Showing posts with label Dave Shumway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dave Shumway. Show all posts

December 31, 2013

2013

Photographer Dave Shumway looks up at the Milky Way
while sitting beside a small campfire in Tanzania. 

Another year for the books...I LOVE MY LIFE.

In the last year, I:
  • consumed 123 pizzas (or more);
  • went climbing 116 times;
  • took 117 Bikram Hot Yoga Classes;
  • and...drumroll please...spent 142 days away from home on trips. 

I basically look at the year like this, March in the American Southwest, May (and other little trips) in Yellowstone, August in Tanzania, October/November in Italy, and the rest of the year trying to make Rocky Mountain College the best place I could all while climbing, doing lots of yoga, and eating even more pizza. 

I missed my 10 year high school class reunion because I was getting ready to fly to Italy, sorry BHS class of 2003. The good news is that I weigh the same that I did when I graduated, and can climb much better, the bad news is I have not run or sang on stage in years. 

I ticked my first on-sight trad lead rated 5.11D (or 5.12- depending on what guide book you read). 

I had plenty of images published in ads, magazines, newspapers and books around the world...at least enough to afford some cool trips and buy some great gear. 

I visited family back in Chicago in June, visiting "home" for the last time, as my parents are moving to a new place, that will likely never be "home" to me, even though I'll keep visiting them yearly. 

I did make one big change, or will in a few days. As of January 6, 2014 I will no longer be the Staff Photographer/Web Content Manager/Designer are Rocky Mountain College...I will be the Director of Communications for Volunteers of America - Northern Rockies. I will still be teaching a class here and there for RMC, so don't worry. 

I pray that your 2013 was as fulfilling as mine, and that we all safely finish 2014 knowing that we lived each day trying to be more awesome than the day before. 

God bless, and happy shooting

November 26, 2013

Yellowstone, November 23 & 24, 2013

A Yellowstone Coyote
A coyote moves through the sage at sunrise near Blacktail Lakes, in Yellowstone National Park. Captured with a Canon 7D and 400/2.8L IS II in aperture priority mode with an exposure bias of + 1 at ISO400, f/7.1, and 1/640th of a second. The camera was handheld.
I've only made seven trips (I think) to Yellowstone this year, but that's what a month in the Southwest, a month in Africa and a month in Italy will do to you. 

This past weekend I took students from some of my RMC photography courses to Yellowstone. November is often a slow time in Yellowstone, but we managed wolves, elk, bison, coyotes, and some beautiful scenery. When you are teaching 18 college students, your photography has to go on the back burner, a bit, but I still managed a shot or two. 


The images are online here:

http://www.shumwayphotography.com/gallery/34168199_TcNxkJ
Make the jump to go through the online gallery, I ask that you leave comments/criticism or at least give your favorites a thumbs up... THANKS!

If you have questions, ask... I published the camera information with each image and have added full keywords to share just about anything you would want to know about the images.


Happy shooting 

June 1, 2013

The Best Year

The best year...well the past year, it has been a great year.


This year's calendar starts in an odd place. Last June, my little sister got married to her high-school sweetheart and a great guy. They planned their wedding date around my adventures, mostly because they wanted a free photographer, who did work like a $5K photographer.  They were too afraid to do the wedding after my Alaskan Adventure because "what if a bear were to eat me."

So this great year starts on June 8, 2012, my sister’s wedding. I’m so proud of my little sister :)


Shortly after her wedding, I drove my newly customized (to live out of) Ford F150 from Chicago, IL to Billings, MT, where I packed for what ended up being my longest adventure to date. I also finished editing wedding photos before I left, just in case something went wrong – you know, like a bear eating me.


I left Billings, MT for Alaska and the trip was legen...wait for it...the kind of trip that gives you memories and stories to fill a lifetime. : ) Jumping off ice into the Arctic Ocean, swimming rivers in remote (almost unvisited) national parks (ANWR and Gates of the Arctic), seeing muskox, climbing in the Brooks Range, hiking in Denali, camping along fishing costal brown bears, spit ratting it, sailing Kenai Fjord, watching orca pods come together to breed, driving the most rugged and remote roads in North America, and getting to photograph it all...I hope your not lactose intolerant because the second half of the word is, dary...legendary ;)


Alaska in the summer is amazing, and I feel okay using that word because it is God's creation at its most unadulterated state. Alaska really is creation at its finest that I have experienced to date.


I returned home with more than 27,000 photographs, and I don't have words to describe the experience justly.


Now for those of you who have not visited Montana you may not realize that it’s  "Big Sky County" and "The Last Best Place." Those things really are true, but it’s no Alaska. My return to home and to my job as a staff photographer and college "prof" was a challenge, and I'm okay admitting that.


I spent two months with the nights being too bright to see stars, with no deadlines, no real responsibilities, and with very few people to interact with. A foreign concept to folks in most of the world, but it was my reality, and I loved it.


My fall semester was a good one with great students in all of my classes, numerous trips to Yellowstone National Park (my favorite place in the lower 48) and plenty of good climbing around Montana and Wyoming. The problem with having a "real" job is that you can't just take two months, or even two weeks off to go on an adventure. And if that's true then I am incredibly blessed to not have a real job, as by November I was ready for another adventure.


I'm Swedish and German, I grew up in the Midwest, and I like cold weather, so there is something about the Arctic that just calls to me like a siren song. As November rolled around, the semester was winding down, and I got to leave for two weeks to go back to the Arctic. I was teaching classes like Digital Nature Photography and Conservation Photography, so the students understand why I “had” to leave for two weeks.


The trip’s timing was perfect. We saw countless polar bears, ample snow, rapidly changing ice, Northern Lights, and magical light. I returned home with more than 12,000 photos and some of them are unimaginable.


At this point in my year, I'm back to Montana after spending two months in Alaska and more than 30 days in the Arctic. I have nearly 40,000 images to edit. It was those images that caused me to make a decision that broke my mother’s heart, just a little bit. I decided to stay in Montana and edit photographs rather than travel back to Chicago for Christmas. I decided that I needed to edit and was not going to let myself have a "real" Christmas unless I was finished editing. Don't feel too bad for me, as I found plenty of time to ski and climb while I was "resting my eyes," from all of the editing.


