Saturday, July 4, 2015

Mono Lake Sunset

Cycle is finished...

I'm back in Crimea. Simple statement but with significant implications. The first cycle of my wandering is over. I ran out of gas ... figuratively ... and decided I needed some time back in a familiar environment where I could recover and clean up the amazing number of images I collected over the last 3 months. Haven't added up the total but it's well over 10,000. Not bad for 3 months work. There's lots of good stuff in there but it needs to be culled and sorted and analyzed. I know there's lots of mistakes in the Lightroom database ... keywords aren't right and some images are in the wrong place. And I need to fix a lot of bad stuff in those pictures. For example ... many of my images have jet contrails in them. Really out of place when the subject is nature and her beauty. So I'll be learning all about healing brushes in both Photoshop and Lightroom in the coming days. I've also got issues with how Photomatix treats noise. Seems that several noisy images creates a real mess in Photomatix. I get popcorn sized kernels in the sky for some reason. The best solution I have right now involves running Noiseware on all the images and aggressively knocking back the luminescence noise both before and after Photomatix. That works but there's a price ... I lose some resolution and I hate to give even a little up after so much effort to capture it. But because the final image is almost noise free I can aggressively sharpen and not see any additional sky noise. That helps ... some. But I need to get on the Internet and see what can be done about this problem.

Some statistics for you:

Miles traveled almost 10K. Number of major places visited is 32+. Number of days on the road tops out at about 75 give or take. I'm now an expert on rest areas in 5 states. I've seen more McDonalds than I care to remember (for the free WiFi) and have buckets full of memories ... both good and bad. I'll be talking about much of this in the coming days and weeks so stop by regularly. I promise to be more diligent in my postings ... it turns out to be very hard to find accessible Internet connections that don't have lots of 'issues' and I needed electricity too as my laptop battery went south early in the trip. It's a problem I need to resolve before the next cycle begins.

Image issues...

Most of the images I've put on this blog have been OK but almost every one has issues. I mentioned the contrails and noise already but there's a whole host of things that aren't really right. I plead my situation as the cause ... it's almost impossible to find a good place to edit photos on the road. I often had to set the computer on my truck's tailgate and edit under a tree. Reflections were a constant problem and, as any editor can tell you, background light can make a mess of your colors and everything else. I did all I could but I was often rushed. It was more important to get the images ... to spend time scouting out locations during the day and photograph during the golden hours. Working at night was often prohibited as national parks impose a strict generator rule (no later than 8 pm in most cases ... just as the sun was setting). Everything conspires to make editing a major problem. So, I'll probably be posting some of these images again after they've been given the respect they deserve. Hope you don't mind.

Mono Lake Sunset

Mono Lake is one of those really unusual places in the world. Because it's trapped with no drainage, over time it has become very salty and alkaline. Something like 3.5 times the salinity of the oceans and 100 time more alkaline. When the wind blows, even a little, foam forms on the shore. But, contrary to the opinion of one Samuel Clemens (aka Mark Twain), the lake is not dead. It's brimming with life ... brine shrimp and small flies thrive there in the spring and summer. And birds ... huge flocks of birds come. I was amazed that it's the nesting ground for 80% of all seagulls in California. And it's a major flyway stopover for birds migrating north and south. It's anything but dead. But it's at risk ... big time. The LA water authority, in the 20s, confiscated the fresh water sources for the lake and sent the water west to feed the growing metropolis. Mono Lake started to dry up and that created a major disaster. Only through a long and costly legal battle has the lake been able to partially recover. Of course, just when there's a light at the tunnel's end, the drought really took hold of the west and the recovery plan is in danger again. There's no water, almost no snow pack, and that's spells disaster. They need water and there's none to be found.

Anyway, I was in Yosemite and it was just too tempting to take rt. 120 over the Sierra Nevada and drop down on rt. 395 for a one day visit. I arrived early and went to the visitor's center. It was obvious that the big draw was the tufa ... the calcium carbonate tubes that grow in the alkaline environment of the lake. They form when fresh water, brimming with calcium leached from volcanic mountains to the south, interacts with the alkaline salt water of the lake to form crystals of calcium carbonate. You can actually watch this happen when the conditions are just right. So, in the really oppressive heat of the afternoon, I drove to the south end of the lake and wandered out to the huge formations on the shore. They're not really all that pretty up close but, as a backdrop to a spectacular sunset, they are perfect. It was one of those moments a photographer dreams about and now it's here for you to enjoy.

Mono Lake Sunset - 35mm(1.6 crop),f/18,HDR,ISO 100,license CC BY-NC 4.0


Not much here technically. I bracketed the shot as the dynamic range was way too much for my sensor. Then into Photomatix to get the tone mapped image followed by some final added touches in Lightroom.

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