Category: nature photography

Tahquamenon Falls State Park

Tahquamenon Falls State Park

While I have travelled far and wide to film the Great Lakes for our documentary The Sweetwater Seas: North America’s Great Lakes, I had not been to Tahquamenon Falls State Park in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. I’ve seen lot of great shots of the falls along with drone footage. When Mary and I decided to head somewhere in the Lance Camper RV we looked for a place neither of us had been and landed on Tahquamenon Falls!

The park is the second largest state park in Michigan, and most of the 50,000 square acres are wilderness and not accessible. Which is great for the moose which have been reintroduced to the area, but not necessarily for seeing them! The hiking trails are very well kept, and the lower falls is accessible to wheelchairs. There is a 5-mile trail between the lower falls and upper falls. The lower falls are much smaller yet there are several as the water makes its way downstream to Lake Superior. We hiked the trail between the falls one afternoon for about a mile before rain and darkness turned us around. The trail down low by the river was muddy but once you moved upriver and on the bluffs it was dry and beautiful.

This short film gives you a good idea of the park, the falls and the wetland areas and lakes inside the park. As most photographers know, when travelling with others you may not linger in an area as long as you would have if travelling alone. I also only carried my iPhone for shots on some of the trails. Otherwise it was my Canon 5D Mark IV and a tripod. Now the one thing I failed to do when I went to the lower falls the first time I left the heavy neutral density filters in my big bag instead of putting them into the small bag I carry on the trail. A mistake I made so long exposures we not as long as I wanted. And while filming the Moon over the lower falls I shot the video in 4K with the 16mm lens to get the widest shot, but should have thought about shooting in HD as it widens the shot even more although not as good as in 4K. Next time I realize the shot needs the width of the 16mm as seen in stills I will shoot it both ways.

You learn a few things every time you go out and shoot no matter how long you’ve been doing it! Enjoy the video and still images!  

Peace, Richard

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Owls in Evanston

During these very strange days here in Evanston, Illinois there has been an interesting diversion for those out for a walk or bike ride – a family of Great Horned Owls. The adults were spotted in late February or early March with three owlets born in March. Folks have been watching them in the trees, yes while social distancing and wearing masks, to watch the little ones grow to almost adults currently. I only came to know of them last week when a friend posted photographs of them. I have since been there three times to date and have watched them sleep in the trees, wash themselves while sitting on branches, followed each other through the trees all while waiting for mom to come back with food. Interestingly they seem to have a pecking order on who gets to eat first.

It has been great to watch these majestic raptors, known in many places as wise old birds of prey and held to an almost religious status. Watching them follow each other from one tree to another or deciding on a tree for themselves has been an interesting diversion from the pandemic spreading over this country.

They are common in North America but in cities they are not as common as in the forests and woodlands. This pair of adults apparently has been coming around north Evanston for a few years. Maybe next year they’ll decide my 300 year old oak is a good place to rest and raise their kids.

For those interested in the tech side, I shot with my Canon 5D Mark IV for both still and video images. The first evening I shot until it was so dark I had to up the ISO to 3200 which left them a bit grainy while watching them eat. On other days when I was shooting in the late afternoon early evening I could use ISO 400 easily. I used the 28-300 f5.6 on the first shoot, my 300 f4 with a 2x convertor the second day and went back to the 28-300 with the 2x convertor and a polarizing filter the third day.

Enjoy.

Richard


Snow Storm in May?

With snow expected today I thought I post something from February to remind you it won’t be all that bad! Besides we won’t need to shovel since it will be 50’s on Sunday! So enjoy… you can watch a video of the shoot with this link: https://vimeo.com/329873301

Winter on the Great Lakes can be a fantastic opportunity to see the power and fascination of nature. Went back to Lighthouse Beach to shoot the Ice Island which had formed off the beach at sunrise to get the light shining through the ice sheets. Shot mostly video for The Sweetwater Seas documentary but took some time to shoot some still images as well.

Started at 6am in 9 degrees, at least there was no wind at all so it seemed warm with all the layers on! (Just had to watch where your breath went so it didn’t get in front of lens!) Spent about 2.5 hours out there. Enjoy!


Happy 100th Birthday Grand Canyon National Park!

Today marks the 100th Birthday of Grand Canyon National Park! It has been 19 years since I was last at the Grand Canyon. As anyone knows who has seen this magical place it is awe inspiring when you see it for the very first time. Breathtaking, spectacular, unbelievable, remarkable, enormous, spiritual are just some of the words used to describe this place. I have only been to the South Rim nineteen years ago for New Year’s Day 2000 with the family. We enjoyed the momentous passing of the millennium sitting on the hood of the car (to stay a bit warmer) watching a starlit sky filled with more stars than the kids had ever seen before. It was a magical night knowing the passage of time was marked on the calendar, used by most of us today, by a millennium.

It is the second most visited national park (behind Great Smoky Mountains National Park – which yes I have a book on…) and because of these massive numbers of people at the park, it faces challenges of over use, management of the Colorado River system that fails to adequately adopt strategies for the protection and restoration of native animals, as well as cultural resources and wildlife habitat, sound and air pollution, mining just outside the park, and yes the effects of climate change are already apparent in the park.

I have not been to the north rim or even down below the rim more than a few hundred yards. It is on my list of things to do, along with visiting some of the Native American sites along the canyon. Here are four images from my last trip there for New Year’s Eve and New Year’s sunrise back on Jan 1, 2000. Yes, before digital.

Enjoy,

Richard