2013 started off with a new semester at Rocky Mountain College, and being that it was also my fifth year teaching I'm told I was due a "sabbatical." Now as I am not a full-time professor, I don't know how this was really supposed to work, but I took that to mean that I could teach an independent study course or two and schedule the month of March off from the staff photographer part of my job. So that's what I did, and no one has called me on it yet.


Again my images appeared in national ad campaigns and magazines like The New Yorker, Backpacker, National Geographic, and Outside to name a few. I had my worked published in a few books around the world, and in so many US newspapers that I lost count.

Oh, and the region’s biggest paper, The Billings Gazette, named me as one of their 40 Under Forty this year in February.


March 1 I left Billings, MT bound for Las Vegas. Well, actually about twenty miles west of Vegas to Red Rock Canyon. Red Rock is one of the best climbing destinations in the country – it is seriously incredible. But that was only the start of my "sabbatical trip"a.k.a. my "March Through The Southwest," I continued on to Zion, Bryce, Capitol Reef, The Swell, Arches, Canyonlands, Indian Creek, Natural Bridges, Monument Valley, Antelope Canyon, The Wave, and back to Zion and Bryce Canyon before I made my way back toward home, with a mandatory stop in Yellowstone.


Upon returning home with 17,000 photographs, I immediately left for a climbing trip to Devils Tower, where I got rained out again, and then off to Bozeman for some more climbing.


April is a crazy month around any college campus, but I love the craziness, as I get to photograph all kinds of different things, and that only makes me a better photographer for whatever assignments come my way through the rest of my life. My April was also filled with catching up with old friends, making new ones, doing 32 hot yoga classes and finding time to climb 16 times despite the cold and snowy spring.  Oh yeah...I was a bit ticked off that after a cruddy winter for skiing, as soon as the resorts closed we got pounded with snow, but I was finished with the ski season so I didn't motivate myself to go and skin up the mountain to earn my turns.


May, and my 28 birthday, was spent in Yellowstone National Park... Sixteen days to be exact. Spring in Yellowstone was slow, but patience and dedication paid off, and after spending more than 100 hours watching and waiting, I was privileged to photograph a grizzly sow and her three tiny cubs of the year. Many of my friends in Yellowstone got to enjoy my birthday German chocolate chocolate chip cookies, but they still couldn’t help but to harass me about my age...I'm getting closer to an age where people will just assume I'm an adult, I hope ;)


I truly LOVE the life that I get to wake up each day and live. I am blessed beyond measure in so many ways, and though this has been the best year of my life, I have a hunch that next year will give it a run for its money and each year to follow will do the same.

Remember, it might seem like I never work, but I average over 50 hours each week. Though I spent one third of my year traveling, that is not much more than someone who chooses to spend each weekend of the year traveling. Oftentimes I travel like a dirtbag, but I do have a nice truck (2012 - F150), I do have a nice apartment (no time for a house, but I do love having a pool/hot tub/sauna), and a great job with benefits and a retirement plan. Yeah, I'm single, but who do you know that would put up or keep up with someone as crazy as me...no seriously what's her number? I'll give her a call ;)


p.s. In August I'm taking students on a three week African safari, and then I hope to climb mount Kilimanjaro.


p.p.s. In October/November I am going to Italy to teach photography for three weeks, and hopefully sneak in a sport-climbing trip on the Tuscan coast with a friend.

I'm living my dream...I hope you find a way to live yours.

April 20, 2013

March Through the Southwest

Photographer Dave Shumway hikes The Wave, in the Coyote Buttes district of the Paria Canyon-Vermilion Cliffs Wilderness, Utah. Captured with a Canon 5D III and 17-40/4.0L in aperture priority mode with an exposure bias of - 1/3 at ISO200, f/11, and 1/640 of a second. The camera was mounted on an Induro CT214 tripod with an AcraTech GP ballhead.
For my "sabbatical" trip I decided that it was time to revisit the American Southwest, and March seemed like the perfect time to do this first trip, with a digital camera. The other reason behind the trip in March, is that it allowed me to get plenty of great climbing in too, while snow and ice cover the rocks back in Montana.

Each parks name is linked to its corresponding gallery of photos and the thirty "best" images are in  "The Best of My March Through the Southwest (2013)."

On March first I left Billings and drove well past Salt Lake City, where I stopped at a rest stop for a few hours sleep, before pushing on to Las Vegas. Actually I was to the west of Vegas, meeting friends for a week of climbing in Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area. The climbing was amazing, and the photography was not to shabby wither. I ticked off my first 5.11 on-sight trad lead (Animal Boy 5.11d, or if you listen to Mountain Project it is 5.12a), I got to climb many of the famous climbs, and even climbed some of the remote, rarely climbed routes. Did I mention that I took some pictures too.

After Red Rock Canyon I went with friends to Zion National Park...Zion is beautiful, but without leaves on the trees it just does not seem right to take many pictures, but the climbing is good.

From Zion we made our way to the San Rafael Swell with a quick little stop in Capitol Reef National Park and Bryce Canyon National Park (I'll come back to Bryce). The "Swell" is amazing and worth a visit, or ten. The main plan was to get in some great canyoneering, and we did. We made our way to the middle of the "Swell" and did Baptist Draw and Upper Chute Canyon, if you are interested in technical canyoneering and find yourself in the area, I would call these a must do.

After the Swell, I left one group of friends to meet with another in Arches National Park, but they changed their plans and left me to Arches and Canyonlands National Park all by my lonesome. That was just fine though, I'm a nature photographer...that's how I work best, and with a new moon the planned night photography part of my trip was just getting started.

Arches and Canyonlands, especially Island in the Sky, are simply incredible. The parks are really a landscape photographers paradise, and if you plan a fall or spring trip the low sun angle makes for some different opportunities that will help you photos be different from the millions of summertime visitors.

I made my way South for some climbing in Indian Creek, and photography in the Needles district of Canyonlands National Park, and that continued my streak of awesome climbing and photography.

