Tag Archives: central

Geese, Tule Fog, Autumn Trees

Geese, Tule Fog, Autumn Trees
Migratory snow geese and Ross’s geese in a pond on a foggy San Joaquin Valley morning

Geese, Tule Fog, Autumn Trees. San Joaquin Valley, California. December 1, 2017. © Copyright 2017 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Migratory snow geese and Ross’s geese in a pond on a foggy San Joaquin Valley morning

Since it was December 1, it seemed like time to start my annual series of visits to California’s Great Central Valley to photograph migratory birds and the landscape of the place. (Actually, I had made one preliminary and very quick visit about a month earlier, but too early for the birds shown in this photograph.) There is a ritual about these visits which, for me, are typically one-day affairs that start very early and end rather late, with a fair amount of driving involved. Up well before dawn, I drive a couple of hours in darkness and often fog, arriving perhaps a half hour before dawn to the stirring sound of many thousands of birds, already awake at morning twilight. I photograph intensively for at least a few hours before taking, at last on most days, a midday break. By mid-afternoon I’m back at work again, photographing through the peak of the visual crescendo just before sunset and then continuing for perhaps another half hour or so until the light is gone. I pack, get into my vehicle, and retrace my two-hour drive back home. (At least the shorter daylight hours of this season allow me to get up a little bit “later” — if you consider 3:45 or 4:00 AM later — and return home in time for a late dinner.)

On this first day of December it was incredibly foggy when I arrived — so much so that it was really hard to make photographs. I usually enjoy photographing in the fog, but this was so thick that almost no sunrise light managed to color the gloom. But before long the light began to come through the fog and eventually I found a moderately large group of white geese settled in on a pond. Among them I saw Ross’s and snow geese, and beyond them there were trees with fall foliage.


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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White-Faced Ibis

White-Faced Ibis
White-faced ibis wading in shallow water

White-Faced Ibis. San Joaquin Valley, California. December 1, 2017. © Copyright 2017 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

White-faced ibis wading in shallow water

Late each fall I begin heading out into California’s Great Central Valley to photograph migratory birds and the winter (plus a bit of autumn) landscape of this place. That landscape is largely agricultural, but Americans had enough foresight in the past — and one hopes we’ll return to those roots again soon — to put aside many areas in this midst of these areas for the use of birds, largely migratory birds who spend their summers thousand of miles to the north and then magically appear in my neighborhood during the colder months. Here, under the Central Valley’s open sky (often obscured by tule fog at this time of year!) I find cranes, herons, ibises, geese, egrets, hawks, eagles, and more.

Yesterday I made my first real bird photography foray of the new season. As usual, I was up and on the road many hours before dawn, arriving at my destination a half hour before sunrise to find the place socked in by tule fog so thick that bird photography wasn’t really possible at first. I took my time, slowing down to synchronize with the less-hectic flow of time here, and a bit later in the day came upon a group of ibises feeding near the edge of a pond. The coloration of ibises used to confuse me. Guides show everything from nearly black to quite colorful, but the first time I saw these birds they looked dark and, to be honest, somewhat drab. However, as this photograph shows, in the right light their feathers can produce a wild array of color including red, blue, green, yellow and more.


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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Temblor Range Wildflowers, Evening

Temblor Range Wildflowers, Evening
Wildflowers, evening light in the Temblor Range hills

Temblor Range Wildflowers, Evening. Carrizo Plain National Monument, California. April 2, 2017. © Copyright 2017 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Wildflowers, evening light in the Temblor Range hills

On the first day of my annual spring Death Valley visit, I took a detour down US 101 and then inland to the Carrizo Plain National Monument. I usually go straight to Death Valley in a single day, but the reports of a “super bloom” in areas of the Central Coast, plus the fact that friends were already there camping and photographing, made the side-trip sound interesting. Heading inland from 101 at Paso Robles, I soon entered the spring-green hills and began to see wildflowers… and wildflower fans! After five yours of historic California drought, Californians are absolutely thrilled by this lush spring of green hillsides and flowers. I continued heading east and eventually arrived at the Carrizo, where the only thing more plentiful than the wildflower hunters were the flowers themselves!

This national monument is not as developed as most, which makes sense given the remote location, the typical dry and inhospitable climate, and the generally small number of visitors to this faculty that is co-administered with the BLM. All of that is my way of saying that it took me a while to figure out where the heck I was and where my friends were camped! I found them, we sat and caught up on one another’s stories, and as evening came on we headed out for some photography. We ended up climbing up into the Temblor Range, where there were all kinds of flowers. I made this photograph of the hills and valleys above us just before the sun set.


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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Chasing Spring Color In The Temblor Range

Chasing Spring Color In The Temblor Range
Photographers Robert Eckhardt and Michael Frye photographing spring wildflowers in California’s Temblor Range

Chasing Spring Color In The Temblor Range. Carrizo Plains National Monument, California. April 2, 2017. © Copyright 2017 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Photographers Robert Eckhardt and Michael Frye photographing spring wildflowers in California’s Temblor Range

It has been my tradition for a number of years to spend the better part of a week photographing in Death Valley National Park around the beginning of April. It turned out that this year’s spring bloom in the Carrizo Plain area was reported to be stupendous, and when I heard that friends of mine would be there photographing I altered my plans to pass through there on my way to DEVA, giving myself an evening and a morning to photograph the wildflowers and landscape.

The group of us decided to head out to some hillsides at the base of the Temblor Range, which runs along the edge of the plain. We drove as far as we could up a dead-end gravel road, then got out, loaded up camera gear, and headed up into the hills, where lots of flowers were covering sections of the hillsides. Here photographers Robert Eckhardt and Michael Frye photograph in a field of yellow and purple high above the base of the hills and the Carrizo Plain.


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.
Blog | About | Flickr | Twitter | FacebookGoogle+ | LinkedIn | Email


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