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Red Rock and Autumn Color

Red Rock and Autumn Color
Early autumn color at the base of Zion Naitonal Park cliffs.

Red Rock and Autumn Color. © Copyright 2012 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Early autumn color at the base of Zion Naitonal Park cliffs.

Back in Autumn of 2012 I had an unusual opportunity to spend a total of roughly a month photographing in the red rock country of Southern Utah. I was there early in the month for a couple weeks, and I returned in near the end of the month with photographer friends. On that second visit we concentrated on Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument and on Capitol Reef and Zion National Park. We visited Zion twice — as we entered the state and again as our trip concluded and we started back to California.

From my autumn visits to this part of Utah I started to learned a few things about how fall color evolves there, though my knowledge is far from complete. The first thing I learned is that the aspens change color earlier than in California — more like late September than early October. (I learned this the hard way, by showing up a bit too late to photograph peak aspen color.) The color in the red rock canyons seems to come later, and we had plenty of it to photograph in the second half of the month. When we arrived in Zion National Park at the end of the month interesting color was showing up at higher elevations, but I think we were catching only the very beginning of the color in Zion Canyon. That’s where I made this photograph, with an early riot of color at the base of the ubiquitous red rock cliffs.


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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Before The Dust Storm

Before The Dust Storm
Just after dawn, the precursors of a day of Death Valley dust storms

Before The Dust Storm. Death Valley National Park, California. April 28, 2016. © Copyright 2016 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Just after dawn, the precursors of a day of Death Valley dust storms

I’ve been through a number of desert dust storms in and around Death Valley National Park — ranging from minor “dust blowing through the campsite” events to “damaging to my vehicle” events. (The latter was some years back as I left the park and headed out to highway 395 and, as I later found out, drove through record-breaking wind and driving dust and sand, to the permanent distress of my windshield.) It is fair to say that my feelings about such conditions are mixed. Frankly, they are very unpleasant — the dust gets into everything, from clothes to eyes to camera gear, and it is almost impossible to do much of anything if you are inside a really bad storm. In fact, near the end of the day on which I made this photograph we simply had to hunker down indoors for several hours and wait for it to stop. But there can be a kind of terrible beauty in these events as well, and if you are cautious you can photograph them.

I recall a day many years ago when I started to make sense of the antecedent conditions that lead to such storms. It was the final day of a Death Valley visit and I was down along the southeast part of the main valley, when I noticed a kind of fuzzy glow in the atmosphere. I made a few photographs and headed north to leave the park, and within an hour or so I was engulfed in a huge cloud of dust. On the day I made this photograph we went to a high overlook along the top of a mountain range to photograph dawn light. This time I recognized that strange, milky atmosphere, seen along and above the Black Mountains in the distance in the photograph. The morning was, indeed, quite beautiful. But it was only hours later that we began to see dust above us — even though we were thousands of feet up in the mountains — as a giant storm developed, and by the time we returned to the bottom of Death Valley in the mid-afternoon one of the biggest dust storms I have seen enveloped the area.


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