2022: Beginnings and Endings, Lines and Circles, and Somewhere Over the Rainbow

“We do not come into this world; we come out of it, as leaves from a tree. As the ocean waves, the universe peoples. Every individual is an expression of the whole realm of nature, a unique action of the total universe.”

Alan Watts

In our modern goal driven western world, we have grown accustomed to thinking about progress in terms of beginnings and endings, starts and finishes. This helps us fulfill our need for accomplishment and closure. There is a mountain ahead of us, a definite starting point and a clear goal of reaching the top. We love lines, a straightforward way of thinking about progression, and are not very tolerant of ambiguous goals. Nature often has other ideas. Before the starting point there was multitude of events and happenings that brought us there, and the ending is usually not an ending at all but merely a brief resting point on an infinite circle of life. Nature is more of a circle than a line and repeats itself again and again. Witness the turning of days, seasons, generations even millenniums.

In the words of Alan Watts “We do not come into this world; we come out of it, as leaves from a tree. As the ocean waves, the universe peoples. Every individual is an expression of the whole realm of nature, a unique action of the total universe.” We are not so much starting point as we are a reflection of mother nature who gave us life. When we leave this world, nature and our unique imprint will have fully merged together and live on for generations to come. Which is to say the circle will not only repeat itself but will change, forever expanding as it breathes in our unique contributions to the circle of life. When we climb to the mountain most of us want to think of our accomplishment as an act of personal will that gets us from the starting point to the top. But it is easy to forget who is lifting us up. We are not putting nature beneath feet and finally conquering her once we make it to the summit. Nature and the ground beneath us are lifting us up every step of the way. We are moving with her, and she will also be there at the beautiful summit to transport us to ever expanding circles as our journey continues.

“The life of man is a self-evolving circle, which, from a ring imperceptibly small, rushes on all sides outwards to new and larger circles, and that without end. The extent to which this generation of circles, wheel without wheel, will go, depends on the force or truth of the individual soul..”
― Ralph Waldo Emerson, Circles

Emerson published his famous essay Circles in 1841 and his usage of the English language may seem a bit archaic to us today, but the central ideas of his essay are as relevant to us today as they were back then. Early in the essay Emerson references St. Augustine who described circles as an infinite sphere, whose center is everywhere and whose circumference is nowhere. I have read the essay several times, and each time I draw new insights to help me on my journey. Circles reflects on the endless circles found in nature and the fluidity of all experience. The natural state for each of us is to forever expand our circles which is also a metaphor for personal growth. Emerson, however, also points out that for many of us our circles stop expanding, often in middle age and older, when we believe we have somehow already arrived at our destination. For Emerson there was no destination to arrive at, only a continuous journey. To settle down and stop reaching out to new circles is a kind of metaphorical death. Emerson did not fear actual physical death, because this is just part of the endless cycle of nature. The only thing to fear is not reaching one’s true potential before the time of our passing. Unlived potential happens because one gives up too early, settles into old habits and just good enough. This causes the death of the spirit whose natural inclination is always for us to move forward.

“There are no fixtures in nature. The universe is fluid and volatile.”
― Ralph Waldo Emerson, Circles

This was a most memorable sunset at Artist Point during my weekend stay at the Mountaineers Mount Baker Lodge. I am not sure how the rocks forming the sundial or labyrinth below the sunburst came to be. Although it seems like an interesting feature, someone definitely left a trace through the construction of the dial. Part of me wanted to disperse the labyrinth, but I thought if the forest service did not want it there, they would have done the same long ago. A few of my viewers mentioned that it was a meditation circle put there to guide circular walks in nature. I often find myself going around in circles when in the beauty of nature. Circles and nature seem to walk hand in hand!

I myself have experienced some apparent endings in the past year, my daughter Caroline leaving home for College at the UCSD and Julia and I finalizing our divorce. But these events are also gateways to ever expanding circles. Caroline will make new friends and connections in Southern California, learn to surf and grow in both her mind and her heart. Julia will also expand her circles as she establishes her new home in California and tries out new activities, forms new relationships, and reshapes her identity. I am still listening to my heart for where to go from here, but I do have some plans. These plans are notional and a bit like looking out “Somewhere Over the Rainbow”. The rainbow points in a direction but what is over the horizon remains to be seen. I will move forward with abandonment trusting my heart that I will create new and ever-expanding circles. Emerson concludes his essay Circles with this quote where he instructs us to follow our heart and move forward with a kind of abandonment.

“The one thing which we seek with insatiable desire, is to forget ourselves, to be surprised out of our propriety, to lose our sempiternal memory, and to do something without knowing how or why; in short, to draw a new circle. Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm. The way of life is wonderful: it is by abandonment”. ― Ralph Waldo Emerson, Circles

Juanita Bay Golden Hour Rainbow

I am excited about some of the new friendships I have formed and how these friendships will support collaborations in photography. Friendships are so important in providing the spark to expand our circles into previously unexplored areas. I also have a couple of books in process that hopefully will soon be published along with several trips planned, including one to the Italian Dolomites. Near term I will travel to Southern California both to see my daughter Caroline and to photograph Anza Borrego, Joshua Tree and other places that are calling me. I am also excited about taking my photography in new directions, integrating music more closely with photography, photographing people (models) in the landscape, intentional camera movement, photographing birds and wildlife in the landscape, building new theme portfolios and more closely integrating my writing with photography. And by the way there are a few peaks I still want to climb, but they will just be departure points into ever expanding and newer circles!

Here is a collection of my best and favorite images from 2022, along with the backstory for many of them, my thoughts, impressions and a few photography tips. They are not in any particular order, some were very popular some not so much so, but all are meaningful to me. Thanks for looking!

1. Two Tree Point

Two Tree Point

Before moving to Woodside, I used to live on Three Tree Point, but there were no Three Trees on the Point. In early December I was at Deception Pass Rosario Head at sunset looking out to Deception Island where there are Two Trees on the Point. My eyes were immediately drawn to these Two Trees with rays of light breaking through an otherwise cloudy day illuminating the Salish Sea and the two lovely trees. The two trees seem to be enjoying each other’s company underneath rays of light and hope! As Bob Ross always said, “Everyone or Tree needs a friend!”

2. By the Light of the Setting Sun and Rising Moon

By the Light of the Setting Sun and Rising Moon

A Waxing Autumn Gibbous Moon rises above Eunice Lake just as the sun is setting at Mount Rainier National Park. This was taken one day before the October Hunter’s Full Moon. From my perspective this is better than the Full Moon which rises well after the sun has set. This moon is at 97% and the convergence of sun and moon in the warm autumn atmosphere is spellbinding and simply amazing.

In the interests of full disclosure this image was taken with a very wide 12mm lens to capture both the red huckleberries and a large portion of the sky which also renders the moon very small. To get the moon to the size as our eyes see it, I took a second image at 105mm and blended the two images together in photoshop. Although both images were taken around the same time, in the time period between changing lenses the moon moved. I am not aiming at absolute accuracy but rather giving emphasis to how the scene impacted me at more of an emotional level, in other words I am shooting from the heart. Originally, I had the reflected moon offset more to the right and few individuals let me know that this is not possible from a physics point of view, so I corrected this. But in the end, I make no apologies that this is a time blend along with a focal length blend. Both were necessary to convey my personal vision. To me photography is not so much about documenting a precise moment, as it is about conveying my sensibility surrounding an experience. We do not experience the landscape through either a wide angle or telephoto perspective as our eyes quickly toggle from one to the other seamlessly as we process the scene both physically and at an emotional level. That was also my intention for this image that resonated so well with most of viewers, without a doubt my most popular image this year!

3. Touch of Autumn in Winter

Touch of Autumn in Winter

In late November I hiked seven miles up an old, abandoned logging road. The higher up the road I went the narrower the path became. At first there was just a little snow but as I wound my way up the mountain the snow steadily deepened until I got to this point where further travel was not possible without snowshoes which I did not bring. Views were far and few between, so I just sat down and took in my surroundings. Snow helps make even the ordinary beautiful, seemingly brings a sense of calm and tranquil order to an otherwise chaotic forest and ground. My eyes soon gravitated to these beautiful orange leafed bushes holding on to Autumn even as Winter was firmly settling in. I knew this was the moment the capture the mood and feeling of this experience heading into the Winter Season with Autumn still on my mind!

