I hope so, because is sure was. -17 deg F to be exact, but it was an image I had imagined ever since I shot this same image last fall and hope to get another one this summer.
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I hope so, because is sure was. -17 deg F to be exact, but it was an image I had imagined ever since I shot this same image last fall and hope to get another one this summer.
To buy or licensed this print, click here
On a cold January morning the sun just manages to peek between the clouds and the horizon bathing Bear Butte mountain and the low clouds in orange light. Ice and snow around the foreground rocks tell a cold story of winter’s arrival.
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At first glance it might be tough to figure out whats going on in this image. If you haven’t guessed, its my neighbor’s bottom deck after a heavy snow we had last week. The pattern was created by the fresh snow falling down between the deck boards and joists. I thought it looked kind of cool.
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It was really slippery getting to this shooting spot on Bear Butte Lake and like a dummy I left my crampons in the truck. I managed to stay on my feet (and knees) and captured a snow covered lake and Bear Butte Mountain a day after out first winter storm.
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Shot at dawn on the new winter solstice, the one thing conspicuously absent in this image is snow. Kind of unusual for us, but it is cold enough to freeze this river solid.
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One small sprig stands alone in the frozen waters of Iron Creek as another cold winter descends in the Black Hills.
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This image was made on perhaps the last warm, snow-less morning in Spearfish Canyon, especially since we’re into December.
This thick birch grove is really chaotic and it made hard to come up with a pleasing composition. In the end, I found a shooting spot on the edge of the grove, shot through the many branches and twigs with a small aperture and changed the image to black and white. Sort of looks like a snowy storm.
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We may not have the marsh or swamp, but we do have the moss covered trees.
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By the looks of this image, you’d think it was shot in the pacific northwest instead of semi-arid South Dakota.
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A couple of years ago we were at the arts festival in Custer State Park, SD and decided to go for a little hike after lunch. The light was pretty harsh but the calm winds made for some really nice reflections in this small pond. I guess there are some nice images to he had even in the afternoon sun.
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What I like about this image are the random tangle of twigs that seem to frame the patchy splashes of color in these aspens.
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On the trail to Devils Bathtub in Spearfish Canyon I was intrigued by the patterns and swirls in this old dead pine log. One problem with hiking with my camera is that I never seem to make it to my destination.
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Am I being too romantic to suggest these two birch trees are locked in a lover’s embrace?
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I shot a similar image at this location a year ago on the trail to devils bathtub in Spearfish Canyon, but there are a few differences this time. The circle of swirling leaves is tighter due to the fallen birch branch and the constraining effect it has on the whirlpool.
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Many places in Spearfish Canyon give me the impression that the fall colors are cascading down the canyon wall like a water fall. This would be the base of one of the falls.
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Upper Rough Lock Falls in Spearfish Canyon is much more visible from one of the platforms on the trail since the forest service remove the vegetation that was blocking it. Just in time for the fall colors.
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The hills and meadows in Spearfish Canyon look like a rain forest this year because of all the wet weather we’ve had. On a dreary, misty and foggy morning an atmosphere like this can evoke many moods; for me it’s a time to reflect about the seasons past and the coming autumn and winter.
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The setting sun creates an ominous scene as it lights the bottom of these storm clouds. I never get over the infinite variations clouds and light create as weather conditions change.
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I promise, this is the last Alaska vacation picture I’ll post. I do like this image though. I think it’s a fishing boat and it suddenly appeared out of the fog as we were cruising up Glacier Bay. The small icebergs are testament to the glacial activity we’re getting closer to.
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