Oct 28

        We decided to go to the east side of the Sierra Nevada in search of fall color.  We couldn’t go the week before due to commitments and our daughter’s wedding.  It is late in the season but we really wanted to see what was left of the fall color.  Our photographer friend Franka Gabler joined our ‘day trip’.  She met us at our home at 3:15am.  We loaded her equipment into our car and left about 3:35am, the morning air was 47 degrees.  Dave and Franka talked about cameras and photography most of the time.  We passed Olmstead Point around 5:40, it was 30 degrees.  Without a moon, the sky was brilliant with stars, there were even a few bright shooting stars. 

    When we reached the stop sign at the foot of 120 and 395 it was 6:30am, 23 degrees.  By the time we arrived at the June Lake Loop a few minutes later the temperature had dropped to 16 degrees.  We drove past Grant Lake, then Silver Lake before we chose our first stop to photograph.  At 17 degrees it doesn’t take long for the fingers to start feeling the cold, then the pain sets in.

First Stop.  First photograph of the day.

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Franka’s body language said, ‘it’s cold!’.

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Our next stop was along the river between Silver and Grant Lakes.  We had finally warmed up by the time we reached this destination.  The mist was rising from the river.  This side of the road was in the shadow of the mountain and wouldn’t receive sun for quite a while.  Despite being 17 degrees the plants didn’t look frosty.  The peak of color is obviously gone but there was still some areas with color.  The bare trunks of the aspen are always interesting subjects.

  David, in my photograph, geez.  The white strip is a nice size waterfall.

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The plants along the edge of the river were frosty.

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When we got back to the car at 8:40 we were all in pain.  Our fingers and toes were frozen.   During the hour+ we’d spent photographing the temperature had gone from 17 to 19 degrees.  Our next stop was the Mono Lake Committee Visitor Center to inquire about fall color….and to get some hot coffee. 

Refueled with coffee and giant cookies from Latte Da Coffee at the El Mono Motel we were ready for our next location.  As we left Lee Vining we noticed a hillside along the highway that had good color.  We were on our way to Lundy Canyon.  The color there was past peak but there were other nice elements that caught our eyes.

Lundy Lake

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We left Lundy Canyon and returned to the hillside outside of Lee Vining.  I like the airy grasses in the amber light of the aspen trees.

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David photographing in the distance.

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Looking out to Mono Lake from the hillside.

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At 2:30, 48 degrees, we leave the hillside and drive back to June Lake Loop to explore Aspen groves  on the opposite side of the road from where we photographed along the river.  Dave and Franka were uninspired by the light of this time of day….I’m just a painter so I was in heaven taking reference photos and enjoying all the possible paintings running through my head.

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Looking from the Aspen Grove down to the car which is near the truck that is barely visible.

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Franka sitting on a rock looking through the pictures she’s taken.  We were waiting for Dave who was still in the grove you see here.

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At 4:30 we leave June Lake Loop and start our journey home.  The light on the mountains of Tioga pass was beautiful.  We were hoping for a pretty sunset from Tenaya Lake or Olmstead Point. 

Near the top of the steep grade of Tioga Pass, taken out the car window.

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Just inside the Yosemite Park Gate.

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Looking back at Tuolumne Meadow.

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Tenaya Lake.  (they actually stopped the car for me)

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We were very hopeful there might be a nice view from Olmstead Point.  It was almost dark when we rounded the bend at Olmstead Point and could see down the valley to the side of Half Dome.  Franka started squealing like a stuck pig or a kid who gets to go to Disneyland.  The valley was covered in rolling fog with Half Dome poking through the fog and an orange glow of sunset laying on the horizon.  Streaks of pink lingered in the sky.  It was beautiful!  I posted a photograph from the same area so you can see Half Dome lit by the setting sun to compare it to what we witnessed.  I captured a few photographs before my battery died with perfect timing.

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Oct 23

We took another day trip to the Eastside on Thursday, October 21.

Pictures from our second day trip to the Eastside.  I really downsized them to fit into an email

and on this blog so they lost a lot of their detail.

I loved this long cloud formation across the mountain.  We were at the parking lot of Mono Lake

after watching the sunrise on the lake.  It was again in the 30′s with frost everywhere.

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David standing on table to photograph the cloud/mountain.  You can see the lake and tufas along the

middle right hand side of the picture.

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Heading for the color of June Lake Loop.  The smudges in the sky are squished bugs on the windshield.

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Mist from the river shrouded the scenery creating a beautiful effect.  The frosted plants and mist really

added to the atmosphere of the place.

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Hmmmm…..should we park at the falling rock sign???

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I liked the symmetry of red/gold/red/gold.

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Huge clouds reflecting on Mono Lake as we head for Lundy Canyon.

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A bald eagle sitting in the gorgeous aspen trees at Lundy Canyon.

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David photographing but wasn’t watching the eagle he was looking at other subject matter.

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It began to rain as I was watching the eagle.  I liked the pattern of rain on the reflections in the water.

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Oct 18

David and I took a day trip to the east side of the Sierra via Tuolumne Pass on Wednesday the 13th.   We got up at 2:30am, left the house at 3:30am so we could be at Mono lake at sunrise.  The temperature was high 50’s when we left but dropped to 31 going across Tuolumne meadow area.  Mono Lake wasn’t much warmer so after an hour of taking pictures my fingers were frozen with pain.  I love the Sierra Mountains.  Their colors, shapes, light, majesty and  awe inspiring beauty never cease to to touch my soul.

Sunrise with Sierra Nevada Mountains and Mono Lake tufa towers.

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The freezing temperatures at Mono Lake created beautiful soft delicate frost on the low dry grasses.

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The developing fall color on the side of the mountains.  I took this photograph shortly after leaving Mono Lake.  Though the air was hazy and the mountain was in the distance you can still appreciate the stark beauty of the Sierra dressed in the fall colors.  There’s still a lot of green yet to change.  The foreground is burnt vegetation that hasn’t re-grown after a fire.

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The June Lake Loop fall color wasn’t ready yet but the scenery was still beautiful.

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We decided to head south on 395 to see how the color was developing.  We didn’t get very far after I saw the sign for Devil’s Post Pile.  I’d never been and wanted to see the formation so we detoured.  I was surprised how small it was.  I expected a grander site.  We grabbed a couple of treats at a bakery in Mammoth and headed south to Convict Lake.  The color was much better at Convict Lake.  I was in heaven with the brilliant blues of the Lake and the fall colors and mountains reflecting on the lake.  The blues of the water were ultramarines blending into turquoises with waves of cerulean blues.  This is where our hike began.  We hiked along the south shore to the aspen groves at the far end.  There were lots of fishing boats and we could see huge fish in the crystal clear water.

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Looking down from the trail.  A fishing boat is in the upper right corner in the reflection of the shore and mountain.

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The aspen groves were an enchanted place with many great ‘path’ shots.

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