Shortly after taking this image somehow my iPhone slipped out of my hands and vanished without a trace into the still smooth texture of the winter snow. I did not have a clue as to where it was because the snow was so white and fluffy it just absorbed the phone without making any imprint. As I started to gently comb through the snow to find it I began to think why I took this phone out in the first place. It was an automatic impulse to take it out without even thinking why I needed it. I began then to realize that this may be a signal to be a bit less dependent on this devise, especially when out in a beautiful place like this. I eventually found the phone, but only after about 20 minutes of effort!

4. Mother Goat and Kid

Mother Goat and Kid

My Daughter Caroline and I last hiked together to the tope of Mailbox Peak when she was seven. As a Father’s Day gift, she offered to go up Mailbox with me again, this time at 18! We could not do the hike on Father’s Day because she was visiting her soon to be college at UCSD. But on this day in early June, although very foggy, it was the perfect day to make the trek! The bear grass was lovely, and we even had unexpected visitors, a Mama Goat and her Kid!

5. Rows of Green Stones at the Harbor

Rows of Green Stones at the Harbor

I am not sure what natural and organic marine and geologic forces created these lines of stones covered with seaweed at the Point of Arches. But they sure look like they were designed with intention reaching out to the gorgeous sea stacks also reflected in the calm waters of a natural harbor. This image was taken close to sunrise at a very low tide on my August backpacking trip to Shi Shi Beach.

This was my first trip to Shi Shi Beach and I am so surprised I have never been here before. I liked everything about it, from the long drive to Neah Bay on the northwest tip of Washington, the hospitality and friendliness of the Makah Tribe who provide recreational permits for access to their native land, the beautiful four mile hike through the woods and down onto the beach, to the camp sites close to the Point of Arches, not to mention the delicious smoked salmon to pick up on the return journey home!

6. You are my Shining Star

You are my Shining Star

At a very low tide at the Point of Arches, a starfish seemingly bathes in the sunlight until the tide rises. I think it is safe to say, at least for this period of time between tides, this starfish was a little “Laid Back”!

7. Middle Fork Bridge to the Spirit of the Shire

Middle Fork Bridge to the Spirit of the Shire

This has to be my favorite hiking suspension bridge and I return here often to visit this beautiful, lush forest of the wild Middle Fork of the Snoqualmie River. The forest approach of the Gateway Bridge reminds me so much of Tolkien’s world and the spirit of the Shire. I have tried to capture this feeling many times walking through this forest, and this is one of the few times I think I actually succeeded. Capturing the mood of a place and what it means to us personally, and still staying rooted in the reality of the experience is not nearly as simple as some would think. When the two come together then one gets the feeling of “magic”! Here what certainly did help were the spotlighting on the bridge, and the soft rays of overhead light filtering through the forest and onto the moss, tree trunks.

8. Indian Henry’s Reflection Pond

Indian Henry’s Reflection Pond

Indian Henry, known as Soo-Too-Lick, early on (1883) guided several familiar names to Mt. Rainier including the Hunting Grounds, these familiar names include James Longmire Philemon Beecher Van Trump and John Muir. Indian Henry was a Cowlitz Indian, beloved by many people.

On this backpacking trip to Indian Henry’s Hunting Ground, I was joined by a small group of painting and pencil artists. We backpacked in from Longmire along the Wonderland Trail fording Kautz Creek. We arrived fairly early at Devil’s Dream where we had first pick of campsites. After setting up camp we then headed up to Indian Henry’s and Mirror Lake staying until sunset hiking back to camp with headlamp. Both Clair and Jodi created original works of art on site while I photographed the constantly changing mood and atmosphere of my all-time favorite place to be on Mt. Rainier! Claire also recorded an online training session for her Adventure Art Academy. We had some inspiring discussions on the trail and camp on the overlap of painting art and photography, similarities and differences. You can see more of Clair’s work and offerings at https://www.claireswanderings.com/ Also check out Jodi’s wonderful art at https://jomiekoart.com/

9. Going Home

Going Home

This cabin is in as beautiful setting as I could ever imagine and is like walking into a dream. In this dream I am finding my way back to where I truly feel I am more at home, in Nature and the Wilderness. This is a common dream shared by many as was evidenced by the thousands of reactions I received from this image. Although this was late July, the Avalanche Lilies were at peak, about one month later than when they usually peak in June. We had an usually cool late spring and early summer causing snow to linger which impacted the bloom cycles in many areas.

10. Snow Lake Mountain Ash Sunset

Snow Lake Mountain Ash Sunset

On a Sunday morning in the later part of September, I heard about the Snow Lake trail reopening and decided to check it out. The reports I heard that the trail was turned into a multilane freeway were definitely a huge exaggeration. What I mainly saw was the original trail refined in the upper part where there were rocks to climb over. The trail is now more or less smooth all the way to the top of the ridge and made for a more comfortable exit in the dark!

Snow Lake was crowded so I headed further to Gem Lake picking deliciously ripe and plump huckleberries along the way. For sunset, I made my way to what would be my evening home along the southern ridge overlooking Snow Lake. This is where I experienced this beautiful sunset with orange mountain ash in the foreground and colors ranging from purple, orange, yellow, and mauve in the sky-a most memorable evening and I am thankful I was able to experience it!

As the light changed steadily from the golden hour to right before actual sunset, I experimented with several compositions and vantage points before settling on this one. I needed to be low and close to bring attention to the orange mountain ash, but not too low because then I would lose sight of much of the lake. Although a wider angle would have given greater emphasis to the mountain ash, Snow Lake would have been rendered too small in size resulting in an unbalanced image. The soft light took on magical colors in the minutes just before actual sunset. I went all the way out to 35mm on my 16-35 zoom lens and did a focus stack of two images to render the entire scene sharp.

11. North Cascades Light of the Angels

North Cascades Light of the Angels

On this trip to the North Cascades, I was looking for an entirely different composition about a half a mile from this spot. But it was hard to notice this clump of heather looking out toward this soft early evening angelic light settling over the western peaks. Several very well-known photographers who I have been so lucky to meet in person including Candace Dyar and David Thompson have shared “follow the light” as a guiding principle for choosing what to photograph and putting together a composition. That principle certainly helped here, and this ended up being my most successful and impactful image from this three-day trip.

12. Inner Glow

Inner Glow

This was taken with a soft-focus lens at the Point Defiance Rose Garden which also has Calla Lilies. and provides another lesson in following the light. Although I normally do not take images in strong midday light, I loved how this light rendered the lilies almost translucent revealing their inner glow. In softer light toward the edges of the day this translucent inner glow would not have been nearly as well pronounced. It is acknowledged that use of my Lensbaby soft focus Velvet 85mm lens helped tame the harshness of contrasty midday light. Most of us landscape and nature photographers have been programed with the mantra to take pictures only during the edges of the day in the golden hours. Creativity, however, knows no such limit and invites us to explore the possibilities of light during all hours of the day.

13. Silver Falls in a Mossy Forest

Silver Falls in a Mossy Forest

I always enjoy this Silver Falls loop hike in Spring when the water is running high! Silver Falls provides another example of breaking through the myth that good light is only to be found during the golden hours. The recessed rocky forested walls of this river valley are sufficiently high that during the golden hours little light penetrates down to the riverbed leaving just the blueish cast of deep shadows for images. I took this image more toward the middle of the day in broken clouds that helped diffuse the light but still allow the light to reach down into the river valley. The light reflects and bounces off the forested and rocky river walls further enhancing the effect. To me a major part of the appeal of this area is the mossy forest, so I emphasized that in the foreground while still looking out to the turquoise glaciated water running high at Silver Falls.

14. Autumn Flame

Autumn Flame

On a cool but sunny November Day, I headed down to Kubota for a picnic in the Garden and to pay a visit to one of my all-time favorite trees! Yes, I have lunch with trees! Photographing the brilliant backlit leaves of this tree also requires shooting toward the middle of the day. Much of Kubota Garden is at the base of a steep hill that blocks the westerly light toward evening. The position of this sun stars also depends on midday light. Getting a good exposure of course in these kinds of conditions is challenging due to high dynamic range between dark shadows and brilliant highlights. But with under exposure, the raw files produced by many of our modern camera sensors are up to the challenge. I just love the symmetry of this tree swirling and reaching out in all direction like octopus’s arms in a kind of chaotic order!

