Shot with a D300 and a Nikon 18-35mm.
2 days ago
Adventure Without Mercy
Shot with a D300 and a Nikon 18-35mm.
Glacier National Park is probably my favorite park that I've been to so far. It's where I first got into photography, I went back there several times while I was in photography school and then there was one more time a few years back. It's that last trip where I got this image, it is pretty common to have overcast skies for days on end and this image was taken at the end of about three overcast days in a row.
This again was captured with a Nikon D300 with a 16-85mm racked out to 85mm and handheld.






Everything was shot with a Nikon D300 and a 16-85mm, handheld and processed in Adobe Lightroom 3. Enjoy
I got a bit of a late start the day I left, making it to the trail head at about 3pm leaving me about 5 hours to make it the 8 miles to the campsite that I wanted. I thought it would be an easy task even stopping to take photos. Everything started off great too, I was close enough to this deer to get a shot with the 16-85mm lens that I had with me.
I tend to go really light on the camera gear when I do trips like this, not just backpacking but times when photography isn't the primary objective of the trip. This trip all I brought with was a Nikon D60 with a Nikon 16-85mm lens (will be reviewing this lens in a future post)
Then things started going a little sideways, mutant two headed flowers,
leading to skull shaped lichens.
This was one of the last dry spots on the trail for the next few miles. It had been kind of muddy up to this point but it started to get a lot worse really quick.
This is what the rest of the day looked like for me, slogging through ankle deep mud and standing water. I tried to carefully pick my way through this stuff but in most places it was too brushy to get off trail and even when you could it was just about as bad as staying on the trail.
Or there were the places like this section of trail that was a solid wall of poison ivy on either side of the trail.
By the time I made it to the site that I wanted to spend the night at it was already taken leaving me 3 more miles to go before the next site in the rapidly setting sun. It took almost two hours to make it there, finally arriving after it had gotten dark. I was stumbling the whole way there because the light was making it tough to see the contour of the muck, that is one area LED headlamps kind of suck, they cast such a flat light that it seems to throw off my depth perception.






Everyone trying to keep warm between burns, when the sun dropped behind the hills on the other side of the canyon it got cold really quick. On top of it all we lost the sun at a little before 3pm.
This is the ladder that we had to use to get to the end of the cliff band.
And to get back out.
Gerber LST Drop Point Fine Edge has a 2.63 in. Stainless steel Drop Point blade. Black Zytel handle. Overall length is 6.13 in.
After the clinic disbanded I made my way down to the main bouldering area which was just swarming with climbers. Not sure of what any of the problems are here but there was something for everyone.
This problem got a lot of people lined up to get on it and at one point a big hold broke off and it promptly saw a new first ascent.
And a lot of falls.
The nice thing about Stoney Point is that its about 20 minutes from my house so I am gonna try making it there as much as possible I figure I might as well gorge myself on as much rock as I can before I have to head back to the frozen tundra of Minnesota.
I lined up a couple shoots down at Zuma Beach in Malibu, CA and while waiting for models to show up I took advantage of the dramatic sky.
Back home seagulls have never really interested me as a subject but here with large flocks of them they can provide plenty of cool images.
All images done with a Nikon D300 and a Nikon 70-200. There will be more to come soon, going to Joshua Tree tomorrow and climbing at Stoney Point on Sunday.
Well lately I have had to get a job to help keep the adventures flowing but after over a year of shooting photos full time going back to jockeying a cash register can take its toll. So after a week of editing images and working my now regular job I am in dire need of a recharge. My last road trip didn't give me much of a chance to get out into the wilds so I am going to take this four day weekend that I lucked into and I'm going over to the Superior Hiking Trail for an ultralite adventure. Hope to have some images on here by this time next week.
One of the subjects that I got good at shooting early in my career was flowing water, coming from Minnesota I had a lot to work with. But where we have lakes out east they have tons of these little streams and rivers just begging to be photographed. This was what I got to drive past as I went back and forth to camp and every morning there would be some one standing and fishing at one of about a dozen bridges that cross this river on my way into town.



