Jan 13

David and I decided to take advantage of the Glacier Point Road being open this late in the season to photograph the sunrise with Half Dome.  I’d recently posted to Google+ a collage I’d made with David’s cast off photographs and trial prints of my giclees.  A fellow photographer on Google+, Vincent Goetz, offered his cast off photographs for collage use as well.  He decided to be at Glacier Point for sunrise also.

Raven Collage

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The three of us were disappointed there wasn’t a cloud in the sky at sunrise so our next stop was Bridalveil Creek on Glacier Point Road.  The creek was frozen solid and the temperature was 19 degrees.  Even the ravens looked cold.  They were walking half squatted as if trying to keep their legs warm.

Boring sunrise.

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Raven huddled on a branch.

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Breakfast at the Ahwahnee was next on our stop.  Vince was driving ahead of us in his truck.  In the valley he came to a stop by the chapel  so a  bobcat could cross the road in front of him.  None of us had seen a bobcat in Yosemite before.  It was very healthy looking.

Bobcat in the Chapel parking lot.

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Our other photography interest was the late afternoon moonrise.  We wanted to be in the Tuolumne Meadow/Tioga Pass area.  As we left the valley after breakfast, we stopped at Bridalveil Creek along the main road in the valley.  David was interested in ice pictures, then we headed for 120.  Though it was a sunny day, at 12:30 it was 35 degrees.

Tioga Pass is now open the latest in the season on record, which gives us a chance to explore the area in winter.  We stopped at Tenaya Lake which is frozen solid and had lots of people on the ice engaged in various activities.  There were ice skaters, ice hockey players, lots of people playing and a few with picnic tables set up on the ice.  It was really creepy to stand on the shore and listen to the ice making lots of weird and distressing sounds.  You could see the ice move as well.  I decided not to walk around on it.

Tenaya Lake.

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Around 3pm we stopped at a pull out near the Tioga Pass gate.  We had an hour before the moon rise.  The wind was bitter cold.  We could photograph while we waited or we could drive down to Lee Vining and have a meal.  We chose the latter.

Ellery Lake, elevation 9538 ft,  taken through the window as we drove by.  I really liked the long shadows on the surface of the ice.

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Mono Lake was a gorgeous deep dark blue as we dropped down the grade.  I wish I’d gotten  a picture of the lake….and of the moon rising over it.  By the time we’d finished our meal the moon had risen quite a bit.  We dashed back up the grade and found a pull out to photograph the moon.  It was so cold with a blasting frigid arctic wind.

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The colors of the meadow were stunning.

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The view behind me, which Vince suggested I turn around and see.  It must have been a beautiful sunset at Tenaya Lake and Olmstead Point.

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My last picture of the day, and my favorite.  Perhaps I was still shivering as I took this through the windscreen.  It’s very Bill Neill-ish without even trying, a happy mistake.

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Jan 28

    Yesterday,  January 27, David and I braved the heavy fog of the San Joaquin Valley to visit the Merced National Wildlife Refuge.  We had both seen a post in photographer Michael Frye’s blog about this preserve and felt we had to see this special place ourselves.  This is a wetland preserve where migrating birds visit or spend the winter.  The entire day was foggy.  Around 1pm the fog lifted from the ground but never dissipated enough to find where the sun might be located.  The ‘auto tour’ road weaves and winds along water ways with so many twists and turns that I  couldn’t have told you the direction of North to save my life.  When we returned to the beginning of the circular route I felt we approached from the wrong side and couldn’t for the life of me figure out how we got to where we ended.  I need to see a map!