15. Sunrise through the Lupines

Sunrise through the Lupines

What a wonderful feeling it was to experience this sunrise looking through the Lupines and out to the Balsam Root at Rowena Crest. It’s a wonderful world! Although I have photographed this flower field overlooking the Columbia River many times at Rowena Crest, I thought this time was the first time I captured the delicate first rays of light subtly illuminating the lupine flowers in a way that is consistent with my experience of sunrise. Although the dramatic colors of sunrise in the sky are often what we hope for in our sunrise shots, equally and in this case even more important is what the light is doing to the foreground elements.

New Horizons

In photography as in any other creative art form, we must continuously reach out and extend ourselves into larger and larger circles. The price of not doing this is essentially withering on the vine, and the death of creativity. As artists we can never rest on our laurels and draw oxygen from merely yesterday’s accomplishments. We must continuously move forward and find breaths of fresh air. Some of the ways in which I moved forward this past year include forays into taking images of people (actually a Sun and Nature Goddess!) in the landscape, Bird Photography, Intentional Camera Movement, and new processing techniques I learned from David Thompson. I also extended my reach through visiting some new areas (at least to me) including the Redwoods of California.

16. Sun Goddess

Sun Goddess

In August, my friend Shaping joined me for a sunset hike to Mt Fremont. Although when we started hiking it was a bluebird kind of a day and also very hot, as we approached the top a breeze moving down from the glaciers of Mt. Rainier helped keep us cool and comfortable. Wispy clouds slowly filled the sky. The wildflowers were still in peak form and Shaping in her beautiful dress reminded me of a Sun Goddess as the sun slowly dipped below the horizon.

Although I called this image the Sun Goddess, Shaping also represents to me the spirit of a “Nature Goddess”. When she wears this flowing dress and reaches out from Fremont Mountain to the sun she is celebrating and honoring mother nature. Shaping feels the same way. A few people confronted me when I originally displayed the series of images that this image is a part of and accused me of chasing Instagram popularity. I can assure you that that was the last thing on my mind. For me the event was completely unplanned and just arose spontaneously out of the happenings on this wonderful day. Sometimes I think some are too quick to jump to conclusions about other photographer’s intentions. Their accusations may be more of a reflection of their own inner state of mind than anything else.

17. Blue Heron and Turtle on a Log

Blue Heron and Turtle on a Log

When I visited the Union Bay freshwater estuary close to the UW campus, my eyes immediately gravitated to this scene. The turtle and blue heron almost seemed engaged in a kind of meditation, looking out toward tow bonsai like tree branches, where new life appeared to be rising from this old decaying log.

This image is one of my first Birding images. I decided to try out Birding after observing Shaping taking bird images on a few of our trips and decided to give it a try. I acquired a 200-600 Sony Lens that provided me the tool I long needed for birds and wildlife. I am looking forward to many more bird and wildlife images on my horizon!

18. A Walk in the Forest

A Walk in the Forest

These white bark alders were lit by the diffused light reflecting off the walls of the Middle Fork valley on a beautiful Autumn Day, perfect for a walk in the forest. For this image I handheld the camera and gently panned up and then back down during .6 second time period. Intentional Camera Movement (ICM) can work great in the forest where a somewhat chaotic scene can be reduced down to the essence of lines, shapes, blotches of merged colors and tones yielding an effect the many have told me is like an impressionistic watercolor. Although this technique involves a lot of trial and error, successful ICM still requires careful selection of a suitable scene, previsualization, and good composition skills.

19. Autumn Fire in the Forest

Autumn Fire in the Forest

For this image I previsualized that intentional camera movement would simplify an otherwise chaotic forest scene into the basic elements of trees and blotches of colors that bleed into one another. I also eagerly anticipated that the orange vine maples would resemble flames rising from the forest floor.

20. Don’t You Feel Small

Don’t You Feel Small

On the trail through a mystical redwood forest filled with fog and mist, I pass ancient trees and an occasional rhododendron. I am in my happy place. Going to new places, or at least new to us, helps build a sense of excitement of visiting a place that we may have heard great things about but never have experienced firsthand in nature itself.  This was the case with me on my recent trip to the Redwood National and State Parks.  I had passed through these parts a few times before on road trips, but never had taken the time to get more intimately familiar with these ancient forests.  With my first few steps out of the car and out into the misty forest I felt my sense of enthusiasm starting to build.  These trees were like nothing I had experienced before—so tall, majestic and grand–a kind of life altering experience that goes straight to the heart.  There was seemingly no end to them and the deeper I went into the forest I felt like I was finding what could be a new home for many more photographic adventures.  I was most impressed by the amazing sense depth and scale of these forests. This in turn was a reflection of the enormous size of these trees, layers of fog and mist, naturally filtered light, and the beautiful undergrowth of Rhododendrons and Ferns. I began to see the world around me in a different way.  This location helped separate me from my habitual way of viewing the world which helped open the gate to fresh visions.

21. Green Goddesses with White Sails

Green Goddesses with White Sails

Sometime ago I heard that Cala Lilies, while native to Southern Africa, have naturalized in California and also parts of the Oregon Coast. On my recent trip to the Southern Oregon Coast, I stumbled upon this patch. I love the way these flowers catch the light, seemingly changing their subtle hues as the sun sets. The center of the flower is deep and invites one to look inside, but their deep interiors are always still a mystery.

22. Irises and Islands in the Sea

Irises and Islands in the Sea

This was such a beautiful Spring evening along the Southern Oregon Coast, warm temperatures, a gentle breeze, waves gently moving across the shore, irises collecting the evening light of the setting sun, and islands floating on the sea.

23. Cattails

Cattails

Walking through the Fir Island estuary my eyes were drawn to the soft patterns of these winter cattails. I liked the simplicity of this composition and in processing I maintained a lower contrast high-key look with somewhat muted colors to match my visual experience of this estuary scene.

24. Snoqualmie River Foggy Morning

Snoqualmie River Foggy Morning

It’s a foggy morning along the Snoqualmie River. Sounds are muffled except for the gentle movement of the water. These quiet sounds almost seem amplified in the quiet of the new day.

25. Fire and Ice

Fire and Ice

The afterglow of the sun that has just set spreads out over Mt. Rainier and Tipsoo Lake. Although the lake here is just starting to thaw, this is almost summer!

26. Pacific Northwest Lighthouse Moods

Pacific Northwest Lighthouse Moods

The Heceta Head Lighthouse casts a guiding light into a moody Pacific Northwest morning.

27. Mt. Si Boardwalk into the Fog and Mist

Mt. Si Boardwalk into the Fog and Mist

My favorite conditions for heading up Mt. Si are fog and mist which is what I found this morning in mid-June! I love this section of trail about half-way up. I later went to the peak where the mist turned more into a freezing rain, then crossed over to the Teneriffe connector trail and out through Roaring Creek to complete a loop. Wonderful day!

28. At Home Along the Ocean Shore

At Home Along the Ocean Shore

“We do not come into this world; we come out of it, as leaves from a tree. As the ocean waves, the universe peoples. Every individual is an expression of the whole realm of nature, a unique action of the total universe.”
Alan Watts

Father and Daughter Hike July

Thanks so much for reading and viewing the images of this blog post. I encourage you to share your reactions, thoughts, comments, impressions on this post here. If you think others would enjoy reading this post, please also share it with your friends and communities. The full resolution images from this blog post can be viewed on my website where they are also available for purchase. Here is the link  https://www.erwinbuske.com/Print-Store/2022-Beginnings-and-Endings-Lines-and-Circles/ . If you would like to see more content like this subscribe to the blog so you automatically receive future blog posts. To learn more upon my perspectives on nature be sure to check out my Ebook, the Hidden Landscape: The Inside Passage. This image rich book is 248 pages and provides insight how nature, mystery, the Tao, Zen, and the American Transcendentalism of Thoreau inform my photography and can provide sources for you own inspiration. Here is the link to the EBOOK along with a preview. https://payhip.com/b/FCI4z. Thanks again and happy trails!

