Tag Archives: morning

Wildflowers, Morning

Wildflowers, Morning
Wildflowers grow along a creek draining past the trail around Saddlebag Lake

Wildflowers, Morning. © Copyright 2018 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Wildflowers grow along a creek draining past the trail around Saddlebag Lake

I have hiked around this lake, located just east of the Sierra crest near Tioga Pass, a number of times in the pass. My first visit to the area was quite a few years ago, when a friend and I did a short mid-October pack trip to access a basin full of small lakes beyond. We ended up here because it was past the October 15 cutoff for overnight parking along Tioga Pass Road, and our reward was a beautiful late-season trip that featured snow flurries as we began hiking and through the night, and beautiful post-front light the following day.

This time the adventure was much more tame. I arose before dawn and got there in time to start hiking at about sunrise. I had the shoreline trail entirely to myself as I walked to the far end of the lake, where I planned to explore a bit and photograph some lakes and ridges. Partway through the hike a small creek drained across the trail on its way down to the lake, and here the moisture supported a colorful crop of lush plants and wildflowers, many at the peak of their blooming cycle. I stopped, set up camera and tripod, and photographed them with a bit of the lake’s surface reflecting the blue sky and the summit North Peak.


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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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Reflection, Morning Shadows

Reflection, Morning Shadows
Shadows on lakeside meadow as morning light hits Sierra Nevada peaks

Reflection, Morning Shadows. © Copyright 2018 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Shadows on lakeside meadow as morning light hits Sierra Nevada peaks

This is a scene of what I regard as classic Sierra Nevada scenery. It also has the three main ingredients of many mountain photographs: rocks, trees, water. I made the photograph in the morning, probably most of the way through this morning’s photographic work. A typical morning in such a place begins with an alarm going off (quietly!) well before sunrise, followed by rolling out of the tent, grabbing camera pack and tripod, and heading off to some likely location to find morning light. Photography begins before sunrise, often moves quickly as the first direct light hits the landscape, and then evolves with the changing morning light… until, several hours later, it is time to wander back to camp and fix coffee and breakfast.

We were camped very close to this lake — though you could have easily walked past it and completely missed our camp, which was hidden away in the trees. We remained here for the better part of a week, allowing plenty of time to become familiar with the local landscape, photograph in a range of conditions, and make longer excursions away from camp. I actually did not photograph this closest lake much until near the end of our stay, when I realized that it was now or never. I made this particular photograph in the morning, well after sunrise but a few minutes before the sun peeked over nearby peaks to illuminate the shoreline meadow.


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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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Redwoods Great And Small

Redwoods Great And Small
Dense Northern California redwood forest containing both old-growth and young trees

Redwoods Great And Small. © Copyright 2018 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Dense Northern California redwood forest containing both old-growth and young trees

I’ve lived on the fringes of California’s coastal redwoods ever since my family moved to the state when I was four-years-old. For years we did weekend trips to places like Big Basin Redwoods State Park, often hiking through the trees and beyond. So I have always been familiar with these extraordinarily tall trees and with the special forests they inhabit. However, it wasn’t until much later that I understood how truly rare the original old-growth forests are. I recently read that only 5% of the original forest was left mostly untouched — meaning that 95% of the trees (19 out of 20!) were cut down during a fairly short period, mostly in the 20th century. This was an astounding example of where greed can push humankind, and we can reasonably imagine that without intervention all of the old-growth forests would have been lost forever. If that greed had gotten its way, you would have to reimagine scenes like this one with only the slender trees on the right, because certain parties would have cut up every accessible tree like the one on the left.

Today it seems bizarre to recall the strong objections to saving these remnants back when the Redwood National Park was first proposed. Even conserving parts of the last 5% of the ancient forests seemed to be a bridge to far for interests blinded by their long-term investments in a nearly depleted natural resource, and they fought bitterly against that parks. There are several lessons in this. This was not isolated resistance to conservation — it has been the pattern with the creation of essentially all of our great American parks and other efforts to protect wilderness and natural areas. There are [i]always[/i] a few very loud voices shrieking that the protection of a few last remnants of America’s great landscape will ruin their economy. (Witness the Utah minority today working to undo national monuments.) However, now that our park system is well over a century old, it is plainly obvious that virtually every single protected area is regarded as a treasure and virtually no sane person would argue that we did the wrong thing by protecting them.


See top of this page for Articles, Sales and Licensing, my Sierra Nevada Fall Color book, Contact Information 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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Pacific Surf, Morning Fog

Pacific Surf, Morning Fog
Light fog hugs the shoreline near a far Northern California beach

Pacific Surf, Morning Fog. © Copyright 2018 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Light fog hugs the shoreline near a far Northern California beach

The redwoods aren’t quite the whole story in this far northwest corner of California. There is this ocean… and a rather remarkable coast. There are other things, too — lots of bucolic farmland, quaint little towns and more. While the redwoods were my main “target” on this visit, I did stop to photograph a few other things, too.

On my way north I had come to this beach just before sunset, but since it had been a very long day and I wasn’t “seeing it” as I passed by, I just kept going. But, as I often do, I filed the location away in my memory as being one with some potential. On my third morning I started down the coast towards Fort Bragg, and after stopping briefly at some redwoods I came down the hill to this beach again, where I saw one of my favorite shoreline conditions, thin fog, partially thrown up by ocean spray and hugging the coast.


See top of this page for Articles, Sales and Licensing, my Sierra Nevada Fall Color book, Contact Information 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.
Blog | About | Flickr | Twitter | Facebook | LinkedIn | Email


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