After leaving Canyonlands I made my way to Natural Bridges National Monument for one last night of star trail photography, and the clouds cooperated letting me have a great night to shoot Owachomo Bridge. I left Natural Bridges in the dark, so I could get down to Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park for sunrise, and that worked out quite well. Although I had been up all night, and was getting tiered I decided to drive up to Antelope Canyon, so I could get into the upper canyon on a week day (praying for less crowds). Light shafts begin to make their way to the canyon floor again in mid March, and being able to visit in the "off season" with light shafts and on a week day meant that I was able to arrange a 2 hour (maximum time you can spend in the canyon) solo tour.

Antelope Canyon, like many of my destinations on this trip, has been shot by seemingly everyone, but I hope I was able to let my style keep my images from looking exactly like everyone else's.

From there I decided that I was ahead of schedule and could in fact try my luck at getting a Wave permit. I made my way back into Utah, past Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, and into The Grand Staircase Escalante-National Monument. Access to The Wave is limited to ten online permits (reservations earned months in advance) and ten lottery permits issued the day before. It took me three tries, but I got a permit and spent an entire day in and around The Wave (actually waves).

When you loose the lottery you need something to do that day, while you wait to try again the next day, so I shot many of the other local sites, including; The Toadstools, The Towers of SilenceCoral Pink Sand Dunes State Park and Moccasin Mountain Track Site.

After ticking The Wave off of my list, I decided to head back ti Zion National Park, to see if the leaves had come in yet. Unfortunately they were just starting to bud, and the rangers predicted another week before things really started to be green. With that bit of bad news I decided to head North a bit and give Bryce Canyon National Park a little bit more of my time.

Three weeks into my trip, and all of my major objectives crossed off of my list I decided to look at the weather and determine the safest break in snow storms to drive back to Montana, and it is a good thing I looked when I did, because the time to leave was right then...as it was I ended up driving just ahead of the storm that pounded Northern Utah, Idaho, and Western Montana for the next few days.

Once I hade made it through the mountains I did decide to make a short side trip down to Yellowstone National Park, but it would have been rude to be so close and not pay the park a visit.


Make the jump to go through the online gallery, I ask that you leave comments/criticism or at least give your favorites a thumbs up...Thanks!

If you have questions, ask. I published the camera information with each image and have added full keywords to share just about anything you would want to know about the images.

Happy shooting

Yellowstone, March 21, 2013


PHOTOS ONLINE

On my way home from a "March Through the Southwest," I just had to stop by Yellowstone for drive through.

Not much happening...actually there was both Wolf and Bear dots, but I was not about to photograph distant dots, so I snapped a few landscapes and continued home.


Make the jump to go through the online gallery, I ask that you leave comments/criticism or at least give your favorites a thumbs up...Thanks!

If you have questions, ask. I published the camera information with each image and have added full keywords to share just about anything you would want to know about the images.

Happy shooting

Yellowstone, February 8-10, 2013

A Coyote (Canis latrans) makes his way through deep snow along Pebble Creek in Yellowstone National Park. Captured with a Canon 7D and 400/2.8L IS II in aperture priority mode with an exposure bias of + 4/3 at ISO400, f/4.5, and 1/320 of a second. The camera was resting on a beanbag.
This winter was a warm and less snowy one, it was a winter with fewer wolves, thanks to hunts outside of the park. With the given situations I made less trips to the park than past years, but I could not stay away forever.

I made a quick little three day trip with plenty of time hiking/snowshoeing/skiing. It was a change of pace to not have much to photograph, but it made for a pleasant, restful, trip to the park.


Make the jump to go through the online gallery, I ask that you leave comments/criticism or at least give your favorites a thumbs up...Thanks!

If you have questions, ask. I published the camera information with each image and have added full keywords to share just about anything you would want to know about the images.

Happy shooting

April 19, 2013

Favorite Quotes

With the recent Facebook updates, I had a fear that my collection of "Favorite Quotes" might be lost, so...I decided to write this blog post. It is quite different from my usual post, but it's my blog I can do what I want ;)

These are my favorite quotes...they really explain an awful lot about me.
  • "In three words I can sum up everything I've learned about life: 'It Goes On.'" - Robert Frost 
  • "Get busy living, or get busy dying." - Shawshank Redemption  
  • "If you don't do it this year, you will be one year older when you do." - Warren Miller 
  • "It's really clear that the most precious resource we all have is time." - Steve Jobs 
  • "The foolish man seeks happiness in the distance; the wise grows it under his feet.” - James Oppenheim 
  • “When I was 5 years old, my mother always told me that happiness was the key to life. When I went to school, they asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up. I wrote down ‘happy’. They told me I didn’t understand the assignment, and I told them they didn’t understand life.” - John Lennon 
  • "When you come to a fork in the road, take it." - Yogi Berra 
  • "You have to take it as it happens, but you should try to make it happen the way you want to take it." - German Proverb (I think this was my senior quote...I'm a dork)
  • "The nice part about being a pessimist is that you are constantly being either proven right or pleasantly surprised." - George F. Will 
  • “If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough.” - Albert Einstein 
  • "There are two things that are more difficult than making an after-dinner speech: climbing a wall which is leaning toward you and kissing a girl who is leaning away from you." - Winston Churchill
  • "Watch your thoughts, for they become words. Watch your words, for they become actions. Watch your actions, for they become habits. Watch your habits, for they become character. Watch your character, for it becomes your destiny." - Tom Krause 
  • "Don't let anyone look down on you because you are young, but set an example for the believers in speech, in life, in love, in faith and in purity." - 1 Timothy 4:12
  • “That is why I tell you not to worry about everyday life—whether you have enough food and drink, or enough clothes to wear. Isn’t life more than food, and your body more than clothing? Look at the birds. They don’t plant or harvest or store food in barns, for your heavenly Father feeds them. And aren’t you far more valuable to him than they are? Can all your worries add a single moment to your life? And why worry about your clothing? Look at the lilies of the field and how they grow. They don’t work or make their clothing, yet Solomon in all his glory was not dressed as beautifully as they are. And if God cares so wonderfully for wildflowers that are here today and thrown into the fire tomorrow, he will certainly care for you. Why do you have so little faith? So don’t worry about these things, saying, ‘What will we eat? What will we drink? What will we wear?’  These things dominate the thoughts of unbelievers, but your heavenly Father already knows all your needs. Seek the Kingdom of God above all else, and live righteously, and he will give you everything you need. So don’t worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will bring its own worries. Today’s trouble is enough for today." - Matthew 6:25-34
  • "For this very reason, make every effort to add to your faith goodness; and to goodness, knowledge; and to knowledge, self-control; and to self-control, perseverance; and to perseverance, godliness; and to godliness, mutual affection; and to mutual affection, love. For if you possess these qualities in increasing measure, they will keep you from being ineffective and unproductive in your knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ" - 2 Peter 1:5-8 

November 24, 2012

Canadian Arctic, November 4-18, 2012

WOW!
As I sit here, after editing over 12,000 photos from this trip to the Canadian Arctic...I find it hard to put this experience into words.

