Wednesday, December 9, 2009

VacaHills

Davis has always been a big proponent of open space and land preservation. But the flat, boring land around town isn't the the most fun, recreationally or photographically. Thankfully that love of the land has rubbed off on some of the neighboring cities as well. So when a few oil spots in the driveway turned into a big oil slick in the two weeks since Miranda's mom had her oil changed in Vacaville, I used the opportunity to take advantage of Vacaville's more recent open space additions.

If only UC Davis had been UC Vacaville instead. I'd love to ride my bike around these hills everyday instead of seeing nothing but flat the ag land surrounding Davis. The rolling Vaca Hills spotted with oaks, boulders, and wispy grasses are easy to hike and rank up there with the most beautiful of California landscapes.



I limited myself to two fixed lenses, to keep not just the camera but also the pictures simple. I also tried to think in black and white.



Both lenses had large apertures which can give shallow depth of field and light falloff on the corners reminiscent of antique cameras.



Something about an old dead tree sitting alone on the crest of a hill always makes for a cool photo.



I filled up the memory card pretty quickly but on the way back to the car I had to find a file to erase to make room for one last image. About a hundred yards from a sprawling subdivision was this criss-crossing of trails made by several different sized creatures (including a people trail on the left.) It's great that Vacaville decided this space should be open for all of us wandering souls.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Lucky

Working the evening shift has two big advantages. The first is that I love shooting sports and most sporting events take place after school or at night on my shift. The second is there is usually great light available for photos. Far too often that great light is wasted on boring subjects or by being stuck indoors. But every so often I get lucky.

On Thursday the late afternoon light helped liven up a blowout water polo game. As the game wound down the clouds began to glow perfectly for a nice sunset shot. Not knowing of any good places near the pool to shoot a sunset I started on the bike ride back to the office. Luckily that was the right way to go. Last week's rains had turned ucd's construction south of Russell Blvd into a series of small ponds. A quick hop of a fence and this sunset was mine.



Thankfully my luck extends beyond photography. I've been blessed with a cute girl who is able to put up with most of my idiosyncrasies and is not afraid to kick a dead seal.

So while in Monterey I decided it was time to make it permanent and proposed. Luckily she said "yes."

Monday, October 5, 2009

Invaders

Apparently deciding that I am no longer cute and cuddly enough for their entertainment Miranda and Whitney headed off to Sac this past weekend to bring a little more life to our home. Welcome the new additions Stella and Dexter.


Here's Dex not enjoying himself in the bath after he had less than perfect aim in the litter box.


And Stellacat caught in the act of a kitty fart

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Cannery Sunset Again

The average person in the world these days gets to see 23,725 sunsets in a lifetime. That's a pretty big number. I happily spent many of my early sunsets playing in the backyard, in pickup games of street baseball, or on boy scout camping trips. But considering I'm now on #12,462, over halfway thru most people's allotment, I realize that sunsets are not to be taken for granted, especially the colorful ones. Sitting at the computer updating my blog as the sun says goodbye to another day is not how we are supposed to spend our sunsets.

So last night, with the light getting low and clouds filling the sky I headed back out to the old cannery to try shooting the rubble again. The gate wasn't wide open like last time but was still more than accessible for a skinny guy and his camera. I got there early enough to do a little exploring.


I like the way the colors in the graffiti compliment the sky.


repeat from last time but with a sturdy tripod


finally the moonlit train tracks outside the cannery

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Tower Bridge Fireworks

This was supposed to be the time I got it all right. I had the fancy high resolution camera for the big enlargements, the expensive tilt-shift lens to fix the distortion I got shooting this scene two years ago, the big nine and a half foot tall tripod to give me a clean view over the docks around the bridge, and I had Miranda there for good luck. All set up I checked the focus at 10x magnification. Sharp as a knife. But another spot about 10 feet closer looked like a better spot to set up. Sure enough it was better. Forgetting to tighten the tilting lock on the lens before moving the camera was not. The picture still looks good for the web but I was hoping this would be the one I could blow up full poster size and still be able to see every rivet on the bridge. Next time will be the time I get it all right.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Towers and Tunnels

Yesterday was a boring one at work. No assignments (except for an eight mile bike ride to shoot a home for real estate that Fred was already at) Just sitting at the computer updating the photos-of-the-week galleries that I'd put off for a few weeks. Around 5:30 a call came over the scanner for a bush on fire at one of the junior high's. I figured it'd be out by the time I got there but I was looking for an excuse to get away from the desk. Rode by, no flames, no smoke, no nothing, dinner time. After a healthy three servings of mac-n-cheese I decided to leave the gear at home and ride back to work light weight. As soon as I hit the road I looked up and saw the wispy high clouds starting to light up from sunset. Back inside, cheap tripod, grad filter, backpack, thinking of what foreground to give these clouds.

