A canyon towhee keeping an eye out for scallywags, ne’er-do-wells, trouble-makers.
π·: Sony A6600 | Sony 100-400mm | Sony 1.4X
ποΈ: May 28, 2023
Scratcher of heads, rubber of bellies
A while back I decided to not use my leave of absence as a trial retirement but instead to let my mind go quiet for a while. There’s a part of myself I’ve kept in hibernation for a very long while and I’m not ready to let him rise from slumber, as if he stirs it will be too hard to go back to work for the year or so before real retirement. I have relented a little in the weeks of leave that remain, small awakenings I don’t think I’ll regret. One that caught me by surprise was a desire to play around with black-and-white photography as usually I only shoot it in desperation. I don’t think I’ll ever shoot much of it, the point is to let my mind wander into new territory, but not only did I love this quick snap of The Muppet as Bear and I hiked in the desert, so far it’s my favorite picture I’ve taken of this saguaro.
π·: Nikon Z fc | Nikon 16-50mm DX
ποΈ: November 21, 2023
Sadly this is about as close as I’ll ever get to an actual mountain lion. Thankfully this is about as close as I’ll ever get to an actual mountain lion. Bear usually wants to stop and stare at the animal sculptures at Fraesfield, he knows they aren’t real but can’t quite make out what they are. It’s the mountain lion that really gets his interest, there is also a jackrabbit and a javelina nearby. This morning he walked right on by, there were lots of people and dogs with it being Christmas Eve so I think he was a little too distracted to appreciate art.
π·: Nikon Z fc | Nikon 16-50mm DX
ποΈ: December 18, 2023
Common side-blotched lizards are one of my favorite desert residents and one of the rare reptiles you might glimpse during the cooler months, though only on the warmest days. I met this basking female in the late spring when warmth is not hard to come by, she was basking in the sun but could easily retreat into the shadows if necessary. She decided I was alright and even closed her eyes for a while.
π·: Sony A6600 | Sony 100-400mm | Sony 1.4X
ποΈ: May 29, 2023
We had a dry summer so the desert flora is looking pretty parched, some saguaros are pretty gaunt but visually I notice it most in chain fruit cholla. They are also known as jumping cholla due to the ease with which they attack passers by, but I like the chain fruit name since it highlights their most distinctive feature: their fruit grows in chains. Pretty shriveled up here but I like photographing nature in all its states, not just the pretty ones.
π·: Nikon Z 7II | Nikon 105mm macro
ποΈ: October 30, 2023
Throughout the desert embedded in the boulders you can see the planet’s spine exposed, a reminder of how thin the veneer of life is. An osteogeologist could tell you exactly which vertebrae these are but to me they are just the bones of the earth.
π·: Nikon Z 7II | Nikon 105mm macro
ποΈ: September 24, 2023
High on a snow-covered mountain I came across this secluded retreat, only the wooden door hinting at the dwelling behind, carved into the sheer cliff face. I wondered who would answer if I approached and knocked. Perhaps a desert ascetic meditating in the highest places. Perhaps a mystic who removed themselves from the world to better understand it, waiting to answer all my questions. Perhaps this is where all the rattlesnakes go to wait out the winter.
I decided not to knock.
π·: Nikon Z fc | Nikon 105mm macro
ποΈ: December 12, 2023
Two of my favorite things, a phainopepla and an ocotillo, side lit by the rising sun. Ocotillos have been a revelation since we moved to the desert though I struggle with how to capture that love in pictures. The past couple of nights I’ve sat out in the dark watching the meteor showers, positioning myself behind one of our ocotillos so that in the darkness its inky fingers reached out to Orion as shooting stars flew past.
π·: Sony A6700 | Sony 100-400mm | Sony 1.4X
ποΈ: December 13, 2023
I was thinking of Latourell Falls in Oregon when I took this picture, there’s a rock face beside the waterfall completely coated in yellow lichen. The gray wood stood in for the high cliff face, and while the lichen here is but sparse compared to its Oregon counterpart, it is a little more moist beside a waterfall than on a dead tree in the desert.
π·: Nikon Z 7II | Nikon 105mm macro
ποΈ: November 29, 2023