Let me start by saying that there are around 750 photographs from the Low Canadian Arctic online here. If you don't feel like reading this insanely long trip report you can just jump to the photographs and enjoy them. Make the jump to go through the online gallery. I really do appreciate any comments/criticism you leave; you can even give your favorites a simple thumbs up, so I can get your opinion on the winners...thanks and enjoy.

Bear at sunrise
A male Polar Bear (Ursus maritimus) looks around as the rising sun breaks through the clouds illuminating the world with its colorful glow. Captured with a Canon 5D III and 70-200/2.8L IS II in aperture priority mode with an exposure bias of + 1/3 at ISO400, f/8.0, and 1/400th of a second. The camera was handheld.

Last year, while on my trip to Churchill, I knew right away that it was a place that I would visit again – as soon as I could. Luckily Pete Zaluzec, a friend who was on the trip with me last year, decided the same thing, so we began planning this trip while still on last year's trip. Pete and I met up a few times on other trips over the past year to firm up our plans for Churchill 2012.

Pete and I decided that we would do the trip on our own, hire a local guide for some of it, allowing us to do what we wanted. Pete is a world-renowned sculptor who needs photographs for reference material, but unlike many artists looking only for reference images Pete understands light and shoots accordingly. When you are on a photographic trip with others, especially tourists/hobbyists, many times you end up with a group that wants to move on to look for something new rather than wait for good light.

Pete and I knew we were going to find bears and then settle in to wait for the light that we wanted, so we knew that bringing anyone else with us would only work if they cared about light like us. We decided to invite a friend of Pete's who is a famous wildlife artist, Greg Beecham.

With our group set, local accommodations made and a highly respected local guide lined up, we were ready. All three of us use Canon equipment and are obsessed with great light, so it looked to be a perfect group.

Pete does not fly, so we all decided to meet in Winnipeg, Manitoba and take the 40-hour train ride to Churchill, Manitoba. The train ride was a great time for us all to really get to know one another, as well as the handful of other folks making the long journey/ride. During the trip I had plenty of time to lecture on photography, as most of you know, that is one of my favorite things to do :)

When we arrived in Churchill we got in our Yukon XL, that was designed for life out on the tundra. We were excited to get out and find some bears to photograph. Not long after leaving town, I spotted our first bear of the trip, and Greg's first bear. We spent about an hour with the bear, and when it settled in for a second time, we decided to continue on to see what we could find. Not five minutes later I found two bears walking along the shore keeping their eye on a bearded seal that was resting on an ice flow. We continued on to the Northern Studies Center where we found a flock of around 50 willow ptarmigan foraging in the willows.

We had heard a rumor that Natural Resources was going to be air lifting a bear out of the Polar Bear Holding Facility, so we decided that it would be worthwhile to shoot that and cross it off our list on the first day. The helicopter flew in, Resources brought out the bear and readied him for the flight out, the helicopter lifted the bear off, and the show was over. It was very quick, very smooth and professional...it was also surprising to me to see how gingerly they treated the unconscious bear. I decided to also shoot some video of the bear lifting off.

After the air-show we found a red fox and continued our search for bears. We spent the rest of the night watching Natural Resources haze a sow and two ten-month-old cubs along Cape Mary towards the Churchill River. I'll leave the controversial/sad part of this off of the blog post, but I have written a bit about it with the photograph.

If I went through each of our ten days to that same level of detail it would take me a week to write the post, and you a day to read it, so from here on I'll just hit the highlights. Plus I am considering putting together an eBook where I can plug in some multimedia bits showing or explaining some of the great experiences that the trip brought me.

For the next three days we had a local guide from Nature 1st, to both guide and provide "Polar Bear Security." Our guide, Sheldon, was excellent and a pleasure to spend time with.  With Sheldon we found countless bears, raven, gyrfalcon, red fox, arctic fox and plenty of arctic hare tracks :)

We had a slow second day...well at least it started off slow. We drove the roads and back roads getting re-acclimated to the area, and figure out were we could and could not drive with the current snow conditions. As the afternoon came we had yet to find any bears that were ideal for us to photograph, so we kept searching. Driving in to bird cove, at first on two-track then on frozen tundra, we spotted a bear heading our way across the ice. We decided that we would wait with that bear for some light. She tried to break through the ice, dug around and groomed herself while we watched...then suddenly she started to walk away.

It took us a minute or two before we saw the reason...another bear was making his was across the ice and she wanted to give him room to walk past. The second bear approached us and she decided to lie down on the ice. As this happened the third bear that we had spotted earlier in the willows continued to sleep.

We kept waiting, as our chances of having a cooperative bear when the light got good seemed to be getting better. Off in the distance I notice another bear heading our way and this bear has a beautiful, clean, white coat.

Now we had two bears together digging in the ice at the edge of the shore, a bear sleeping to our left in the Willows and another sleeping out on the ice to our right. Suddenly, almost on our cue, the two "friendly" bears started to play with one another, as the light broke through the clouds in a narrow slit on the horizon. It was short lived, and the two bears started to walk off into the willows, but we decided to follow.

As we rounded the end of the willows we could see that the two bears were sparing in the setting sunlight, and it was magical. The sparing ended, and our guide as well as Pete and Greg thought the day was over. I spotted a fifth bear making his way across the ice and was able to convince them that there was still enough light and time to make our way back to the cove and photograph this bear.