Ever since the old, scraggly oak tree on the covell village property fell I've been looking for another defining landmark near town to compose my sunrise/sunset shots with. Just beyond where the old oak stood, at the old hunt wesson plant, the developers left one old tank standing when they tore down the cannery. Could that be my new landmark? I took a chance and headed that way, hoping the homeless in town had cut a hole in the fence to set up a camp in there. Cutting past the little league fields my luck was even better, the gates there were wide open. The tower wasn't as great as I'd hoped, a little too bulky for close-ups and too close to the tree line for middle distance shots.



Looking to find an altenative foreground I backed up into more of the deconstruction debris. Unfortunately the cheap tripod and no remote switch made for shaky pictures of an otherwise nice composition.



The way back to the office lead past the bike tunnel on H St. I'd been meaning to see what the tunnel would look like in photos and since I had the gear with me...

Rodeo Beach, Take 3

Determined to get a better shot of those three large rocks at Rodeo Beach I've made three trips back there in the past month.

My excuse for the first trip was an alignment of the north tower of the golden gate with the transamerica building and the full moon. While I had plotted my position and timing correctly the moonrise was too early to get that nice glow of the harvest moon. I'm not sure if it's worth trying again anyway.



Before I headed over to the bridge I did some hiking around tennessee cove, muir beach, and kirby cove. I only brought the pocket cam with me on the hikes but after seeing kirby cove it's now on the official 'I will return with a real camera' list.

Sea anemone at muir beach


day time at kirby cove


Down at Rodeo Beach the tide was rolling in which made it hard to keep the tripod from shifting in the waves. It also made it hard to keep my shoes and pants dry.





A week later Mir had a meeting for new volunteers at the marine mammal center near Rodeo Beach. And while I would've tagged along to giver her company anyways it was another good excuse to visit the three amigos. After dropping her off I headed to the Kirby Cove trailhead to visit one of the abandoned battery points that was now covered in graffiti. I really like this doorway.



Down at the beach the tide was out but the fog was in. I tried another angle to play with the fog, giving the rocks an old time look.



Last friday Sue was on vacation so I filled in her morning shift for her. Having that evening free and Mir heading down for another night at the center meant another night for Wayne at Rodeo Beach. After a brisk, lung opening hike up to Slacker's Ridge for the sunset I headed back down to the beach.

The view from Slacker's made it look like the beach was fogged over but once to the three amigos the sky was clear and colorful. Can't decide which I like best.




While I don't remember the sky being as vivid as it is in the last photo that's what the auto white balance captured it as. The light was mostly gone by 9:30 but with Mir working til 11:00 I had some time to kill. Since there was no moon in the sky that night I chewed up that hour and a half five minutes at a time. It's amazing how many stars are visible just a few miles away from such a major metropolis.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Moon Fire

After last week's trip to Rodeo Beach I began plotting my return by checking for low tides around sunset/sunrise to hopefully get a better shot. And since the tides correspond to the phases of the moon I also checked to see if I could line up any landmarks with a rising/setting moon. Friday the 24th a crescent moon would be setting due east an hour after sunset. Looking at google maps (double true) the north end of treasure island lined up with alcatraz and the north tower of the golden gate. A great alignment for a photo. Technology can be a huge help in getting extraordinary photos. It can also help save me gas and bridge toll by checking bay area weather cams and seeing nothing but fog at the golden gate.

So around sunset I pulled Mir away from her farming video game and headed north past woodland determined to find something to line up with the moon. Along poleline road we passed a huge hay bale fire that was sending a thin ribbon of smoke up the valley. The smoke cloud created wonderful lines on the northern horizon and we found a solitary oak on the way to Knight's Landing with the Sutter Buttes in the background.

The tree is a little small and I probably should've shot this direction again from a closer position.

Up the road with the same tree but now looking east to the sunset and moon.



Realizing the tree will be around longer than the burning pile of hay we headed back to try and get the descending moon above that fire. Maneuvering along some back county roads toward conoway ranch I found a good spot to line everything up. The pile looked to be about 20 feet wide from this angle and probaly 40-50 long. It was a scene I definitely don't expect to see again.

Last Weekend

Last weekend was a decent one for photos. Watering the backyard garden found an industrious spider who had set her web up in the right spot to catch a few rays of light passing thru our trees. The first photo is looser with some color leaking thru the fence in the back while the second photo was from further back and zoomed in so a black pot would provide a solid dark background.


Later in the day a few clouds appeared on the horizon and I headed out, again, to the sunflower fields. Unfortunately as the sunlight waned the clouds thinned even faster. There was just enough color in the sky to make an acceptable shot.


The drive back into town made the trip worth it. A local great horned owl had found a nice perch along F St.


