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From the water below a Great Blue Heron Colony in North Georgia. (9 of 11)
From Jurassic Cove
Where Is Everybody?
Cormorant calling out. From below a the Great Blue Heron Colony in North Georgia. (4 of 8)
From Jurassic Cove
Automotive Flight
Reminders of past automotive glory and the consuming power of nature at the Old Car City outside Cartersville, Georgia.
From Auto Afterlife
Grumpy Olds Car Face
Reminders of past automotive glory and the consuming power of nature and time at the Old Car City outside Cartersville, Georgia.
From Auto Afterlife
Your Father's Oldsmobile
Reminders of past automotive glory and the consuming power of nature and time at the Old Car City outside Cartersville, Georgia.
From Auto Afterlife
Henry Ford's Remains
Reminders of past automotive glory and the consuming power of nature at the Old Car City outside Cartersville, Georgia.
From Auto Afterlife
Pounding Mill Overlook
Blue Ridge Parkway, North Carolina. This image was taken from a pull off of the Parkway. It is a compilation of several separate 30 second exposures stitched together in post processing. Even in this remote Appalachian setting, the sky on this moonless night was not nearly as dark as the skies in Utah. The light from nearby and distant towns shows up as a golden glow on the horizon that highlights the trees in the middle of the frame. The same illumination washed out the night sky and made the Milky Way more difficult to see.
From Night Skies
Shoshone Storm
We took off early one morning from our hotel near the Grand Canyon Park's entrance to find a vantage point that was not dominated by selfie sticks and tourists with their backs to the Canyon smiling into their cell phones.
After a short drive and then a mile hike through a pine forest, we came upon this spot and stayed to take it all in. Midway on our hike we had come across an old pine tree whose bark had been recently shredded by a bear and had hesitated, just for a moment, about continuing on.
We stayed at the Canyon's edge for awhile enjoying the view and the crisp, clear air. After a while, a snow storm developed in the distance and moved across the Canyon toward us. This images captures that moment and the stone monument that identifies this a Shoshone Point.