It ended up being the right call, as the light was incredible on the bear and the ice edge. The light continued to dwindle as the bear walked in front of the MV Ithaca. And now we all started to think the day was done, but what an ending we had enjoyed.

Almost beyond our belief we spotted a sixth bear making its way across the ice, then a seventh coming from the other way. The were all making their way through Bird Cove, and we were the only ones here to see and photograph it. Two of the bears came together for a "kiss" where other bears had been digging, but the real show was yet to come.

The sun had set, but my Canon 5D III and new 400/2.8L IS II had plenty of light for what was about to happen next. The two largest male bears decided to put on an after hours show, and after chatting about it, the sparing commenced. They spared long enough to both deliver great photographs, but even enough for me to shoot some video.

Towards the end of the sparing I was shooting my Canon 5D III and 400/2.8L IS II in aperture priority mode with an exposure bias of + 2/3 at ISO3200, f/2.8, and 1/800th of a second. By that point I had moved away from the vehicle to get the best angle I could on the main event, and I was glad that we had an armed guide as I was shooting with five bears in sight and at least three more that we knew were in the area. Needless to say my head was on a constant swivel, and I shot handheld because setting up a tripod would slow me down in a retreat to the vehicle; also with the shutter speed needed to stop fighting bears, I knew that I could handhold my camera and lens just fine...I love the new 400/2.8L IS II.

Our third day was, with without a doubt, the slowest day of our trip. We only photographed one bear, and that bear was inspecting an old bear trap and then showed why she had been trapped and marked recently. She was incredibly curious of the vehicle and it took significant effort on the part of our guide to scare the bear away.

We did have an okay sunrise and a beautiful sunset, but the only wildlife highlight was a Gyrfalcon that I spotted and got to photograph sitting on the ice edge. Unfortunately for Pete and Greg, it flew away before they could get their cameras ready.

The next morning started off with blizzard conditions, really near whiteout. But we were not about to sleep in or take the day off, even though we did chat about the idea. In places the sun managed to break through, but others were not so nice. For most of the morning we did our best to stay away from the worst of the storm, and even managed to find a cooperative fox with some nice light.

By lunchtime we decided that we needed to go find some bears, even if it was quite blustery. When it's blowing snow the bears just want to lie down out of the wind and rest. We found a few, and as one of them got up and started walking in our direction the sun managed to break through the clouds, but that did not stop the wind from blowing snow. She made her way past us and to the willows edge, when in about five minutes she dug a day den in a drift and all but disappeared.

With two bears resting out of the wind, and sunset coming soon, we decided to wait for better light and hope that one of the bears would get up and move. As the sun neared the horizon and broke through the clouds the female bear decided to sit up and see what the wind was doing. It was now blowing about half as hard as it had been. She must have decided it had died enough to get up and move, but not before shaking off the afternoon's accumulation of snow.

The next morning promised clearer sky, so we decided our fifth day would be about getting some landscapes. With the next three days on our own we figured we could chase the light and landscapes without a guide thinking we were nuts. We wanted to photograph sunrise over the ice, but many of the ice features we had scouted the evening before disappeared over night, so we shot what we could find. The wind and snow of the past few days had left the landscape buried in many places, but that was okay with us.

Pete has the gift for making great friends of random people he meets. On the train ride he decided to learn a little Chinese from four young women who were visiting from Taiwan. They only had one day scheduled out on the buggies and the rest of their time was spent in town, so we decided to take them with us for most of our fifth day (their last day). After we did our landscape run, we went and picked them up. Thank God for the third row seats in the Yukon XL.

Once we added them to the vehicle we shifted our focus back to polar bears, and we found our share. First we spotted a bear making his was across the ice. He ended up heading into the rocks for a bit before heading further along the coast. We jumped ahead to our next access point and waited, but after about fifteen minutes everyone was a bit anxious and wanted to move on. I demanded six more minutes, and five minutes later he made his way around the point and into sight.

He approached, but then went and rested in the lime grass. We waited with renewed patience, and he rewarded us by approaching very near (near enough that I returned to the safety of the vehicle). We repositioned and spotted a pair of red fox hunting and another bear way out on the ice, but as the sun was getting ready to set we wanted to keep a subject nearby.

The bear started to head away on the ice then disappeared behind some huge piles of snow and ice. Everyone was quite cold, and the common consensus was that we should head back towards town, but being the senseless jerk I am, I decided we would wait six more minutes. A few minutes later the bear peeked out at us, crossed back to our side of the off ice and walked in the setting sunlight.

The next morning we were out dark and early, and after a short delay for an iceberg bear (ask Greg about that one) I spotted a cross fox running out on the ice. We continued on looking for bears...and we found one resting at the willows edge. The sun was about to break through the clouds at the horizon, so I made my request of what the bear "needed to do." Oddly enough as soon as I finished saying what I wanted the bear got up and walked exactly where I wanted him to, as the sun broke through. The bear then bedded back down on our side of the frozen lake. The bear was so near us that I had to shoot some bear abstracts.

The clear sky and warming temperatures were causing a rise in atmospheric distortion, so we made our way back to town for gas and lunch. While there we did a bit of lens testing using FoCal. We finished our lunch and testing in time to find a bear in the setting sunlight, but just barely ;)

The next morning we found a bear resting in a grove of black spruce, but after I made my request he went into a better scene for the actual sunrise. It's not luck if you request it...right?

By our seventh day of the trip the ice was really starting to form along the coast, and the bears were keeping a close eye on the conditions. Some bears walked along the ice, while others took a more relaxed approach to the waiting game.

That night the clouds came in and the wind changed direction, blowing almost all of the ice out to sea, with many bears still on it. We spent $300 on gas and then we found another bearded seal, but that was about it.

The next morning it seemed as if there had been an exodus of bears, with the ice, and most of the folks that we talked to found very few bears from that point on. We decided to head into the storm to find bears. I decided with fewer bears I could finally waste some time photographing the cracks in the ice.