Sunday Mir and I headed down to Marin to check out a small waterfall that fell onto the beach and into the ocean. The exit for that hike happened to be the same exit for Stinson beach. After sitting in traffic for 5 minutes only to move a couple hundred feet we gave up (I'm fine hiking a couple hours to see a waterfall but 5 minutes in traffic practically destroys me) Golden Gate park was option no. 2. Looking for the first uncrowded place to pull over we happened upon a trail down to a nice black sand beach. While we're both appreciative of the beauty in nature this beach was a little too au natural for us. Mir, with the help of an unexpectedly large wave, did get in the spirit of the beach for a while as she let her jeans dry.


Deciding to skip the unmarked beaches we followed signs down to Rodeo Beach on the ocean side of the park. This one was more family friendly and had some nice rock formations along the beach. Mir on a big rock looking for sea creatures.


and a nice set of rocks that I'm going to have to come back an visit on a clearer day at low tide.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Starlight Sunflowers

Checking the weather report for a repeat of Saturday's sunset was a little depressing. Not a cloud in the sky for at least 10 days. Not sure if the sunflower fields on Road 102 were going to last that long I decided to head back out last night to try some starry skies behind the flowers. It's pretty hard to compose a shot in nearly complete darkness, especially when it's watering night and the field is surrounded by a soggy moat. And as dark as it was on the ground there was still too much light in the sky being right between Davis and Woodland. We need to get that dark sky ordinance rolling again.



That's the Milky Way running along the left edge of the photo.



If it's not too breezy I might try going out again for one good and long star trails photo.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Sunflower Sunset

As the first drops of rain fell I knew the skies were working towards a grand sunset. It was about 4:30 and I was stuck in Woodland sweating thru an American Legion baseball game. The rain was not only a cool relief but a reminder to keep my eyes to the sky. I already had in mind a sunflower field about six miles down the road from our house that was waiting for a colorful sky to compliment it. Back in the office I watched the clock and would peek my head out the door every few minutes to see how things were developing. By 8:00 I knew I had to get out and shoot. I was all ready to skip out of work for a half hour or so when Chris told me he only needed one more photo and the little league folks would email it in in a few minutes. A conundrum. Do I leave now, drive 10 minutes, quickly shoot, drive back, and work on one photo or wait a few minutes, stay as long as I like at the sunflowers, then go straight home? I chose the latter and fifteen minutes later realized that was a bad choice. The sky was absolutely perfect as I left the parking lot, a good 10 minutes from where I was supposed to be.

There was still some color in the clouds when I arrived but nothing like it was just minutes earlier. Though my patience is usually a virtue this was one moment where time was not on my side.



Hopefully the sunflowers are patient enough to give me one more chance.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Twin Oaks

Costco is a wonderful place. Two dollar giant pizza slices, huge bags of peanut m&m's, sparkling hidef tv's greeting your entrance. But the real gem there is the $2.99 12x18 prints from the photo lab. Large enough make the photos be seen but not so big as to show all the flaws in your focus, exposure, and old lenses. It's really the perfect size in every way but one, nobody makes 12x18 frames. For as long as the 24x36 mm leica format has been dominate you would think frames with a 2x3 aspect ratio would be common. But frame manufacturers are still infatuated with the relic formats; 5x7, 8x10, 11x14, and 16x20. All useless to me. Kohl's sometimes carries an american made 14x20 frame (several of which grace our living room walls) that gives a nice 1 inch border to 12x18 photos. But at over $20 each on sale the frame ends up being 7 times the price of the photo.

Enter Wayne's do-it-yourself world. I took a piece of scrap pallet wood, ran it across the table saw and router a few times and voila, a free 12x18 frame. A quick trip down to the spca thrift store found a nice poster of a shirtless Brady Anderson. $3 and a glass cutter later I had 3 $1 panes of 12x18 glass.


As you can see in the photo trying to cut perfect 45ยบ angles on a table saw isn't an easy task. So it was off to craigslist for a good miter saw. Craigslist is a great way to reuse/recycle and to avoid directly giving any money to companies that have outsourced jobs to china. So for about the price of three new frames I got a great deal on a saw in vacaville that will hopefully help me make countless more.

As I was leaving with my purchase the clouds were putting on wonderful show over the vaca hills. I detoured thru the backside of town, along the base of the hills, looking for a nice foreground to match with the sky until I stumbled upon a stalled housing development. Barren streets and empty lots lead to small hillside graced by a pair of oaks.

Here was a positive result of the housing slump. This view, or possibly the trees themselves, would be gone forever had the building craze continued. Although, I'm sure they've only been granted a temporary reprieve and the sun will eventually set on this view.