2020: Reflections on Change and Stillness

2020 was a year of extraordinary change that effected each one of us at all levels of our being: physical, emotional and mental. The year started out ordinary enough but then came COVID falling seemingly from the sky igniting a global pandemic the likes of which we have not seen in about a century. With businesses, schools and even parks closing along with the need to social distance and wear masks, life as we once knew it came to a screeching halt. If this were not enough, as the year unfolded many of us found ourselves wading through the deep water of a toxic political environment primarily centered around the Presidential Election. Onetime friends turned against each other strengthening even more an already formidable great divide as many of us sought refuge in our social media bubbles. We started unfriending and blocking people left and right across a wide virtual field of social media acquaintances with little or no actual physical contact. During this period of time I also witnessed the slow decline of my Father and his eventual passing in September. He lived a good life but he was highly impacted during the pandemic by rules that helped keep him safe from COVID but also contributed to his isolation. My Dad introduced me to nature and the outdoors through hiking and photography at an early age and is one of the biggest influences in my life for my love of nature.

The one thing I now realize more then ever is the importance of Nature in each of our lives–Nature as a refuge from day to day troubles, Nature as a source of inspiration and creativity, Nature as a mirror and window into our own souls. Even in this Pandemic Nature is still there for me to discover.  Nature is within myself, and in all places including my own yard, the woods where Julia, Caroline and I can access right out our front door, and places within walking distance of our home.  As the initial stage of the Pandemic passed parks were soon reopened as long as we practiced social distancing and wore masks as appropriate. I actually spent more time in Nature in 2020 than any previous year that I can recall. In nature there is a beautiful stillness where we can experience who we truly are as person. In nature there is also impermanence and change which causes me to appreciate its beauty all the more. Much of the beauty of a flower or the colors of autumn is the knowing that this beauty is temporary. We can only experience this still, quiet, changing and impermanent beauty in the here and now, face to face with nature where we are nature and nature is us.

Here is a collection of my favorite images from 2020, not in any particular order. Thanks for looking!

#1. The Lantern

The Lantern

A Japanese Maple lights up like a lantern as the morning light bursts through an opening in the canopy of the small tree by a pond. It is a wonderful experience to get under a Japanese Maple and explore with a ultrawide angle lens different composition possibilities. Small movements left or right, up or down, can make major differences in the look and feel of the composition. It was a creative challenge for me to find an opening in the canopy where a sun star would be possible, along with just the right amount of natural light to illuminate the inside and outside of the tree. I felt a wonderful sense of accomplishment when it all came together in this image including a good perspective of the tree, a sun star, and wonderful backlit lace-leaf leaves lighting up like a lantern.  In this image you will also see a small stone Japanese Garden Lantern.  In Japanese Culture these small garden lanterns symbolize nature through the concept of finding beauty in the impermanence of the natural world.  At no time was this more evident to me than underneath this Japanese Maple Tree, with its leaves now fully turned a bright red, catching the rapidly changing light, and ever so slowly starting to fall to the ground, one by one.

#2 Hot August Meadow in the Goat Rocks

Hot August Meadow in the Goat Rocks

On a hot August day, I started my long loop trip hike into the Goat Rocks at sunrise and did not finish until well after sunset. I suppose I could have finished sooner, but what is the hurry? In the evening I passed through this happy meadow just below a ridge top and decided just to hang out and enjoy nature at her finest for an hour or so. Hiking down from the ridge to the car I eventually had to use a headlamp and in order to not surprise animals I played Neil Young music through my JBL speaker attached to my belt. No sooner than I set up the headlamp and music I peered out onto the trail about 50 feet ahead and saw two narrowly spaced bright eyes staring at me. At first I thought it a person because the eyes were fairly high off the ground. Then I saw a big and long bushy tail. It could have been a wild dog or a cat, I do really know for sure. The animal would not move so I turned up the music a bit more , now Neil Young’s Natural Beauty Song. The animal then slowly with grace, almost like our cat Precious, started moving up the rock talus and then perched onto a flat rock and sat down like a royal cat still looking at me. Amazingly calm I proceeded back out onto the trail but it later occurred to me that if this was a cat it may have just positioned itself in prance position. Nevertheless it was all ok and good—Perhaps thanks to some mellow Neil Young music!

#3 Satori

Satori

There are moments when my soul is a mirror to everything around me. Forms, shapes and patterns bathed in light rise out of the dark void and return again in an endless cycle. In such moments I feel I am the mountains, the sea, the setting sun, and the tree spread out over the bay. There is no me, mountains, sea, setting sun, or tree spread out over the bay–Satori.

#4 Beauty in My Backyard

Beauty in my Backyard

This image of Mt. Rainier was taken on a hike right from my home through the forest and up to an overlook with a view of Mt. Rainier. A long 200mm telephoto perspective compressed the layers in this scene sufficiently to capture the same emotional impact this scene has on a person when he/she stands at this site for the first time.

#5 May the Light Always be With You

May the Light Always be With You

In the early morning at Cape Disappointment the sun finds an opening in the clouds to fill the entire atmosphere with wonderful angelic light. Every day in life is such a blessing and it is in moments like this I remind myself to live each day to the fullest. Every day is a new beginning. Who knows what is around the corner. Plan for tomorrow, but always live for today as if it were the last and welcome the light of dawn!

#6 Deception Pass November Sunset

Deception Pass November Sunset

In late November I decided to do some hiking winding my way through various trails crisscrossing Deception Pass State Park. I eventually reached this viewpoint and decided to stay to sunset, hiking out with head lamp. There is something about late fall/winter sunsets, especially when most of the day is cloudy and overcast, that make them seem more special to me!

#7 Twin Peaks

Twin Peaks

“To me dreams are part of nature, which harbors no intention to deceive but expresses something as best it can.” –Carl Jung

Fog creeps across the pond and begins to fill the Snoqualmie Valley on Winter evening after sunset. Images with atmosphere especially with fog, mist, low clouds, haze, sand, and rain can all evoke a sense of dream like mystery. What all of these atmospheric conditions have in common are particles in the air interacting with sources of light. This awakens our feelings and emotions to cultivate the sense mystery. Particles in the air soften the scene, and with the interaction of light this helps direct our attention to essential forms while hiding others which deepens the mood. It would be a mistake however to reduce our reaction to the scene’s atmosphere to just feelings and emotions. The mystery also points to something beyond even what we are feeling at the time, to a sense of wonder at the experience of being in nature. With the softer rendering of the scene made possible through atmosphere, the scene can often seem dream like and a little other worldly.

#8 Moon Rising Over the North Cascades

Moon Rising Over the North Cascades

This is from my August backpacking trip in the North Cascades. We were treated to a wonderful sunset and moon rise on Saturday Night. After the sun set the mercury rapidly dropped bringing on a very cold night at close to 7,000 feet elevation. I laid one of my water bottles outside my tent and it was frozen the next morning! I think we felt a bit of autumn approaching in the air.

#9 Dances with Fog and Light

Dances with Fog and Light

On a foggy morning at Deception Pass State Park I noticed this tree growing out of a eroded seawall, although large, bonsai like in its shape, with two needleless arm like branches reaching out to the rocks on the shore and in the sea. Through minimalism and the process of subtraction I knew I could get to the essence of the scene and the use of black and white would help as a medium to emphasize the contrast of light and shadow to bring attention to essential forms.

Subtraction is strongly related to both improving the composition and deepening the mystery. Subtraction is the notion that less is better, and there is a beauty and elegance in removing as many elements from the scene as possible. In photography, the world as it presents itself to us is often cluttered with extraneous detail. But the skilled eye using a good choice of lens and angle of view can always simplify the scene to primarily include those elements which are integral to the composition and deepening the mystery. This does not necessarily mean always using a longer focal length lens with a narrower field of view, as that would be an over simplification of the process. But it does mean a keen awareness of what attracts you to the scene and the skills to arrange as few elements as possible in a pleasing composition. What is left out strengtheners the mystery for the elements that still remain. With mystery there is almost always something concealed and held back.

#10 Madrone Spread Out Over the Bay

Madrone Spread out over the Bay

A Pacific Madrone rises from the edge of a steep undercut bluff and reaches out over the bay, and out further still to Puget Sound’s Rosario Head and Bowman Bay. Madrone trees prefer to grow along bluffs in fast draining soil close to salt water where the temperatures are also warmer in the Winter. They are always doing something, shedding bark and leaves year long, growing leaves, displaying beautiful white flowers in spring and red berries in fall and winter. Madrones are among my favorite trees. They have so much character that reflects their intimate connection with their immediate environment and no two trees alike.

