read up on Bryce Canyon that it is near the top of “The Grand Staircase.” Thinking of the bottom of the Grand Canyon as the base of the staircase, sedimentary rocks “recount a history of 525 million years.” The so-called pink cliffs of Bryce (that I think of as orange) are made of sandstone from sedimentation. “Massive tectonic plate activity from 20 to 15 million years ago began to thrust up a tremendous swath of the earth’s crust” nearly two miles to form the 130,000-square-mile Colorado Plateau. (Bryce Canyon National Park brochure) This tectonic force pushed up unevenly causing the exposed layers to appeal diagonal instead of horizontal. Geologists have identified the content, named the layers and dated them.
Because of the high altitude of Bryce ( 8,000 to 9,000 feet), the air does not retain moisture well. Therefore, the temperature can vary over 40 degrees in a single day. About 180 days a year the temperatures swing from below freezing at night to warm afternoons. This means that snow melts, seeps into crevices, turns to ice, cracks the rock around it and causes erosion. This frost-wedging shapes the rock walls into fins, opens windows, and when the tops of the windows break, limestone pillars. Here is a small sample of the fascinating scenery from the “Bryce Amphitheater.”
This is but a small sample of the photos I made on this trip to Zion National Park. Each time I look at them I am reminded of the beauty that has been entrusted to our care. I was impressed by the use of shuttle busses through the main canyon. They managed the car traffic and helped visitors to be able to see many sights without having to sit in traffic, find parking places and make the drivers miss out on the spectacular scenery. They ran so often that visitors don’t have to spend long periods waiting. The shuttles make our time in the park more enjoyable. The multiple visitors’ centers allow many teaching opportunities and a chance to sit and watch short movies in between hikes.
Traveling along scenic highways 160 and 89, we visited un-named rock formations as well as the Wupatki and Sunset Crater Volcano National Monuments. Early in the morning the sun shone then clouds built. A cold rain storm accompanied us and painted the clouds in the colors of bruises and saturated the orange sedimentary and black volcanic rocks. It reminded me of a visit to Pompeii on a rainy day, where a community was engulfed in an volcanic eruption.
Traveling across the mesa, the Valley of the Gods abruptly touches it. Descending on a narrow, unpaved road with multiple tight switchbacks we hoped we wouldn’t encounter a vehicle too big to clear a switchback. Dust obscured the view of the road. Despite the treacherous road we were again mesmerized by the views of the valley. We had been here on our honeymoon, on a hundred degree day in July with no air conditioning. This time the air was cool and we drove in relative comfort and it was late afternoon with a storm approaching. The sky was dramatic and mercurial. I exposed the camera to the sandblast and hoped the seals are as tight as advertised.
The area in Southwest Colorado and Southeast Utah is rich in history of the ancient Pueblo people and amazing natural beauty. I hope by sharing thee glimpses that more people will come to respect and protect these lands held sacred by people who came before the Europeans.
,The rugged lands of New Mexico demand talent and resilience to cultivate them. That is true for the Chaco culture a thousand years ago and true today with our current tools. Starting in the early 20th century significant efforts have unearthed 2,000 dwellings and restored some so that we can see the remnants of a complex community, harnessing the canyon waters to cultivate crops. Current thinking is that a prolonged drought motivated them to seek a new home, but some say this is part of a migration that brought them from Asia and took them farther south.