Blog

New on 500px : Oregon coast by eustaciacooper by eustaciacooper

Blog

New on 500px : Oregon coast by eustaciacooper by eustaciacooper

Blog

New on 500px : Dark Queen of the Sky by dustinwongphotography by dustinwongphotography

On my recent Oregon Coast trip, I thought I had wrapped up my photography adventures and started heading back towards home (Seattle). It was raining hard and I could see lightning in the distance. After passing through one storm, I approached another and saw 3 large bolts come down within 20 minutes of each other. I had no idea where I was and there were no obvious places to pull over and get a shot, plus I was exhausted from a week of shooting and driving up and down the coast.

I took the highway my GPS navigated me to and it was taking me away from the storm, so I figured my opportunity was gone. Then right as I pass this full size 747 jet at the Evergreen Museum, a bolt strikes behind it lighting up the sky. I find a place to turn around, (but it took me a while), so I missed three bolt strikes. I grabbed my gear and hurried off into the dark to find a composition. I quickly set up my sequence to shoot off a bunch of shots and instantly get this bolt. It was the only one I captured as the storm had moved farther to the west and was no longer behind the plane. I don’t normally shoot man made structures like this, but the opportunity was there. Hope you enjoy this one!

Instagram I Facebook I Website

via 500px http://bit.ly/1Xa81l1

Blog

New on 500px : Tatoosh Mountains by troymason by troymason

A friend and I went on a 9 mile, 3,500 foot elevation gain snowshoe trip out of Longmire in Mount Rainier National Park, which delivered exquisite views of Mount Rainier to the north, and the Tatoosh Range to the south. Mount Rainier was barely visible, so I focused on the Tatoosh.

via 500px http://bit.ly/22ZLIPz

Blog

New on 500px : Central Oregon sunrise by jpforrest by jpforrest

Black and white sunrise in Central Oregon.

via 500px http://bit.ly/1VIQ9MC

Blog

New on 500px : Sandhill Trio by ggman02 by ggman02

Sandhill Cranes in flight on a winter day.

via 500px http://bit.ly/21o5czK

Blog

New on 500px : Redwoods by nashvilleexplorersclub by nashvilleexplorersclub

Avenue of the Giants, California

via 500px http://bit.ly/1oL1gYT

Blog

New on 500px : Hibernation by alexnoriega by alexnoriega

White Pocket Photo Tour 2016
Private Workshops and Tours
Online Processing Instruction

Did some snowshoeing and winter camping at Mount Rainier, Washington last weekend with my buddy Michael Bollino. This place (as with any) looks quite different when you’re standing on thirteen feet of snow! Several more new images from this trip to come. I’m also currently working on my first official processing video, which has been in high demand for a couple years. However, I’m relocating back to the northwest soon, so the release may have to wait until then.

via 500px http://bit.ly/1R2jfQN

Sem Categoria

New on 500px : Above the Foggy Lineup by tobyharriman by tobyharriman

Above the Foggy Lineup – Aerial over San Francisco.

via 500px http://ift.tt/1EvJfNB

Sem Categoria

New on 500px : Above the Foggy Lineup by tobyharriman by tobyharriman

Above the Foggy Lineup – Aerial over San Francisco.

via 500px http://ift.tt/1EvJfNB

Sem Categoria

New on 500px : Tread Lightly by lmemrick by lmemrick

**Please view on black.**

Three years ago, when Addam and I first visited this fall, we were both astounded by the uniqueness of the falls and the lushness of the moss. Thick, green moss carpeted every inch of the area right around the creek. We explored the creek upstream, admired the falls from the overlook deck, and then made our way down over the cliffs to the bottom of the falls. It was difficult to get down, since I’m short and there’s quite the little cliff to navigate. But I did it with Addam’s help and encouragement. This became a very special place to us, since we saw it for the first time together, and since I conquered a few fears here with the descent over the cliff. And we had this awesome place all to ourselves that day.

The second time, we ran into a couple of other guys down at the falls below the main drop. Still mossy, still gorgeous.

On our third visit a few weeks ago, we were floored by how much the place had changed. The first thing we noticed immediately was that there were lots of people there already at the base of the falls. I was shocked, honestly, because it’s not easy to get down there at all, at least not for me. On our way down, I realized that it likely hadn’t been easy for everyone else who makes there way down there, either. There was now rope anchored to a rock at the top of the cliff. Despite the rope, this was, by far, my most difficult trip down to the falls. Due to the number of people who must have been slip-sliding down the rock wall since this place gained popularity, there was so much erosion of the earth around the rocks that my previous footholds had been destroyed. I just had to let myself drop this time, as my legs weren’t long enough to reach the ground I was trying to land on. I don’t remember having that problem before.

Then, there was the moss. Or, should I say, there wasn’t. Much of the moss that had once carpeted the hillside was gone. Just gone. Mud is all that remained, with telltale footprints of people slipping down the hill. My stomach sank when I saw how much people have destroyed the hillside at this beautiful place.

I would never discourage anyone from visiting this amazing place, as photos really don’t do it justice. But please, as you head out to these places this weekend and in the future, just watch your step. Truly try to leave no trace. I know it’s just some moss and dirt, but it’s part of the experience of being there, and I’m sad that people who go there now don’t get to see that part. We need to stop being so focused and obsessed with what we’re looking at through our lenses and remember that these are real, live landscapes that we are visiting.

Out of respect for the land, we have decided that this will be our last visit here for a long, long time. Hopefully, if people will just be mindful of what their feet are doing, this and other trampled places may begin to recover from the effects of their popularity.

Please, show some respect.

via 500px http://ift.tt/1ApxnSi