#11 Sunrise at Big Cedar Tree

Sunrise at Big Cedar Tree

I pass this tree just about every day while walking through the woods close to my home. Somehow it was sparred during the logging of this area years ago. It looks so tall, beautiful and majestic at sunrise, rising above all the other trees of a different generation.

#12 The Larch

The Larch

I remember watching an episode years ago of the British comedy, “Monty Python’s Flying Circus” where an image of a Larch would keep popping up before, during and after various comedy skits with the narrator uttering the words in a British accent–The Larch. Perhaps this is where the expression Larch Madness has its roots! I am thinking that this Larch Tree here may be a good specimen for any new revival of the Monty Python show! I have always been attracted to a trees with character that stand out from all the rest but also appear as harmonious and organic parts of their larger environment. This Larch certainly stood tall and majestic above all the surrounding trees offering a clear subject and focal point and blended in beautifully in with its forest and mountain home. The autumn blueberry leaves in shades of burgundy, orange, red and gold provided a beautiful carpet leading my eyes to the golden larch and the mountain background helped place the Larch in its environment without also competing for attention. I love the way this Larch is seemingly reaching for and into the cloud filled sky above the mountains. Larch trees have needles like evergreen conifers, but these needles turn from green to yellow and gold in late September and early October in high alpine areas east of the Pacific Crest in Washington State.

#13 Light in a Mossy Forest

Light in a Mossy Forest

There is nothing like hiking on a late fall day when you round the bend and find a mossy forest catching the brilliant light of the sun already starting to set in the late afternoon.

#14 Daffodils Under the Tree of Spring’s Golden Light

Daffodils Under the Tree of Spring’s Golden Light

On an early March evening in the Skagit Valley, Spring welcomed me with Daffodils under the Tree of Spring’s Golden Light! A chorus of Geese were flying all evening overhead, heading north. Although none flew into my shot, the music was welcome in the cool air of the fragrant fields of gold.

15. The Great Pacific Northwest

The Great Pacific Northwest

This image has some of the best things I love about the Pacific Northwest and Washington State: Wild Rhododendrons in bloom, the beautiful waters of the Puget Sound and Hood Canal, Islands, and Mt. Rainier!

#16 Glimpses of Summer Paradise

Glimpses of Summer Paradise

From the slopes of the North Cascades, as I approached this meadow I thought I was seeing glimpses of what might be paradise, or at least as close as we mortals will ever see.

#17 The Flow and the Way of the Glacier Lilies

The Flow and Way of the Glacier Lilies

When the snow melts on the fields of Mt. Rainier, yellow Glacier Lilies are among the first wildflowers to bloom, sometimes rising right through a thin layer of snow, eventually forming vast colonies that flow through the meadows and lead the eyes to the beauty that is everywhere at Mt. Rainier National Park.

# 18 Lilac Tears of Joy

Lilac Tears of Joy

“When lilacs last in the dooryard bloom’d,
And the great star early droop’d in the western sky in the night,
I mourn’d, and yet shall mourn with ever-returning spring.” Walt Whitman

For many of us 2020 has been a year of mourning. We lost many of our loved ones due to the pandemic and other causes. I personally lost my Father who passed away at age 92. He live a good life but he was highly impacted during the pandemic by rules that helped keep him safe from Covid but also contributed to his isolation. His spirit lives on in all of his children and grand children, my loving Mother, and many others in his life. My Dad loved nature and the outdoors, never gave up on anyone–always being willing to help regardless of the circumstances or what one might have done. Family always came first. He introduced me to nature and the outdoors through hiking and photography at an early age and is one of the biggest influences in my life for my love of nature. Luckily I was able to talk to him in person outside a week before he died. The flowers were blooming at a dooryard and he was very lucid. He reminisced in vivid detail about a hike we took years ago to the Alpine Lakes Wilderness as if it were yesterday. My Dad was also very disciplined and I am so happy at least some of this wore off on me! Papa has gone on to a better place and is now in peace. Papa we miss you very much, but your spirit will always remain in our hearts forever.

#19 Blue Forget-Me-Nots

Blue Forget-Me Nots

This is dedicated to all our frontline workers in the medical field who have served us so well during this pandemic.

#20 Palouse

Palouse Sunrise

Rise and shine, this is your sunrise from the top of Steptoe Butte in the Palouse.

#21 Small Stream in an Ancient Forest

Small Stream in an Ancient Forest

With some areas of Olympic National Park opened after initial pandemic closures, in May I decided to take a visit. I am glad I showed up early as there were few people there and all camping facilities remain closed further reducing the crowds. The few people I saw were polite in their willingness to socially distance. Although I visited a few iconic sights, I felt drawn to this small stream cascading through some old growth, moss and rocks. The water seemed as pure as one could hope to find anywhere, likely one of the benefits of taking the trail less traveled through a rain forest.

#22 South Falls Backlit Maple

South Falls Backlit Maple

As the sun sets before dipping below the distant forest above the canyon wall, the leaves and moss of a big leaf maple are backlit taking on a luminous quality. Scattered light also illuminates South Falls against the dark background of the canyon walls.

#23 Lakeside Larches Turning Gold

Lakeside Larches Turning Gold

The Larches this year in Washington seem to have started turning gold a bit later than usual but at the time I took this image they were well on there way to their golden splendor!

#24 Blinded by the Light

Blinded by the Light

This image is looking out from Hurricane Ridge’s Observation Point out toward the first flank of the Olympics rising from the ocean waters of the Straight of Juan De Fuca. I am staring right toward the sun softly filtered through layers of clouds.

#25 Freedom

Freedom

A flock of birds fly through a foggy forest and into a small inlet before heading out into Bowman Bay. The song of the seagulls slowly passes through the misty air.

#26 Bare Tree Reflections in the Winter Light

Bare Tree Reflections in the Winter Light

The soft light of a winter sunset works its magic on a group of bare trees next to a small pond.

#27 Alpine Pond Autumn Moods

Alpine Pond Autumn Moods

In early October, Julia and I took a hike into the Alpine Lakes Wilderness Area in some of my favorite conditions: clouds and fog. Autumn is still hanging on, but there were signs that it is slowly making its exit with many leaves on the ground. The blueberries were perhaps at bit beyond their peak ripeness, but still well worth spending an hour picking!

#28 Grazing and Sleeping in the Pasture

Grazing and Sleeping in the Pasture

A herd of deer settle into a carefree evening in this idyllic setting under the Olympic Mountain and colorful skies.

#29 Tumwater Canyon Visions

Tumwater Canyon Visions

In early October, I took a drive over to Leavenworth and the Tumwater Canyon. I just love how still sections of the Wenatchee River reflect the surrounding trees and foliage now transitioning to the colors of Autumn. I decided to experiment with this nearly abstract composition with just the reflections. I flipped the image to get closer to my Monet like vision for this scene.

#30 The Colors of Autumn

The Colors of Autumn

This image has some of the best things I love about the North Cascades in Autumn: a mountain lake, morning light, reflections, orange mountain ash, burgundy blue berry leaves, and larch trees! This lake lies just below the east side of the Pacific Crest where in early October the green needles of the the Larch Trees turn to gold complementing the colors of the the deciduous leaves of the orange orange mountain ash and burgundy blueberries. These larch trees only grow in high alpine elevations usually above 6,ooo feet. On this day there was wind on the water but I found this gorgeous secluded spot on the lake where the water was protected and the fall foliage wrapped around the foreground of the scene to help frame the image of the lake, reflection, and the surrounding peaks.

#31 Russian Butte in the Mist

Russian Butte in the Mist

This is from an early morning adventure in late November hiking trails above the Middle Fork of the Snoqualmie River. I was taking some images of the forest when I turned around to this momentary opening in the clouds, fog and mist and was easily distracted into taking a different picture, this one!

Green Fields of the North Cascades

Green Fields of the North Cascades

This image was taken in August, but Spring arrives later in the North Cascades with the transition to Summer only a few weeks later, and not long after that Autumn!

Thanks for reading this blog post. I invite everyone to share with me their reactions to this blog post. You can share your thoughts, comments and impressions right here! If you think others would be interested in this post, please share it with your friends and other acquaintances. All of these images are available on my website for purchase and are located in the following link: 2020: Reflections on Change and Stillness. If you like the kind of content I am creating on this blog please let me know and consider subscribing to blog. Thanks again and may the wonder and awe of nature be with you!

