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Posts Tagged ‘National’

30 Mile Shadow of Haleakala – Haleakalã National Park

20 Dec

Last weekend I enjoyed one of my favorite locations and views atop the summit of Haleakalã on the island of Maui. This spot has one of the most fascinating views that is created when the sunsets, namely the amazingly long shadow of the 10,000+ peak of Haleakala that stretches across the Pacific Ocean. Every time I visit most people are facing the opposite direction to take in a glorious sunset, but I am always entranced by the shadow as it stretches across the open ocean. A shadow might not seem exciting to most, but its fascinating to think how this one shadow can blot out light for such a vast area and stretch to the horizon. Adding to this view is the open crater of Haleakala with its iconic cinder cones and more subtle geological features. I never tire of this view.

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

30 Mile Shadow of Haleakala – Haleakalã National Park

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Government Shutdown Effect – Yosemite National Park

07 Oct
Tioga Pass East Entrance with Sign - 2013 Federal Shutdown - Yosemite National Park

Tioga Pass East Entrance with Sign – 2013 Federal Shutdown

Day 1 of the partial U.S. government shutdown just happened to fall on the day I left for my fall photography and new moon astro-landscape trip. My first stop was Yosemite National Park which was a high profile casualty of the shutdown. All highways were open to the park so as to drive through, but visitors were asked to refrain from stopping. Quite ironic that the public was and still is being advised to avoid using public land.

Tunnel View Signs - 2013 Federal Shutdown - Yosemite National Park

Tunnel View Signs – 2013 Federal Shutdown

Having traveled through Yosemite so many times it was incredibly sad and frustrating to not be able to enjoy the scenery as I might normally. I cannot emphasize how frustrating it was to have something of such beauty in reach, but yet deliberately taken away. Lucky for you though I’ve developed a set of images taken during my trip that just might evoke that frustration as I felt. Below are the amazing views of Yosemite as taken during my time in Yosemite during the first days of the U.S. government shutdown.

El Capitan Sunset - 2013 Federal Shutdown - Yosemite National Park

El Capitan Sunset – 2013 Federal Shutdown

Tuolumne Meadows - 2013 Federal Shutdown - Yosemite National Park

Tuolumne Meadows – 2013 Federal Shutdown

Half Dome from Olmstead Point - 2013 Federal Shutdown - Yosemite National Park

Half Dome from Olmstead Point – 2013 Federal Shutdown

El Capitan - 2013 Federal Shutdown - Yosemite National Park

El Capitan – 2013 Federal Shutdown

Tunnel View - 2013 Federal Shutdown - Yosemite National Park

Tunnel View – 2013 Federal Shutdown

Deer in El Capitan Meadow - 2013 Federal Shutdown - Yosemite National Park

Deer in El Capitan Meadow – 2013 Federal Shutdown

Tenaya Lake - 2013 Federal Shutdown - Yosemite National Park

Tenaya Lake – 2013 Federal Shutdown

Photo Details:

iPhone 5S with blur achieved in camera at the time of capture.

For more on why the national parks were shut down I recommend this NPR article and broadcast:

National Parks Close As Other Public Lands Stay Open

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

Government Shutdown Effect – Yosemite National Park

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National Geographic’s 125th anniversary celebrations continue

30 Sep

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As part of the continuing celebration of its 125th anniversary, National Geographic once again features Steve McCurry’s famous ‘Afghan Girl’ photograph on the cover of October’s ‘The Photography Issue’. Along with the new issue, National Geographic has launched some supporting content, as well as a new blog called Proof, offering ‘new avenues for our audience to get a behind-the-scenes look at the National Geographic storytelling process.’ 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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20 September, 2013 -Navajo National Monument

20 Sep

Miles Hecker a regular contributor shares a new article on the Navajo National Monument.  

Kevin Raber has posted a new image on the Home Pgae.  This image was made last month on a journey from Svalbard.  Polar Bear On The Edge illustrates the environment the Polar Bear lives in.  This was a fascinating trip to learn of the challenges facing the Polar Bear all throughout the north.  

Check back often for an update to Michael Reichmann’s continuing review of the Olympus OM-D E-M1.