    We arrived at the wildlife refuge at 6:45am and left at  4:45pm.  When we entered the preserve in the dark thick fog, our headlights lit up bunnies scampering along the road.  There must have been 3 dozen little bunnies between the gate and the first quarter mile inside the preserve.  We saw a couple of owls in the predawn light and then began noticing all the hawks.  As soon as you reach water there are birds everywhere.  Coots, ducks, waders, ….I don’t know my birds but you get the picture.  It was such a magical day with the fog creating such a dramatic atmosphere.  I took a few pictures of birds but I don’t have the lens for birding.  I’m used to shooting landscapes, not critters that constantly move.   Instead I observed them, reveled in their beauty and sounds and looked them up on my iPod Audubon Birds app.  There were so many varieties of birds to watch.  My favorites were the Northern Pintail,  White-tailed Kite, various egrets and heron, and lastly, the Lesser Sandhill Crane.  Unfortunately they were at a distance and the fog never cleared enough for a good viewing.   It was thrilling to see them taking flight and landing, flying overhead and listening to their calls.  Occasionally they’d characteristically jump up and down as if filled with pure joy.  I certainly was while watching them.

   The temperature was 41-43 degrees with a very wet fog and breeze.  The dampness and breeze made made the temperature feel more like 33 leaving my gloved fingers stinging with cold.   

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11am  This stretch was one of my favorites for composing scenes with trees in fog.

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2pm  Look! A very exotic bird in the crouching position.

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3:15pm   ‘Four Water Fleas on a Day Trip’    The reeds were so much fun to photograph since the water was mirroring the reflections with such crispness.  We saw all sorts of wild shapes and figures that made us laugh.

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5:40pm  We rose above the fog as we left Cathys Valley on Highway 140.  We were treated to a spectacular sunset on an ocean of fog.  This was the only sunshine we saw all day.

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Jan 28

We are having our January spring-like weather here in the Sierra Nevada foothills.  It seems we usually have a week or so of warm weather this time of year  and then we slip back into winter.  The hibernating ladybugs are very active during the warm weather.  A couple days ago my husband and I spent an afternoon photographing the ladybugs and the river behind our house.  It always feels so cleansing to get outside after being indoors so much during the middle of winter.

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Ladybugs on a small oak tree.

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Ladybugs in the cracks of Ponderosa Pine bark.

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David photographing along the river.

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My self portrait  :)

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Lacey catkins.  Looks like spring isn’t very far away.

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The motion of the river.  I had fun playing with my camera at this spot of the river.

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Aug 16

Dave and I went to McGurk Meadow, which is located off Glacier Point Road, on July 28 and July 30.  Our good friend and local photographer, Nancy Robbins, guided us to the trail head.  On the second trip Nancy joined us again as well as another wonderful photographer, Franka Gabler .  I learned I’m very out of shape.  The trail is just under a mile to the meadow, all downhill.  On our first visit we arrived early evening catching the last light and then walked out in almost full darkness.  The trail is all downhill going to the meadow.  I was struggling on the hike out.  Perhaps part of my problem was the fact that we were at 7000 feet.  When we went back I had shin splints so bad at the start of the hike but by the end of the hike I was feeling much better.  This hike is rated as the easiest…at level one…   Take the deet, the mosquitos are thick.

There were lots of flowers blooming along the trail.  I could identify huge red Indian Paint Brushes, purple Larkspur, a variety of Lupine, Tiger Lily, Columbine, Astor…..

Nancy and Tiger Lilies

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Edge of meadow 

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Dave, Franka and Nancy

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Dave and Franka are standing on a little bridge over the flowing brook.  This is the beginning of the meadow.  When we arrived there was a bear in the woods behind them.  They spotted another bear on our way out.

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Nov 18

October 2009

In October my husband and I took a day trip to the eastside to find the fall colors.   We left home about 4am, drove up the Merced River Canyon to Yosemite, turned onto 120 to take Tioga Pass down to the Lee Vining and Mono Lake area. 

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This was my first time to  the east side and I definitely wasn’t disappointed.    We started at the June Lake Loop at 6:30am.  As the sun rose the colors of the Aspens grew brighter and glowed like jewels.  Grant Lake and Silver Lake had the best colors.  The trees along Grant Lake were brilliant oranges and yellow.  We drove to Lundy Canyon in the late morning.  Lundy Canyon was pretty but I preferred the Grant Lake area.  We hiked up past the beaver damns but the trees weren’t as colorful and the wind was biting cold so we drove back to the June Lake loop.  All day  big storm clouds billowed towards the west, in the direction of Yosemite, but we had sunshine along with the wind making a beautiful autumn day.  We’ll definitely be going back next year!

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