My Best and Favorite Images from of 2019

Every year about this time I reflect back upon the year through a review of what I consider my best and most memorable images. I would not be honest if I said popularity has nothing to do with the selection. I have not met a nature and landscape photographer yet who did not feel a sense of validation of their work when it is well received in the photographic community and with people who follow their work. But popularity alone does not raise an image out of my often daily posts to the Best of 2019 album. I need to also feel good about the image, that it expresses something about who I am as a person, and the image also resonates with others at more of an emotional level. When I put an image into the Best of Album, I must feel reasonably confident that the image is well composed and is a good example of my progress in the art and craft of photography. Ultimately the images must be sufficiently impactful that they have the power to inspire others to share in my love for nature, and the ability of nature to lead us to something beyond our selves, the interconnection of everything on this earth. Here are 16 of my best and favorite images from 2019, not in any particular order. Thanks for looking!

#1 Rising from the Clouds

The moment when something changes after a long day in the clouds and fog, Mount Baker has risen. Looking into a scene like this when the mountain is still lost in the clouds to me is like soul searching and the process of self discovery. I know the mountain is out there and will eventually emerge from the fog, clouds and mist. Just as I know my authentic self, the essence who I am, has always been there just waiting to be rediscovered.

Not until we are lost do we understand ourselves.–Henry David Thoreau

#2 Ever Returning Spring

I always look forward to the Daffodils blooming in Washington’s Skagit Valley. To me their bloom symbolizes the arrival of spring, the long awaited movement out of winter hibernation, and the arrival of new life and energy. Every year we are lucky enough to experience the reawakening of our soul and a kind of rebirth. The daffodils in this image lead to a lone tree. Lone trees have always had a special place in my heart. For me part of their attraction is the sense of mystery that surrounds a lone tree. In this case, why was this tree spared when most if not all of the others were cut down when the valley was cleared for farms? The lone tree is often associated with the Tree of Life, a myth of a tree that connects heaven and earth. Standing at this spot I must say I feel I am as close to heaven here on earth as I will likely ever get, and this gives me greater appreciation of the enduring myth of the lone tree as the Tree of Life.

#3 Flock of Birds

It is such an exhilarating experience to watch about every hour or so the Skagit Valley Snow Geese gather and take up in flight, make of few spins over the fields, and then all land not much further away from where they started to resume their winter feeding. One must be patient, however, as the birds have a mind of their own as to the nature of the time and place for their next movement.

#4 Remembrance

Some summer memories linger and grow long after summer fades away providing memories of warmth and color one can draw upon anytime as the world turns.

#5 Mind Wandering in the Desert

Sometimes all that is needed is to lay down on the desert sand dunes and look up at the drifting sands and sky and let one’s mind wander to and fro. One thing I like about some desert landscapes is that world is reduced down to simple forms, patterns of light and shadow, lines and curves. The simple and beautiful essence of the landscape is made all the more apparent in natural near monochromatic scenes such as this one where the primary colors are gold and yellow tones.

#6 Spider Man

Photographing Japanese Maples in Autumn is one of the things I just love to do. Each tree seems to have its own character that almost every photographer sees in a slightly different way. A good Japanese Maple is truly a tree with a thousand faces. This year I decided to try photographing these trees in a much different way getting as close a possible to some of the more sinewy and well established branches. I call this image Spider Man because the branch extending form the right appears to be reaching out in several directions in a manner that looks both human and spider like.

#7 From Ashes to Nature’s Majesty

I consider this June Sunrise at St. Helens a near miraculous event: beautiful color in in a cloud filled sky, flowers near their prime, little wind, and beauty all around. It is moments like this that I feel so blessed to be fully alive and awake, witnessing nature at her best!

#8 Morning Fog

This Morning Fog image was clearly not one of my most popular images, but it is one from this year that I can relate to most and it also resonated well with several photographers and friends whose opinion I respect. To me the more subdued color pallet and subtle light moving through the grey green forest captures the feeling of walking through the woods on wet, somewhat dreary and cloudy late Autumn day. I have grown to actually like these days where one can walk in the quiet forest with an abundance of solitude, hear even the most subtle of sounds, and feel a close connection with the forest and its individual trees.

#9 Spring Thaw

The advent of Spring in the alpine often comes slowly. Even as one notices a few perennial plants here and there pushing up from bare spots on the forest floor, there is still snow to be seen in most other places. A few yellow glacier lilies will actually point their heads up right through the snow and alpine lakes begin to thaw as temperatures climb revealing beautiful abstract patterns of water, snow, and ice.

#10 Beauty at the Forest Floor

Nowhere do I find more peace and wonderment of the beauties of nature than at the forest floor. This is especially true in deciduous alder tree forests in sub alpine areas of Western Washington. Ample sunlight can make its way through the deciduous forest canopy in early spring before the leaves of the tree begin to emerge. This helps support the growth of a variety of greenery and flowers at the forest floor including bleeding hearts and queens tears pictured here. Later, the leaves of the forest canopy will crowd out much of the light, but at that time the bloom cycle will be about over and the plants will already be mature as summer approaches.

#11 October Multnomah Falls Dream

There is nothing like spending a morning in late October at this spot of iconic beauty that is Multnomah Falls. The Fall color this year was absolutely phenomenal and more beautiful than I can ever recall on previous visits. Although some say that Multnomah Falls is over shot, to me when one is lucky enough to find color and conditions like this, shooting the falls is cause for celebration. It is a little like seeing a double rainbow in the sky! Let us rejoice before the beauty and grandeur of Multnomah Falls in the colors of Autumn!

#12 Alpine Lakes Overlook

This image is looking out to some of my favorite lakes and peaks of Washington’s Alpine Lakes Wilderness area-Kulla Kulla and Mason Lakes, and Bandera, Pratt, and Granite Mountains. For me this is where my journey into Washington’s wilderness began at an early age hiking with my family and often neighborhood friends to the various lakes of this Wilderness Area. It is also a place I am always enthusiastic about returning to. Each time I revisit these beautiful ridges they look both familiar and new. I return a changed person and that seems to also effect my experience of this place. On this trip, the Alpine Lakes seemed more beautiful than ever before!

“We shall not cease from exploration and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time.” T.S. Elliot

13. Garden in Paradise

How would you imagine a garden in Paradise would look like? Would it possibly be something like this?

To fully experience the beauty of an wildflower meadow at Mount Rainier’s Paradise flower fields, one must lie in the trail inches away from a patch of flowers. From this low perspective breathe and take in the beauty that surrounds you. Be careful when you are doing this, walk (or lie!) on durable surfaces and leave no trace. It is surprising how many excellent composition opportunities can be found right from the trail. They may not be apparent, however, unless one gets down and dirty very low and close to the ground.

14. Beacons of Light

On this morning at a cloud covered Death Valley, beacons of light lit up small sections of the mountains creating beautiful spot lighting and contrasts of warm and cool light, streaking across the tall peaks and touching the salt sea with spring water below.

Climbing up through a steep and barely visible trail with head lamp I had few expectations for what would await me at the top of this climb. One of my favorite photographers, Erin Babnik, was leading the way to this spot with optimal viewing of Manly Beacon and the Death Valley salt flats below and I followed her steps. It was a cloudy day, but at sunrise shafts of light illuminated sections of the distant mountain and a not at all common site, water in Death Valley. I found the combination of warm and cool light amazing and this is a experience that will linger in my memory forever.

15. Avalanche of Fall Color

Here are swaths of fall color and light along a North Cascades Avalanche Chute. Light illuminating parts of this fall tapestry is a wonderful experience to behold. I could loose myself for hours just following the light as it saunters down the mountain side.

16. Palouse Lupine Dreams

Just after sunrise and the clearing of some valley fog, a beautiful patch of lupine looks out to the green wheat fields of the Palouse. I love photographing in this location and usually I look more for distant telephoto compositions featuring the waves and patterns of the spring wheat fields. But on this day I was drawn to a wide angle perspective of this beautiful patch of lupine along the slopes of Steptoe Butte. The combination of wild nature and the cultivated farm fields seem to live and thrive together in a harmonious chorus underneath a glorious Eastern Washington sky.

If you would like to see favorite images of 2019 displayed large and at higher resolution head on over to my website at https://www.erwinbuske.com/Print-Store/Best-and-Favorite-Images-of-2019/ Thanks everyone for looking!