 

 

"Having been to Antarctica with Michael and Kevin, I would say after having traveled the world and shot nearly my entire life as an exhibiting photographer,  it was one of my highlights in my life and I talk about it, all the time.  The images and experience of seeing something visionary and nearly extinct from the world, to see and experience the wildlife and scenery that does not fear humans is amazing.  The images I shot there won me two Smithsonian awards and nearly 18 other international awards". – Tim Wolcott

 Find Out More Now
These Expeditions Will Sell Out Quickly. They Always Do

 


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Shadowless – Yosemite National Park

18 Sep

While it can be enticing if not blinding over time to chase golden hour light I’ve come to savor the moments I can explore a foggy landscape. While photographers will often use depth of field and lighting (ex. rim lighting, naturally occurring spot lighting, back lighting, etc.) to place an added emphasis of focus on a subject fog provides a naturally occurring means of doing the same thing. Fog both obscures and isolates subjects while bringing out naturally occurring color. Leveraging these qualities of fog with the right subject and you can produce a moody and timeless photo.

Around this time last year while driving to the Owens Valley, via Tioga Pass through Yosemite, I was pleasantly surprised that most of high country was socked in with extremely heavy fog. Ironic in such a majestic landscape I could be so excited to have obscured views. Rather than focus on the bigger elements of the landscape the fog provided a means to see the finer details and work to capture them in an intimate fashion. If you’re ever driving through a scenic location with heavy fog my recommendation is duck off the road to a safe spot and explore the area with your camera.

Photo Details

5 image vertical panoramic, Canon 5D Mark II, Canon EF70-200mm f/2.8L IS II USM, 1/100 sec, f/9, ISO 320

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

Shadowless – Yosemite National Park

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National Geographic photog shoots the Southwest US with Nokia 1020

30 Aug

natgeo3.jpg

National Geographic sent photographer Stephen Alvarez to the beautiful American Southwest equipped with Nokia’s flagship Lumia 1020 smartphone. The results from the 1020’s 41 megapixel camera are pretty impressive – at least by mobile phone standards. You can evaluate the photos with your own eyes on our mobile photography site, connect.dpreview.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Dogwoods, Yosemite National Park

16 Aug
Dogwoods, Yosemite National Park

Dogwoods, Yosemite National Park

“To love beauty is to see light.” – Victor Hugo

This Victor Hugo quote in its original context had nothing to do with photography, but it is quite appropriate to photographers and those who love photography. Not only does nature photography revolve around the art of light and seeing, much to Hugo’s original intent, beauty inspires and gives us hope. One of the  many reason I enjoy photography and share it with others.

Photo Details:

Canon 5D Mark III, Canon 50mm f/1.0 at f/1.0, ISO 320, at 1/3200/sec

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

Dogwoods, Yosemite National Park

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National Geographic drones help capture Serengeti wildlife close up

11 Aug

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What’s the safest way to get close up photos of lions on the Serengeti? Send in a robot. And an aerial drone. That’s what photographer Michael Nichols and his team did, producing incredible images for a National Geographic feature. From a nearby car, Nichols and crew directed a small remote-controlled robot outfitted with a Canon camera toward lion prides as they hunted, slept and well, do everything lions do. And we do mean everything.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Morning Mist – Glacier National Park

05 Aug
Morning Mist - Glacier National Park

Morning Mist fills the valley below Logan Pass in Glacier National Park

This weekend I went back to look through older footage of Glacier National Park as I worked on a long standing personal project. While much of what I was working on in the field at the time centered on the iconic views of Glacier National Park, I was happy to see that I also captured the subtle beauty of the park as well. Sometimes simple aerial or atmospheric perspective can transform a well known view into something offbeat or abstract.

In looking at this scene I instantly locked on to the shading of light over the forest as morning light entered the valley and bounced off its walls. This wasn’t the typical view of a landscape with atmospheric perspective as the light seemed to split into a narrow fan of varying intensities. In watching the lighting change it was as if Mother Nature was lifting a curtain on an incredible show.

Related Reading:

Originality – A Matter of Perspective 

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

Morning Mist – Glacier National Park

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Canadian Travelogue: Nova Scotia – Cape Breton Highlands National Park

21 Jul

The autumn foliage of Cape Breton Highlands National Park offers a more exciting colour palette than anywhere else in Canada, and quite possibly in North America.