With the help of our guide we found a handful of bears on a day that most of the folks we talked, to on the radio, found none. We even found two bears that did not seem to like one another much, charging and showing other signs of irritation. They eventually figured things out and it was time for a nap. On our way in for the night I found this beautiful tree that had been overcome by a snowdrift, so we had to make one more stop for the night.

That night with clear sky and a nice display of the Northern Lights, Pete and I had to spend a few hours out photographing the show. The lights danced above Cape Mary, then above a grove of black spruce, and lastly above Hudson Bay.

The next morning we decided to hunt for some of the smaller species on our list. We found lots of arctic hare track, but no hare, a rock ptarmigan and lastly the illusive, or at least this year, arctic fox. I even took some time to do a bit of "cold yoga," the wind-chill was around -30ºF, but it was better than being like this bear and watching television. In the bear's defense it did scrub down after, and even brushed it coat.

On our tenth and final day the wind was strong and making new drifts for use to battle, but the weathermen were wrong...yes it was incredibly windy, but the clouds were breaking and we had plenty of nice light. We even managed to find a few bears, something that few others were managing to do, even some of the Tundra Buggy folks, and they guarantee bears to their clients.

With only a few bears, high winds and our train departing shortly we decided to follow this bear's example and make tracks as soon as the sun set.

After ten days on the ground, with bears every day, we were actually glad to be heading home. And after 47 hours on a train we arrived back in Winnipeg, Manitoba where I loaded my truck and started the long drive back to Montana.

I left Montana on Saturday, November 4 and made it back home safe and sound on Sunday, November 18, 2012. I took 12,120 photographs and 60 video clips; I drove 1656.3 miles; and I absolutely fell in love with my new 400/2.8L IS II.

My travel count for 2012 is currently at 121 days away from home, and I assume I'll get a few more before the end of the year.

As always if you have questions, ask... I have published the camera information with each image and added full keywords to share just about anything you would want to know about the images.

Thanks and enjoy

P.S. needless to say this trip helped boost my number of Polar Bear, Arctic Fox, Gyrfalcon and all around Arctic images.

October 29, 2012

Yellowstone, October 27 & 28, 2012

Yellowstone Lake
Waves crash on shore at Sedge Bay of Yellowstone Lake in Yellowstone National Park. Captured with a Canon 5D III and 17-40/4.0L in aperture priority mode with an exposure bias of + 2 at ISO50, f/22, and 1 second. The camera was mounted on a Gitzo 3540XLS and Arca-Swiss Z1sp, a 4 stop neutral density filter was used.
PHOTOS ONLINE

My second trip with students of the fall...was...well, okay. The wether was cold/snowy compared to the first trip (September 15 & 16, 2012), the activity was less than stellar, this fall has not been a great one in the park. The students got plenty of learning done, and I think they should have come home with a number of good photographs.

We left Billings (Rocky Mountain College) at 5:15a on Saturday morning and made our way quickly to the Park's North entrance, arriving right at sunrise...well we think so, it was very cloudy and snowing. We made a fairly uneventful drive to Swan Lake flats, stopping only for a few elk here and there. Swan Lake was frozen over, and we did not see any Swans on the ice, so we continued South. An Ermine ran across the road and off into the snow and sage, leaving us with a good sighting, but no photographs.

The miles rolled by with only occasional stops for the students to take in the sights and snap a few photographs of the snowy landscape. We decided to walk the full Norris Geyser Basin loop and made some nice images along the way.

From there we drove to Canyon to check on the great grey owls, but that was a bust, so we drove South towards The Lake. A go to move for me is to head to Sedge Bay and photograph the lake, waves, and whatever else I can find. We spent about 30min shooting crashing waves, ice covered logs, and the falling snow...then a grizzly bear decided to come and put on a show. We spent about an hour photographing the bear along the shore of the lake, as the bear approached I moved all of my students back up the hill, as we did that three tourists ran down the hill and whistled to get the bears attention...scaring the bear up the hill and away.

We waited back at our van, as a handful of cars followed the bear as it tried to cross. when the bear gave up and started to head back our way and towards the river we loaded up the van to give the students a chance at a drive by photo of a grizzly. The can in front of us parked on the road, forcing us to stop too...darn ;)

After the drive by we decided to leave the bear alone and make our way back to the North. We stopped to check on the owls again, again with no luck. We didn't stop again until we got to Gardiner, as the clouds kept us from having a nice sunset. K-BAR was closed so we went to Outlaws for pizza before returning to Super 8 for a good nights sleep.

The next morning we were up early and made our way to Lamar, stopping only to shoot a few landscapes (again the sunrise was a bust due to clouds). At Pebble Creek we spent a while photographing a mousing coyote, but we turned around at Thunderer and headed back to Mammoth, then south to Norris, then West Yellowstone for lunch at Arby's. With the day being mostly a bust we decided to start towards home, we left the park and stayed left on the old river road to drive along the Park's boundary where we photographed pronghorn antelope and realized that one of our vans had a flattening tire. It was the van I was driving, so the other van left for home while I changed the tire with the help from a few students (many hands make light/quick work).

As a reward for running late we ordered a few pizzas only to get a call back that the Livingston Pizza Hut was closed because their hot water heater was out. McDonald's was our only other real option, so fast food it was...then the long (slightly slower than usual) drive back to Billings.

The students had a good time and did plenty of learning, so I'll call the trip a success.

Make the jump to go through the online gallery, I ask that you leave comments/criticism or at least give your favorites a thumbs up...Thanks!

If you have questions, ask. I published the camera information with each image and have added full keywords to share just about anything you would want to know about the images.

Happy shooting

October 25, 2012

Yellowstone, September 15 & 16, 2012


Dark Grizzly Bear
A grizzly bear looks around after napping for hours along the Yellowstone River in the Hayden Valley of Yellowstone National Park. Captured with a Canon 7D and 500/4.0L IS + 1.4TC III in aperture priority mode with an exposure bias of 0 at ISO200, f/7.1, and 1/400th of a second. The camera was mounted on a Gitzo 3540XLS and Induro GHB2 gimbal head.
PHOTOS ONLINE

Way back in September I took some students from my ART247 Nature Photography course to Yellowstone for the weekend. We left Billings at 5am and raced over the Beartooth Pass in time to shoot sunrise, it was a crisp morning. The morning chill was fleeting and as we made our way into the park you could have told us it was July with the warm temperatures and crowds.