2018 Calendar: The stories behind the images

I am excited to announce that my 2018 Calendar is now available and can be purchased through this link  Erwin Buske Photography 2018 Calendar.  As was the case last year, I will donate ALL proceeds to the Nature Conservancy.  Here are the images for each month along with some stories behind the images.  All images were taken in about the last twelve months and feature locations either in Washington State or somewhere near Washington.  Thanks everyone for your support and interest over the past year!

 

Gold Creek December072

January: Early Winter Magic

This image is of beautiful Gold Creek Pond close to sunset yesterday evening. Operating the camera was quite a challenge in the freezing cold temperatures made worse by occasional gusts of wind across the pond, but well worth the effort. I took out my water bottle to stay hydrated and placed it on a snow covered log-less than 15 minutes later is was more ice than water! The hike up Gold Creek was awesome also. I just love this area! Sony A7R2  22MM F16, 1/10S, ISO 100

 

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February: Hall of Mosses Deer Crossing

My daughter Caroline and I spent three days at Kalalock along Washington’s Pacific Coast over her spring break, with visits to Ruby Beach, and the Hoh and Quinault Rain Forests. The weather was at least ten degrees cooler there than here in Seattle and the rain storms came at intervals of about every 15 to 30 minutes. In between storms, however, there were epic conditions for photography with frequent sun breaks and also a few bright colorful rainbows!  Here in the Hoh Rainforest as soon as we parked the car the rains subsided creating an opening for us to hike the Hall of Moses trail along the Hoh River.  Beautiful filtered light entered through the forest canopy creating a soft glowing mysterious look. I set up my tripod at this group of Maples and Caroline said “Daddy there is a deer!”. I said where! And sure enough a deer walked into the scene I had already set up as I was looking through the viewfinder, at which time I cranked up the ISOs to freeze motion and started firing away the shutter!  Nikon D810, 36MM, F14, 1/200s, ISO 1250 to freeze motion.

 

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March: Ecoloa Beach Overlook: Flying West

It was a very awe inspiring experience this early evening to watch the movement of clouds and play of light on the waves. The perspective from the Ecola Overlook is one I never tire of and I find that the early evening light is best for this scene. It was particularly inspiring this evening with the dramatic clouds forming a ring around the sky and a passing gull flying through the scene.  Nikon D810, 28MM, F14, 1/320S, ISO 200.

 

 

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April: Ballad of Big Pink

This image is of sunrise at Roozengaarde Tulip Fields.  This is an example of an image that I did not consciously plan to take and by the good graces of the universe I arrived at the scene with little if any time to spare in order to capture the sun rising.  I planned to head out to the Skagit Valley from my home nearly two hours away around noon.  But at about 3AM I awoke wide awake from sleep and on a quick impulse decided to go then in order to make sunrise.  I arrived at the general area of the Tulip Fields but could not find a suitable field and place to pull the car to the side of the road even as the sunrise was starting and beautiful colors will filling the sky.  I thought at this point that I totally missed it in terms of “getting the shot” and as I was driving to get some coffee and breakfast I noticed a group of cars parked at the edge of what appeared to be a Tulip Field.  I quickly pulled into a field parking area and more clearly saw these pink tulips about a couple of blocks away.  I quickly grabbed my photo pack and  ran down the muddy path arriving just in time to setup and shoot!  Sony A7R2 35MM, F16, 1/2S, ISO 125

 

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May: Palouse Waves and Patterns

This image is of Palouse Waves and Patterns as viewed from Steptoe Butte.  When one  first arrives at Steptoe Butte the temptation is to take wide sweeping panoramas of the area, but in my experience the best shots are more of the narrow field images that emphasize the waves and patterns of the rolling wheat fields.   This image was taken with my 300MM lens with a 1.4 teleconverter attached.  Nikon D800, 300MM, F13, 1/15S, ISO 100

 

Rebirth

June: New Morning

At no time is the transformation of Mt. St. Helens more apparent than early summer when the first flowers appear in large drifts cascading down the mountainsides. Within my own lifetime I have witnessed a change going from ashes to Eden~  This image was taken just after sunrise.  This is a focus stack of several images taken at F8, 16MM,1/50s, ISO 400mm, Sony A7R2.

 

Indian Henry0470-HDR

July: Walking into a Dream 2

The best wild flower meadow that I know about is this one at  Indian Henry’s Hunting Ground, Mount Rainier National Park. This cabin is perfectly situated in as beautiful setting as I could ever imagine and when approaching the cabin through the meadow it is like walking into a beautiful dream. Indian Henry, known as Soo-Too-Lick, early on (1883) guided several familiar names to Mt. Rainier including the Hunting Grounds, these familiar names include James Longmire, Philemon Beecher Van Trump and John Muir. Indian Henry was a Cowlitz Indian, beloved by many people.  Sony A7R2 29MM, F16, 120S, ISO 200

 

Glacier Peak 2017 Images1896 copy

August: Image Lake at Sunrise

Beautiful pasque flowers gone to seed and Image Lake awaken to a rosy sunrise underneath Washington’s most remote volcanic peak, known by the Suak Indian Tribe as “Tda-ko-buh-ba”, but also known as Glacier Peak. This location in the Glacier Peak Wilderness comes as close to heaven on earth as anything my imagination can possibly conjure up. Looking out across the meadow and lake to Glacier Peak one feels the pure essence of a wilderness area, an area where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by people, and where we are just visitors who cannot remain in a place of such unspoiled beauty. Image Lake is not very accessible and I approached the lake as part of an extended 7 day backpacking trip with the Sierra Club in August of 2017. Our route took us up and over Spyder Gap’s Lyman Glacier, scrambling down into the Lyman Lake Basin, up and over Cloudy Pass, over to Image Lake, and out through Flower Dome and Buck Creek Pass-about a 60 mile loop trip including side trips.
Western pasqueflower, or Anemone occidentalis has a less than showy bloom but you won’t miss the next stage, which resembles a fuzzy mop of hair. An early bloomer, the seed pods last all summer on mountain slopes and meadows in middle to high elevations. This is a focus stack of 6 images taken at F11, 29MM, 1/5s, ISO 800 (to reduce movement caused by wind.

 

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September: Where the Angels Roam

This image is from my trip to Mt. Rainier in September of 2017. While driving up US 410 to circle around Rainier I passed through thicker and thicker smoke. This summer almost half of the days have been like this, drab and smoky due to forest fires in the area including the Norse Peak Fire on the northeast side of Rainier. The smoke actually helped me at Silver Falls as it combined with clouds to produce some spectacular mid-day filtered light. But this same layer of clouds and smoke did nothing but diminish the view of Mt. Rainier to the point where it was almost unrecognizable through the haze. I felt some winds blowing in the area and on a hunch, I thought Bench Lake would be a good place to go for sunset if some of the smoke would just blow away. It took almost ten minutes before sunset for this to happen, but for ten precious minutes the reward was absolute bliss, and some of the best light I have ever seen in this area!  Sony A7R2 23MM, F16, 1s, ISO 100

 

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October: Guardian of the Camp

The small peninsula in the Enchantments upon which we made our camp was evidently the home of this particular Mountain Goat who was our almost constant companion during our stay at the Enchantment Lakes!  The closer I moved toward the goat the closer she also moved toward me.  With the Kid goat not far away, I decided to go not closer than this!.  Sony A7R2, F14, 1/160S, ISO 100

 

Elowah Falls

November: Elowah Mystery of Autumn

This image is of beautiful Elowah Falls looking through the veil of moss covered boulders sprinkled with maple leaves, moss covered branches and the warm atmosphere of Autumn.  Getting this image was no small challenge, not so much because of the difficulties of navigating a steep and slippery hillside down to this shooting location, but because once I arrived I saw about six unattended tripods planted right in the river in front of me.  Luckily the workshop leader agreed to temporarily move his group out of the way so I could capture this shot.  I am hoping this area will be spared by the recent Eagle Creek Fire, but if not it will be wonderful to experience the renewal of this area in the years ahead.   Sony A7R2 16MM, F11, 1/4s, 1S0 160, this is a focus stack of several images.

