Subalpine Meadow, Forest, and Peaks

Subalpine Meadow, Forest, and Peaks
At the edge of a subalpine meadow, surrounded by forest and high peaks

Subalpine Meadow, Forest, and Peaks. John Muir Wilderness, California. September 1, 2017. © Copyright 2017 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

At the edge of a subalpine meadow, surrounded by forest and high peaks

I’ll have to go back and look through a week’s worth of photographs to see if I’m just imagining it, but it seemed to me that we could almost watch the high meadows start to change from green to golden during this late-season trip into the John Muir Wilderness. It was surprisingly green when we arrived about a week from the end of August — the surroundings looked more like perhaps lake July of a normal year, with lush green vegetation in the meadows and extraordinary numbers of blooming wildflowers. One doesn’t typically go to the Sierra near the beginning of September to photograph wildflowers, but that was quite possible this year. But by the first days of September, a week later, it seemed like the usual transition from green to golden was finally happening.

We were also fortunate to experience “interesting” weather, which is not always a sure bet in the Sierra. Talk to a few long-time High Sierra photographers and you’ll hear griping about the terrible, awful “week of boring blue skies!” That may seem like an odd complaint to those who frequently must photograph through challenging weather, but we can be frustrated by too much blue sky! We did have these conditions on this trip, but we also had clouds and rain, including one surprise after-dark shower. The clouds in this photograph are small, but it was still morning — such clouds are often the harbingers of afternoon thunder showers.


G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books and Amazon.
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