We made our way over Dunraven Pass and into Hayden Valley where we spent a few hours with the darkest grizzly bear I have seen in ages. From there we had an uneventful drive South along the Lake and up to Old Fateful, where I got to play tourist. After watching the eruption from the parking lot we decided to have lunch, go for a walk and wait for a second eruption. We made our way North towards Norris to watch the Cygnet Fire as it flared up in the hot and dry conditions.

Sunset was spent in Mammoth with a bull elk and then photographing the incredibly dry Upper Terraces (dryer than I have ever seen them). Pizza at our favorite spot...K-BAR, and then off to the Super 8 for a great nights sleep.

Up early and South towards Maddison, but we got distracted by the sun rising through thick smoke from the fire. The Valley was warm and relatively void of elk, so we made our way to Firehole drive to try our hand with photographing the falls before the sunlight got into the Canyon. From there we made our way to Great Fountain Geyser just in time for an eruption.

After that we made an uneventful trip back out of the park towards the Beartooth Pass, we only stopped to shoot some of the falling leaves. As we made our way up the Pass snow started to fill the sky, and atop the Pass we found an opening in the storm and made some landscapes of the fall foliage, snow and grand vistas from the "top of the world."

The students had a great time, and I take the rest of my students to the park this weekend, but the weather promises to be much cooler this weekend.

Make the jump to go through the online gallery, I ask that you leave comments/criticism or at least give your favorites a thumbs up...Thanks!

If you have questions, ask. I published the camera information with each image and have added full keywords to share just about anything you would want to know about the images.

Happy shooting

June 18, 2012

May and Beyond...

Sorry for the extended silence...May was a crazy month.

Here are galleries from some of my May trips to Yellowstone National Park:
And here are galleries from some of my local climbing trips:
I also spent some time in Chicago and photographed my little sisters wedding (no I do not shoot weddings, so don't ask).

Today I spent the day today on the Beartooth Pass and in Yellowstone with a friend and we had a great little day trip.

Tomorrow morning I am off to Alaska and the Canadian Rockies for the next couple of months. I plan to check in via Facebook and Twitter daily (thanks SPOT CONNECT), and I will try to post photos online when I can (no promise as to how many or often).

p.s. I do have posts about photography in Yellowstone from April and May that should go live each week while I am gone...check that out on YellowstonePark.com.

April 23, 2012

Yellowstone, April 21 & 22, 2012

The Canyon Pack Alpha Female, Wolf, drinks from the Gardiner River after snacking on an Elk carcass in the China Garden of Yellowstone National Park. Captured with a Canon 5D III and 500/4.0L IS + 1.4TC III in aperture priority mode with an exposure bias of + 1 at ISO800, f/7.1, and 1/250th of a second. The camera was mounted on a Gitzo 3540XLS and Induro GHB2 gimbal head with a custom long lens support.

PHOTOS ONLINE

Warmest opening weekend I have ever experienced, the snow is MIA, but the wildlife activity made up for it all. One friend said; "best opening weekend ever," and he might be right. I had multiple, prolonged, close encounters with wolves. I spent a few hours nearby a grizzly bear, and that was all in the first morning.

Friday night I drove down to the park, so I could get an early start to opening weekend in the park. After a great night sleeping out under the stars I was ready to see what I could find in the park. I expected to have to drive quite a ways South before the shooting would heat up, but I only made it to the China Garden before I had to stop and watch an "unknown" grey wolf feeding on a carcass well within 100m of the road. At first it was only myself and a friend to sit an enjoy the time with a wolf that near, but soon the crowds grew and the wolf moved about 100m up a hill looking down on us all. A bald eagle also decided to give us a fly by at the same time.

I decided to head South and try my luck at finding a grizzly or two, but first I got to see the Canyon Pack head towards the unknown wolf and their hard earned meal. Lots of debate followed as to who the "unknown" wolf was...Limper, limper's son, the missing grey yearling, a member of the Eight Mile Pack, etc. I will say this...the wolf was older (had an old man's walk), he had a dark pack and looked very similar to Limper (one of my favorite wolves); if the wolf was Limper...great, but I would be easily convinced that it was a potential offspring of his from the Eight Mile Pack (from his many hiatuses from the Canyon pack). Later that day the Canyon Alpha female was seen following the "unknown" grey miles away from her pack and the carcass.

I drove South to find a group of photographers with a grizzly around dynamite curve; I spent the next few hours moving along with the bear. The photographic opportunities were not great, but it was a tolerant bear at close range...how could I not stay and click off some photos.

I decided to drive all the way to Old Faithful looking for bears, but I had no luck. Returning North I spent some time chatting with some friends about our plans for the evening I suggested; "we should head back and check on the Canyons then head out to Blacktail Lakes to see if anything has pulled that bison carcass out of the water." I did just that, while they went straight to Blacktail lakes. I was rewarded with the Canyon Alpha Female snacking on the carcass then drinking from the Gardiner River less than 50m from me, while they had a young wolf running around with a bone and some sandhill cranes come up and try to walk in their car (I'm not sure who won ;)

As the Alpha Female left the photographers around me commented; "my heart is racing," others said; "that was a once in a lifetime experience." I was reminded that I am extremely spoiled in that my heart was beating like normal and I had witnessed very similar events multiple times before. I mentioned that what we had encountered was something that happened a few times each year for the last few years...little did I know that less than 12 hours later I would be photographing it again.

I followed the Alpha Female a short while later only to catch her after she crossed the road to make her way back to the South again, the same area that others had seen and heard her pack in around the same time. I got a few shots as she walked along a ridge in the late afternoon light, but the conditions were producing heavy atmospheric distortion.

I headed out to where I was spending the night and planing on setting a camera for an attempt at shooting the nights meteor showers. I love to sleep out under the stars, open bivy, and it was another great night for that. Around midnight I awoke to start shooting the meteor shower, but a haze quickly rolled in and killed any hope I had of capturing the showers. Had I gone somewhere else I might have been able to see and photograph the showers, but I settled for a good nights sleep under the stars.