 

Middle Fork Snow on Garfield comp

December: Garfield Whispers of Winter Approaching

In early December, I took one of those long hikes in the light rain that makes me happy I live in the Pacific Northwest-yes I love hiking in light rain! This time I headed west (rather than east) along the Middle Fork of the Snoqualmie River, past rainy creek and on to Pratt River. What a spectacular section of trail through the rain forest! I especially like the sounds of the light rain falling on the trees and bushes against the constant roar of the Snoqualmie River occasionally with the accompaniment of small creeks and streams swollen with near constant rain. There was only one brief opening and I retook this image, this time with a dusting of snow on Garfield Mountain and some clouds rolling through the valley.  This image won third place in the Washington Wild (a Conservation Advocacy Group) 2017 photo competition.  Sony A7R2, 16MM, F16, 8s, ISO 125, 5 stop neutral density filter

Storytelling

Its now 2017 and I have made my resolution for photography, to tell more stories to go along with my images.  Last year my resolution was to take more macro and small area images.  I was very successful in carrying out this resolution and I have no doubt I will be successful this year in sharing more stories about my images.  There is something about publicly making a positive affirmation through making a resolution that helps provide the energy to make things happen!

One thing I have noticed during this past year through social media is that when I combine a story with an image, the image is usually always more successful.  Viewers love a good story even if it is brief.  Most of my stories for landscape images have to do with the challenges that often come with getting the shot.  But there are also stories that have to do with the history of a landscape/land mark.  Sometimes the story relates to how a landscape awakens an experience at a personal level that is often shared by others as well, such a journey to one’s ideal home.  These stories are more archetypal in nature and point to common experiences.  Other times the story itself is in the image, for example images of trailscapes or approaching weather.  With all types of stories, the story helps lead the viewer not only into the image, but what the photographer was thinking and feeling at the time of capture.

In this blog post I will share some of my images and the original stories that went along with them from last year.  The first image is Snow Lake at Sunset and is titled “Its a Bugs World after all!”

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Snow Lake Sunset: Its a Bugs World after all!

“Yesterday I decided to take an impromptu trip to Snow Lake to watch the Sunset. I had scouted this composition out earlier in the week and wanted to return in more optimal light. Shooting the sunset at this location is challenging, not because of the steepness of the terrain, but because of the tempestuous and annoying buys that are everywhere. Every time the light got better, the bugs came out in ever increasing force creating zigzags in front of my camera lens and landing on the glass for in depth exploration as if it was a flower! And did I mention the biting! I attempted to swat them to clear them out of the area but this just caused them to come back with more vengeance as their high pitch humming sound got louder and louder. At one point I broadcast bug spray over the entire area but the spay fell back on my lens element interrupting my workflow some more! I resorted to speaking only in tongues and expletives. Finally i found my cool and I resigned myself to the fact that I was going to get eaten alive taking this sunset image and that I best take multiple images of the same scene in hopes that one would escape the wrath of the bugs, and that one shot is this one here! In spite of all the trouble, I am pleased how this turned out-it is such a beautiful spot! The pink heather dotting the landscape, the afterglow of the sun that just set, the warm color of the water and sky, were all just amazing that night!”

 

The next image is titled  “Nawiliwili Lighthouse” and is from a Father and Daughter vacation in February.

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Nawiliwili Lighthouse

“This image is of the Nawiliwili Lighthouse in the early morning light. The Nawiliwili Lighthouse is located close to Lihue and the Marriot Beach Resort on the island of Kauai. It is about a mile and a half walk from the Marriot Hotel where I was staying across a maze of roads and golf paths. On my first couple of adventures to this location I had not figured out the right way to get here and with headlamp trekked across the manicured golf greens close to the cliffs above the ocean in route to my obvious destination. Eventually I was approached by the attendant who told me this was strictly private property. After my next adventure, this time through head high abandoned sugar cane fields I finally set out to find the correct path through the maze which led me to this fine location and vantage point for Nawiliwili Lighthouse. Photographing at this spot is quite a memorable experience. If you arrive before dawn, you will enjoy the sound of not only the waves crashing on the shore but also of numerous bird calls including in infamous Kauai Roosters crowing one right after the other! The clouds move in an around the lighthouse quickly creating a constantly changing venue making possible always unique compositions.”

 

This next image is called “Going Home” and is from Indian Henry’s Hunting Ground at Mt. Rainier National Park, Washington State.

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Going Home

“This image is looking through a natural bouquet of flowers out to Indian Henry’s Ranger Cabin and Mt. Rainier in the distance. I do not know about you, but I would work for free to stay at this cabin at Mt. Rainier’s Indian Henry’s Hunting Ground for the summer months! Heck, I might evern pay! This cabin has to be everyone’s dream and fantasy of a home in an ideal setting, a universal archetype for a mountain cabin in a setting of a lush meadow with flowers and Mt. Rainier looming above. Needless to say, we met the ranger on this trip and he seemed quite content with his position, and very laid back also! Where is your special dream cabin located?

This image is from the recent series of wildflower hikes I led for the Seattle Mountaineers. Indian Henry’s is about a 12 mile round trip hike with about 3,500 feet elevation gain, making it somewhat challenging for a sunset hike with return by handlamp (this is what we did).”

 

The next image is titled Mirror Lake and is also from Indian Henry’s Hunting Ground at Mt. Rainier National Park.

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Mirror Lake

“This image is of Mirror Lake in the evening light at Indian Henry’s Hunting Ground, Mount Rainier National Park. Indian Henry, known as Soo-Too-Lick, early on (1883) guided several familiar names to Mt. Rainier including the Hunting Grounds, these familiar names include James Longmire Philemon Beecher Van Trump and John Muir. Indian Henry was a Cowlitz Indian, beloved by many people. Thanks to Celine Cloquet for helping uncover some background on Indian Henry.”

 

The next image is from a day hike to Goat Lake that I took in late Spring and is called “Refuge”.

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Refuge

“From my hike yesterday, this is Goat Lake in evening light with Cadet Peak in the distance. Goat Lake is located in the north central cascades with the trail accessible at the end of a short forest service road that departs from the Mountain Loop Highway. The hike is about five miles one way, but it is an additional mile, sometimes beating the bush, to where this image was taken at the far end of the lake. Goat Lake is only about 3.100 feet high and is one of the first lakes to become easily accessible and snow free in May. The bush is very thick and dense around the lake, making it difficult to find suitable places to properly frame an image. After scouting out the area for some time, I found an elevated boulder where I could place my tripod, the only issue is that I had to bunch the three legs close together making the balance somewhat precarious. Plus the tripod was situated higher than i could see clearly the LCD or EVF so I had to balance on my tiptoes on top of the narrow boulder also! Not a bad place, however, to perform acrobatics and a balancing act with no spectators.”

 

This next image is from my families vacation at the end of the road at Denali National Park and is called : “Dreams of the Great One”.

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Dreams of the Great One

“Denali basks in the calm atmosphere of the warm early morning light and also reveals itself in the waters of iconic Reflection Pond. Although this is an iconic site, very few people get to see it due weather and restrictions on access. The typical state of affairs in July are clouds and or rain with only occasional and brief moments of clearing. On my first trip to this location, I feel so blessed that there was an opening early on this morning. Cars are not allowed this far into the park, but the Backcountry Lodge, where I was staying, agreed to shuttle me out there in the early morning as long as I would walk back. As we rounded the bend of a steep and winding road the mountain suddenly became visible, and the beauty of the peak was spell binding, to the point I almost forgot I came here to take images. The beauty first and foremost must be experienced for what it is in the moment. Images come second. Denali at 20,310 feet is the largest in North America and when measured from the base to the top is 18,000 feet making it the highest mountain in the world. The flowers in the foreground along with the clouds and atmosphere helped me frame this image in a somewhat unique way.”

 

This next image is titled “Like a Bridge Over Troubled Water”

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Like a Bridge Over Troubled Water

“” Like a bridge over troubled waters, I will ease your mind.” With all stress and anxiety that many have been feeling over the past couple of weeks or so I thought I would feature an image that takes us to to calmer place. This image is from my recent trip to the Columbia Gorge and is of Mist Falls along the Wahclella Falls trail. These falls normally do not have much of a flow, but in late October there were heavy rains in the Gorge making these falls really stand out.”

This final image is titled “On the Trail to Elowah” and tells its own story.

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On the Trail to Elowah

Here is to telling more stories to go along with my images in CY 2017.  What stories will you tell in the coming year?  I look forward to hearing them and will be sharing many of my own in the days ahead!