Posts Tagged: Eriophorum sp.

Dawn on Canaan Mountain Bog

A favorite place, especially at dawn and dusk. Cabin Mountain is just visible in the distance, lower right. The white stuff out there, for those not familiar with such places, is a sedge called cotton grass – an Eriophorum species.

This exposure was made in September of 2012 on a trip with photo-buddy Robert Clark. From here we went to Blackwater Falls to photograph Shays Run (next image) where we got soaked in a heavy rain.

28-90mm Leica Vario-Elmarit ASPH, Nikon 800e, Lr5, Ps CS6.

Canaan Mountain Bog

A beautiful and fragile environment this is. The surface of the bog is largely sphagnum moss growing on a layer of thousands of previous generations of sphagnum moss. This layer, perhaps a foot thick, seems to float on a layer of flowing water. And the water, varying in thickness from a maximum of several inches depending on usually the plentiful precipitation, is underlain with rock. So the larger vegetation growing in the bog is very shallow rooted, and thus subject to all kinds of problems. Winter here is ferocious, with constant wind freeze-drying buds and throwing over entire groups of trees. Temperatures are bitter, and probably the only thing keeping the shallow roots from being destroyed by freezing is a generous layer of snow.

In this image taken in late fall you can see cotton grass, Eriophorum sp., some Nemopanthus and viburnum,  and a flagged hemlock, Tsuga canadensis. The hemlock barely hang on in these exposed areas but they are probably safe from the adelgids because of the weather. The trees barely visible in the background are growing on higher ground. They are a mix of red pine, white pine, hemlock, red spruce, maples, birch, and an occasional stunted red oak. Also with a rhododendron and mountain laurel understory. Though not visible in this image a few small stands of our native balsam firs, Abies balsamea, exist in the area. Some say these are Canaan fir, a cross between balsam fir and the more southern Fraser fir, Abies fraseri.

28-90mm Leica Vario-Elmarit, Nikon 800e, Lr4, Ps CS6.

Ephemeral Gestures Part Two

I was talking with friend and photo-buddy Bob Clark (http://roberthclarkphotography.com) a couple of days ago about things photographic. We both have times when we wonder what the heck are we doing out there. Just what are we making images of, why, and who cares anyway. We are both driven… compelled to make images. To satisfy our egos? God, I hope not! Are we just making pretty pictures? Again, god (or is that dog?), I hope not. There is no social commentary in either of our works. And often no overt sign of humans other than the extent to which we reveal ourselves through our images. Sometimes I think I just like to show people the cool stuff I found. But it has to be more than that. I can’t need affirmation that badly, can I?

I think of Minor White and his friend Paul Caponigro, both really powerful and influential photographers and superb craftsmen. Both of whom have had a significant influence on me forty some years ago. White conceptually through his teaching, and Caponigro through his images… they really expanded my ideas of what an image could be, and in a way that connected to my view of the world and to the photography I was doing at the time. Without question they are living in my images today.

A couple of points: Paul Caponigro, not John Paul Caponigro… Paul is John Paul’s father. And this is Dolly Sods Wilderness, one of the most extraordinary places in the Mid-Atlantic region.

28-90mm Leica Vario-Elmarit, Nikon 800e, Lr4, Ps CS6.

More Red Run Bog

I thought it would snow any minute. This needs to be a big PRINT. The amount of detail in there is scary.

80-200mm Vario-Sonnar CY, Nikon 800e, Lr4, Ps CS6.

Red Run Bog—Take II

Balsam Fir, Abies balsamea, center and right. Native but an unusual sight these days.

Compare this image to the previous post. The sun swept through. What can I say… I’m easily amused. Always have been.

80-200mm Vario-Sonnar CY, Nikon 800e, Lr4, Ps CS6.

Red Run (not Redrum) Bog—Take I

Balsam Fir, Abies balsamea, center and right. Native but an unusual sight these days.

Compare this image to the next one. The sun swept through. This one is largely backlit, the next has full sun with the background in shade.

80-200mm Vario-Sonnar CY, Nikon 800e, Lr4, Ps CS6.

Red Run Bog

Cold and blustery on Canaan Mountain. Don’t let that little bit of sunshine fool you. I was out there from 10pm Monday (after an excellent dinner at the Blackwater Brew Pub in Davis) till noon this past Tuesday. I was fine in my sleeping bag, but from dawn I was out in two pair of gloves, three layers of goose down, a shell, and waders and I was still cold! But it was worth it. More images to come.

80-200mm Vario-Sonnar CY, Nikon 800e, Lr4, Ps CS6.

More Sky

Last month, dawn in the bog on Canaan Mountain. That is Cabin Mountain across the valley with Dolly Sods on top.

105-210 Mamiya 645, Nikon 800e, Lr4, Ps CS6.

Canaan Mountain Bog

This is a reworked file, previously posted under the same name.

45mm Zeiss Tessar CY, Canon 5D Mk II, Aperture 3, Ps CS5, HDR.

Second Light Canaan Mountain

A little later than the last post but still very dark.

45mm Zeiss Tessar CY, Canon 5D Mk II, Aperture 3, Ps CS5.