In the morning I told myself that there was no way that I would be lucky enough to find a wolf in the China Garden again, and I was right...I found five of the Canyon Wolves in the China Garden. With clear sky the dawn was bright enough that when pared with my Canon 5D III's great quality at high ISO I was able to photograph the Canyon Alpha Female eating and drinking again (two days in a row). The pack then let out a good morning howl, celebrated the new morning with hugs and kisses for all and began heading up and away from the crowd of photographers.

Before sunrise I had already gotten enough shots to keep me happy for a day, but I was greedy, so I headed South to see if I could find that grizzly again. I searched for about an hour, but decided that I should get some miles on my feet. During my search I stopped to snap a few shots of the sun rising over Roaring Mountain with the trees casting shadows in the steam.

I headed up above tower (emphasis on above) and ended up with over a dozen miles under my feet, lots of bird sightings, a few nest locations, and a very near encounter with a feeding cinnamon black bear, but no photos. I should explain the "near" and "no photos" with the bear. I was hiking back (not on a "people" trail) and as the game trail turned to go down hill I found the bear about 10m below me heading up the same game trail. I got to see the bear before he realized I was there, so as I stepped off the trail, removed my bear spray, and got my camera out of the way he spooked and ran off the other way...exactly what I wanted to happen. The velcro on my bear spray and a stick cracking was just enough to startle the young black bear. I took a different trail back towards my car and I am sure he had a lovely evening :)

I made a few stops to check around the park and on my way out I spotted a distant cinnamon black bear on the opposite side of a valley, but I decided that I would continue on towards home.

It was a really good trip in terms of photographs made, miles hiked, conversations had and weather enjoyed.

Make the jump to go through the online gallery, I ask that you leave comments/criticism or at least give your favorites a thumbs up...Thanks!

If you have questions, ask. I published the camera information with each image and have added full keywords to share just about anything you would want to know about the images.

Happy shooting

p.s. somehow my 7D was set an hour behind my 5DII and 5DIII, so some of the images are out of order...sorry.

April 20, 2012

Rock Climbing, April 14, 2012

Daniel Lombardi leading "Prime Rib" (5.9) on the North Rims of Billings, Montana. Captured with a Canon 5DIII and 70-200/2.8L IS II in aperture priority mode with an exposure bias of + 1 at ISO400, f/7.1, and 1/500th of a second. The camera was handheld.

PHOTOS ONLINE

My students needed to line up a photo shoot of some rock climbers, and I tagged along to oversee, help and to have some fun. The group headed to Gregory Hills to shoot a few different routes ranging from 5.4-5.11a. As always if I am there with a camera I am going to snap a few shots...that is what I have online. I also brought the GoPro and captured some footage.

Make the jump to go through the online gallery, I ask that you leave comments/criticism or at least give your favorites a thumbs up...Thanks!

If you have questions, ask. I published the camera information with each image and have added full keywords to share just about anything you would want to know about the images.

Happy climbing and shooting

April 11, 2012

Yellowstone, March 30 - April 1, 2012

A grizzly wonders along a hillside near Silver Gate, Montana. Captured with a Canon 7D and 500/4.0L IS in aperture priority mode with an exposure bias of + 1 at ISO400, f/7.1, and 1/500th of a second. The camera was resting on a beanbag.

PHOTOS ONLINE

Spring has sprung...or it's trying to at least. The bears are out, wolves are still running around and things are greening up. After a crazy month of March I had only two days remaining to make a trip to Yellowstone.

Friday was pretty much a bust, but it was a great day to get in some hiking and camping. Saturday brought with it nice soft light and after some searching and plenty of miles hiked I happened upon a grizzly bear just outside of the park near Silver Gate, MT. I spent much of the afternoon playing with my new 5D III and a very cooperative grizzly bear, I left before the bear did. It was then time for a nap, I awoke from my nap to clouds racing overhead...it was beautiful, I should have shot a timelapse of it, but I decided that I could be the only one to enjoy it (sorry).

As I returned to camp I came across a gentleman who was watching a fox nestled into the rocks. He did not find the fox, but the foxes finder had given up watching. I spent the rest of the daylight with the fox as it napped, stretched, yawned and then repeated the process. The scene was interesting and the weather was beautiful, so I was happy to sit and watch for the entire remainder of the day.

After a great night sleep I was off for another day to see what I could find to photograph in the Park. I stopped at the Lamar Canyon great horned owls nest to snap a photo for the record. The nest is so far away and inaccessible, so I am okay encouraging people to bring their spotting scope and watching from across the canyon :)

I decided to hike up above Tower Falls again to see if I could find a bear or two, but had no luck. Making my way out to check on the Silver Gate Grizzly the wolf wathcers had some dots way to the South...I decided to move on. No luck in Silver Gate, so I made my way back through Lamar Valley and through to Specimen Ridge where a couple had just heard some howling to the North while others had seen three wolves to the South.

I picked a spot and started to wait and watch. The usual wolf crowds built up to the East and West of me, but I was left alone. All of the sudden a grey wolf made its way about 50m away from me he ran at first then slowed to a walk as he crossed the road and made his way up the hill to the South...now other cars came racing down to the pullout I was in. About that time wolf 471F (or so I was told later) came out on a ridge about 100m away from me and started howling. She spent the next 10-15 minutes pacing and howling, part of me is convinced that she would have crossed had I not been joined by others, and had a few people not decided to park on the road. There was nothing I could do about it, so I kept shooting the beautiful collared wolf as she howled. After a while she made her way to the West where she crossed the road just out of site from the masses.

I decided to hike up to Tower Falls again, still no luck with bears, but I did find a ruffed grouse foraging in the grass. After spending some time with the grouse I decided it was time to head back to Billings after a quick final lap through the park. Things were slow so I started my drive back to Billings, but with my new truck I decided to take the old Yellowstone trail all the way back to Tom Miner Road...first time and it was a blast.

Make the jump to go through the online gallery, I ask that you leave comments/criticism or at least give your favorites a thumbs up...Thanks!

If you have questions, ask. I published the camera information with each image and have added full keywords to share just about anything you would want to know about the images.

Happy shooting