Category Archives: Photographs: Yosemite

Autumn Oak Leaves, Rain – Yosemite Valley

Autumn Oak Leaves, Rain - Yosemite Valley

Autumn Oak Leaves, Rain – Yosemite Valley. Yosemite National Park, California. November 2, 2008. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Yellow oak leaves during autumn rain in Yosemite Valley, California.

Late in the afternoon – before finding my spot to shoot evening light – I was wandering about in a section of The Valley where there were colorful oaks and dogwood trees when I stopped to shoot this group of yellow and green leaves on a very young oak in a dark section of the forest in the light rain.

keywords: oak, leaf, leaves, tree, grove, forest, fall, autumn, color, yellow, green, season, foliage, yosemite, valley, national park, california, usa, sierra, nevada, mountains, scenic, stock

Autumn Oak and Rain, Yosemite Valley

Autumn Oak and Rain, Yosemite Valley

Autumn Oak and Rain, Yosemite Valley. Yosemite National Park, California. November 1, 2008. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Oak tree with orange foliage in a Yosemite Valley meadow as light rain falls.

This was shot in the rain in a meadow not too far from Sentinel Bridge, if I recall correctly. I liked the mist almost obscuring the cliffs in the distance, and like the fall color on the large tree – but I also like something that is perhaps not too easy to see on this small version, the more distant trees on the right sort of fading into the misty rain.

kewords: oak, tree, grove, meadow, grass, autumn, fall, color, yellow, gold, ridge, cliff, mist, fog, rain, yosemite, valley, national park, california, usa, scenic, landscape, travel, season, weather, wet, stock, nature

Oak Tree and Cliff, Autumn – Yosemite Valley

Oak Tree and Cliff, Autumn - Yosemite Valley

Oak Tree and Cliff, Autumn – Yosemite Valley. Yosemite National Park, California. November 2. 2008. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

An oak tree with autumn color against a cliff face, Yosemite Valley, California.

I found two interesting trees to photograph against the north Yosemite Valley cliffs near Ahwahnee Meadow and the Ahwahnee Lodge on this rainy November day. (The other one was located only a few feet from this tree, and I posted the photo earlier at my blog.) The tree was in the final stages of losing its leaves and the cliff face was wet from two days of rain.

This photograph is, for me, another example of why it is good to return to the same place again… and again. I’ve photographed in this very area quite a few times, making photographs of Ahwahnee Meadow in just about every season, photographing a nearby oak grove on the edge of the meadow, and photographing dogwood trees in fall. Every other time I’ve been there I’ve looked back at the spot where this tree is located without seeing anything – but this time I think I got the timing right and found different lighting conditions that make it possible to see this shot that I had never noticed before.


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” (Heyday Books) is available directly from him.

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All media © Copyright G Dan Mitchell and others as indicated. Any use requires advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

Oak Among Pines

An Oak Among the Pines

Oak Among Pines. Yosemite Valley, California. November 1, 2008. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

A solitary oak with autumn foliage against the backdrop of a dense pine forest in Yosemite Valley near El Capitan Meadow.

As I was photographing the brilliant fall colors of meadow and oak trees in El Capitan Meadow in early November I noticed this solitary oak apart from the other oaks, along the edge of the meadow and with a recently-burned pine forest behind it.

Update: Someone pointed out that these “recently-burned” trees look pretty darn healthy and wondered what I meant. If you look closely you can see that the bases of the trees are, in fact, scorched. In Yosemite National Park, a “fire management” policy is pursued in place of a “fire suppression” policy. Decades ago fire in the forest was regarded as a bad thing and the enemy of healthy forests. More recently it has become apparent that fire is actually part of the life of a healthy forest – and that letting a forest go too long without fire is actually a very bad thing.

This has been proven in many places, including Yosemite. Several very destructive fires have almost completely destroyed some forest areas that were too long “protected” from fire – and as a result the excessive fuel that built up led to tremendously hot and destructive fires that completely killed off old trees. In a healthy forest, the more typical fire may burn the ground plants – many of which are adapted to recover quickly – but it rarely is hot enough to kill off the old, large trees.

Recognizing this, the park service now allows most natural fires to take their natural course, sometimes burning slowly (with supervision and “management”) for weeks or months. Fires are intentionally set in The Valley for this same purpose, and the result is very healthy forests like the one seen behind the oak tree – bearing some signs of past low level fires, but otherwise in very good shape.

keywords: oak; tree; leaves; foliage; autumn; fall; season; color; yellow; gold; brown; bright; solitary; alone; single; pine; forest; trunk; grass; meadow; el capitan; yosemite; valley; national park; california; usa; sierra; nevada; mountains; scenic; travel; landscape; nature; stock