Tag Archives: autumn

Eastern Sierra Aspen Color Reports Starting (9/24/09)

If you are really trying to follow the evolution of eastern Sierra fall color – most aspens – your best bet is to find some of the primary sources yourself and start following them. However, I’m going to continue to post a few here from time to time – and before long I should be able to start posting some of my own reports.

  • Inge Fernau posted an extensive description of her one-day marathon trip to Bishop Creek, including some photographs that will help those who know the areas already extrapolate a bit. Inge’s site is always worth a visit, and few post more thoroughly on the aspens.
  • The calphoto site is typically a great source of current information about the fall color in the eastern Sierra… but this season there doesn’t seem to be much info there yet. I’m hopeful that this many change in the next few days.
  • The Eastern Sierra Fall Color group at Flickr has a lot of information, both in the form of text and in images that will give you some answers to the “where?” and “when?” questions.
  • Greg Boyer’s One Horse Studio site is featuring frequent updates including one from the middle of the current week that sounds somewhat optimistic.

Remember a few things about finding and shooting aspens:

  • Conditions can vary a lot as you travel north/south and low/high. If you hear a poor report about one spot, you cannot necessarily extrapolate that to the whole range. Be prepared to move if your “perfect spot” isn’t in condition.
  • How you shoot the trees matters a lot. Sometimes a grove that seems to be almost green will appear to be quite yellow/gold if you go around to the other side for some backlight.
  • Time of day matters a lot #1. It is really tough to shoot them effectively in harsh, midday sun on a cloudless day. Early and late are often better, and shooting on the sun/shade boundary is often very interesting – though you’ll have to be prepared and work quickly.
  • Time of day matters a lot #2. A spot that is flat and boring in the morning may shine in the evening, and vice versa.
  • Time of day matters a lot #3. Shooting in shady conditions is sometimes very effective. You can get past the problems with black shadows and blown highlights and get a very wonderful soft effect – though you’ll likely have to do some color balancing in post.
  • If you show up and there is a crowd in the spot you were heading towards – yes, it happens! – look around. There is often something slightly different nearby and shooting something other than “the obvious thing” often leads to more interesting shots. (One morning I arrived at North Lake intending to do the iconic “across the lake towards Piute Peak” shot only to find a few dozen photographers lined up tripod to tripod in “the spot.” I went a few hundred yards away… and came back with one of my very favorite aspen photos.
  • Think small. Big groves are spectacular, but sometimes one perfect leaf can make a better photograph.
  • Think beyond the trees. Part of the experience includes other trees, rocks, moving or still water, clouds, grass, etc.

Happy aspen hunting!

UPDATE: 9:00 p.m. – Sierra Impressions points out that there is a probability of a change in the weather pattern next week – in the direction of true fall-like weather. That could mean cooler temperatures (a possible hard freeze is mentioned), perhaps wind, and (outside chance) some precipitation. It is always good to keep an eye on this stuff, for a whole bunch or reasons:

  • light snow can create some really wonderful photographic opportunities, but
  • it can also temporarily close passes, and
  • challenge your adaptability to and knowledge of more challenging conditions.
  • wind can quickly bring down some aspen leaves. (One morning I arrived before dawn at North Lake to find beautiful leaves. A squall swept in and it blew and snowed lightly for about an hour. At the end of that hour the large grove across the lake had lost half of its leaves!)

Besides following the official weather service reports – I like to read the “weather discussion” pages for more details – it also can be fun and informative to follow the Mammoth Dweeb Report. Not only does this site include some interesting local information and a lot of background stuff, but you can have fun following the speculation about longer term patterns.


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.

G Dan Mitchell: Blog | Bluesky | Mastodon | Substack Notes | Flickr | Email


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

Late-Season Corn Lilies and White Flowers

Late-Season Corn Lilies

Late-Season Corn Lilies and White Flowers. Yosemite National Park, California. August 24, 2009. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Golden late-season corn lily plants at Half Moon Meadow, Yosemite National Park, California.

The summer goes so quickly in the High Sierra! It was barely a month ago that I was in the Young Lakes region for a few days and the wildflowers were just starting to come into form, and only a couple weeks ago when I encountered peak condition wildflowers above 10,000′ in the upper Sabrina Basin. While you can still find wildflowers – including in this photograph! – if you know where to look in the Sierra, the signs of the coming autumn are beginning to appear throughout the high country, as they do every year at about this time.

Every year, there seems to be a day during the second half of August when I’m in the Sierra and I get a very clear and distinct impression of a change. In many cases I’m hard pressed to identify exactly what it is, but I know it is there. It might be something about the changing angle and quality of the light. Sometimes I think changing air movement and wind patterns may play a part. Perhaps it is the end of the lush moisture from melting snow. In other cases it is more obvious – like when I begin to see these late-season corn lily plants begin their transition: first they are thick and green; then a bit of  brown begins to appear at the tips of the leaves; soon the veined pattern of the leaves begins to pick up brown and yellow streaks; before long some of the plants turn wild yellow and gold colors and their stems begin to weaken; and in a short time they fall over and taken on the texture and color of old corn stalks.

I photographed these brightly colored leaves at the edge of Half Moon Meadow in Yosemite during the last week of August while on a three-day pack trip into the Ten Lakes Basin.

(If anyone can identify the small white flowers in this photo I would be very grateful. And, no, the flowers are not growing from the bright yellow corn lily plants! 10/11/09 – I think we have  a winner. It looks like it might be a plant called gray’s lovage.)


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.

G Dan Mitchell: Blog | Bluesky | Mastodon | Substack Notes | Flickr | Email


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

Michael Frye on fall photography in Yosemite and the Sierra

Michael Frye has just posted a very useful guide to fall photography in Yosemite and the Sierra at his blog. Frye has a great deal of experience here, especially with The Valley itself – you may know him as the author of The Photographer’s Guide to Yosemite.

I was interested to read that he really loves November photography in The Valley – as it is also at the top of my list of great times for photography there. Right at the beginning of the month I love to shoot the fall colors – wonderful big leaf maples, red leaves of dogwood trees, and the brown to golden colors of the oaks and the dry meadows. I find the weather during this month to be some of the most conducive to photography… basically you can run into almost anything: the first real snows of the season, arriving and clearing storms ringing the Valley walls with clouds, beautiful golden light of autumn, waterfalls that may come back to life after autumn rain, and much more.

More signs of fall in the High Sierra

I returned last night from a four-day pack trip into the Lyell Canyon/Vogelsang HSC area of the Yosemite back-country, and the signs of the coming fall are numerous.

  • Perhaps most apparent is the smaller number of people in the back-country! Although I traveled some quite popular trails I saw only a small number of backpackers. Ah, post Labor Day in the Sierra – my favorite time!
  • Many of the annual plants are dying and turning shades of brown, yellow, and gold. The mule ears have almost all lost their summer green color, the leaves of plants around treeline are beginning to turn yellow and red, and almost all of the grasses have gone to seed and turned golden-brown.
  • Although there has not yet been a real early fall storm, the weather pattern is starting to show signs of approaching weather systems.
  • The leaves of a few aspen trees are beginning to change colors. I haven’t been to the “east side” since mid-August, but in Yosemite I saw a very small number of yellow aspen leaves on trees along Yosemite Creek just yesterday.
  • Even some of the lower elevation plants are changing – also yesterday, I saw red leaves of some of the dogwood trees along highway 120 just inside Yosemite.

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.

G Dan Mitchell: Blog | Bluesky | Mastodon | Substack Notes | Flickr | Email


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