The twin oaks were nice but I convinced myself there was more to see in the hills. I meandered thru back-country, one-lane roads before popping up down the road from lake solano. The sun was getting low and a set of power lines were ruining the shot there so I headed up to berryessa for what I hoped would be a colorful show.


Well, I probably should've stayed at the oaks. But now I have a couple more photos that will need some frames. I think I'm also going to need some more wall space soon.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

North Coast Road Trip

Another year another couple weeks of vacation I had to use or lose. Best way to solve that problem, road trip. Miranda especially needed some time to relax after finals. Since we both had friends/family up the way to the canadian border that seemed like the smart path to take. First planned stop was my nephew Erik's in Eureka. But every time we've gone up there I've wanted to poke around the Avenue of the Giants old growth redwood park. With 9 days to burn on the road I finally had the time to stop. Here are a couple shots of the trees with Miranda for scale.



Two nights at my nephew Erik and Kala's place in Eureka and we began our trek up the coast hoping to make it to portland by midweek. We didn't get far before being distracted by a roadside aquarium in Crescent City where Mir unknowingly volunteered to french kiss a sea anemone. On the road again and over the oregon border we were lured to the sea again at a sign for whaleshead beach (that's pronounced 'whales head' not 'whale shead' as we both initially thought) The beach was pretty but it was a small natural spring flowing from a cliff face that caught my eye. The bright green algae around the crack and the mix of black, brown, and gold sand made for a great color combo. I spent a while trying to get it right but don't think it looks as cool as it did in person.

On the way back to the car a small plant washed ashore. Good time to try some shallow depth of field.


We found a few more nice vista points before pulling into Bandon Beach just around sunset. I'd heard Bandon mentioned on photography sites before but was amazed to look down on the beach and see a dozen or so manned tripods all over the beach. Even in yosemite I'd never seen so many photogs in one place. Turns out it was just a photo workshop, which I should've guessed by the quality of gear most of them were using. I wasted most of the sunset trying to figure out how to use my 4x5 again but got one decent thin red line and reflection of the rocky beach.

We managed to just sneak into the beachside hotel before they closed and shacked up for the night. I awoke before sunrise to find the beach clogged with photographers again. The beach was long and flat enough at low tide that there was plenty of room for all of us. Well except for that one guy with the really heavy walk who left deep footprints everywhere. The beach is so flat and smooth around the big rocks that there were nice reflections everywhere.

and my favorite from bandon beach

I went back to the room and woke Mir so she could play with all the sea life clinging to rocks. Not only was there an abundance of photogs but there were also more starfish and sea anemones than I'd ever seen before. It was hard to leave but we knew there was still plenty of coast left to see.

The drive up 101 is as excruciatingly slow as it is pretty. And by the time we hit Newport we were ready to cut inland and get moving again. We probably missed some really pretty beaches in northern oregon but we were also tired of being stuck in traffic and were really excited to get to Portland. Now maybe our expectations were unrealistically high but Portland was not worth the rush. Tons of homeless and junkies everywhere. Nowhere near as many bicycles as we'd been lead to believe. And we could not find a single recycling bin anywhere. Portland's suckiness turned out to be a blessing in disguise as it lead us to quickly move on to the Columbia River Gorge (and the cheaper hotels outside the city) The waterfalls there are amazing and you can get so close that it's impossible to keep the camera lens dry. We were there at midday so the light was in a bad spot to get the famous shot of Multanomah Falls with the walking bridge. Mir suggested a 1 mile hike to the top of the falls. It was breathtaking, literally and figuratively. Besides being good exercise it also chewed up enough time to move the sun into a better position. However you will get no cliche multanomah falls from me as Mir and I both agreed the neighboring Wahkeena Falls was more likeable and less touristy.
Wahkeena Falls in color

and artistically sepia toned Wahkeena Falls


We left the Gorge and began the push to Seattle, again arriving just around sunset. It also happened to be just before the moonset as well. Here's the crescent moon and space needle from our hotel parking lot.

We wandered around a bit after dark. Never have I been in any major city after dark and felt as safe as we did in Seattle. No hooligans or ruffians anywhere. The only frightful part was a bombardment of seagull poop as a giant flock passed over looking to roost for the night. But before sleep deprivation and bird poop called us back to the hotel one final shot of the space needle reflected in the experience music museum.

We headed up to Bellingham to visit Caitlin and Luna and so Mir could have tea. Bellingham is a pretty area but I didn't really do any shooting there. Here's sunset from the waterfront near her apt with the point-n-shoot.

We closed out the trip by getting lunch in Everett with my nephew Sean who I hadn't seen in 6 years and then staying with Mir's old roommates Jenny and Josh who had just moved to Grants Pass. While I didn't do as much in depth photographing as I had planned getting to see so many good friends, wonderful places, and doing it all with Mir made this vacation one of my best ever.