The best time to visit is immediately after Thanksgiving weekend in October. The holiday weekend itself can be nightmarish, with hordes of people and endless lines of tour buses. Restaurants are filled to capacity and accommodations are hard to find unless you have made reservations well in advance. On the Monday immediately following the holiday weekend, you will pretty much have the entire Highlands region and the National Park to yourself.

Beulach Ban Falls in the 2nd week of October.

Beulach Ban Falls in the 2nd week of October.

The park is enclosed by the northern section of the famed 300Km long Cabot Trail, a loop of highway that starts and ends at Baddeck. I prefer to enter the Park at the western terminus, near the Acadian village of Cheticamp, and tour the park in a by driving in a clockwise direction along the Cabot Trail.

For those who enjoy American history, the original residents of Cheticamp are repatriated families who had previously been extradited to the United States during the Great Expulsion (Le Grand Dérangement) of 1755.  The word Cajun, which is a common term used to identify the French residents of Louisiana, for example, is actually an anglicized mispronunciation of the French word Acadien. This is a topic for another day, but Cheticamp is a fabulous place to base a few days and listen to the residents speak a very unique and distinct dialect of French and English languages.

One cannot leave the Cape Breton without the classic Cabot Trail photo, and the opportunity comes early in the trip. Park your car at the Cap Rouge pull-off and look southwest back toward the village of Cheticamp – you will instantly recognize the view and potential for a great post card picture. This is an afternoon shot, unless you are looking for a photographic challenge. A sunset photo from this location can be breathtaking, but it can also be difficult to pull-off. The sun will be slight to the right-centre of the frame so you will most likely have to contend with lens flare, and make your images thinking of a final HDR treatment.

Two particular locations in the park that call me back each year are Mary Ann Falls and Beulach Ban Falls. Beulach Ban Falls is at the eastern base of North Mountain, near the most northerly point on the Cabot Trail. It is reached by way of a gravel laneway that passes a warden’s cabin, on the opposite side of the road from the Big Intervale Campground. About 2 kilometres on this gravel laneway will get you to a small picnic park, and to the base of the falls. You should hear the falls from the parking lot. As with any waterfall, the option to include the entire waterfall, or selective portions, is an entirely personal choice – let the muses direct your creativity.

Mary Ann Falls in 2nd week of October. Yes, I placed the leaves; however, I later heard a photographer swear up and down that those leaves in his picture were exactly as he found them!

Mary Ann Falls in 2nd week of October. Yes, I placed the leaves; however, I later heard a photographer swear up and down that those leaves in his picture were exactly as he found them!

On the Park’s eastern limits, and about a 5 kilometre drive west from the town of Ingonish, you will come to a gravel road leading inland to the Marrach Group Campground. Continue along this road, following the signs to Mary Ann Falls, for about 7 kilometres until you come to a gated wooden bridge – Mary Ann Falls is immediately to your right, or downstream.

Successful images can be made at several vantage points, but the weather will often decide your ideal location along this relatively small but photogenic waterfall. Like most watercourses, the ideal time to make photographs at either Mary Ann Falls or Beulach Ban Falls is during a light drizzle or with overcast skies, thus lowering the overall contrast. Shutter speeds below 1/15th of a second should produce the often sought after “bridal veil” effect, suggesting water movement.

There are many other locations in Cape Breton Highlands National Park that deserve your attention: there is a fantastic panoramic image looking up MacKenzie River from a pull-off near the top of MacKenzie Mountain, the Coastal Trail offers some really unique Jack Pine stands (an uncommon tree in Cape Breton) as well as several vantage points for great views along the Gulf of St. Lawrence shoreline, and a really easy hike among the hardwoods of the Lone Shieling Trail.

As with most national parks, there is much to offer and explore. You simply have to allow yourself the time and flexibility to maximize your efforts in this park due to its maritime environment – if you don’t like the weather, wait an hour.

The Highlands of Cape Breton, in autumn, is a world-class destination. Plan to spend at least four days to appreciate its splendour.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

Canadian Travelogue: Nova Scotia – Cape Breton Highlands National Park


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