Schwabacher Landing: Grand Teton National Park, WY

Friday, July 30, 2010

The Tetons are most beautiful when viewed from the east, making them prime candidates for a dramatic sunrise shot. I had been scouting viewpoints for the last day and a half but had yet to find something I really liked. All of them had flaws. For example, the overlook from which Ansel Adams’ captured his iconic image, Tetons and the Snake River, one of my all-time favorites, is now partially obscured by trees. I ended up deciding on Schwabacher Landing, down along the Snake River.

It had been cloudy the night before so I woke up hoping for clear skies to the east and a bunch of fluffy cumulus clouds floating above the summits of the mountain range to catch the color of the rising sun. No such luck—not surprising for this time of year. I headed out anyway. You never know what might happen on a given morning; a moose could wander through the middle of the frame at just the right moment.

I ended up waiting for first light with a gentleman from Quebec. He had flown into Jackson from Seattle, where he attended a workshop given by Art Wolfe. (Have I mentioned that I want to be Art Wolfe in my next life?) His wife, sleeping back at the hotel, met up with him in Jackson a day earlier. They would soon head north for their first trip into Yellowstone. In the meantime, we waited to see what we could make of the morning.

To the dismay of my new Canadian friend, a duck and her latest brood of fluffy little ducklings began paddling back and forth through our composition, sending ripples across the otherwise still surface of the water right as the mountain peaks began to catch a little color. Fortunately they were only teasing us. After a few minutes, they continued on their way and we began shooting.

[Click on a thumbnail to view the entire image.]

©2011 Timothy Linn. All Rights Reserved.

Bees & Thistles: Grand Teton National Park, WY

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Mormon Row is a group of century old homesteads that sit in the middle of the sage and grasslands to the east of the Teton Range. They are a popular location for shooting a sunrise in Grand Teton National Park. We did not make it for sunrise but we did show up late in the morning to take a look around and enjoy breakfast. What caught my eye were not the structures, their eastern faces already in shadow, but the bright purple thistles in various stages of bloom. There were a number of bees as interested in these flowers as I but, fortunately, they paid no attention to me as they went about gathering nectar. This allowed me to get within a few inches of them as I shot.

[Click on a thumbnail to view the entire image.]

©2011 Timothy Linn. All Rights Reserved.

Storm Over the Tetons: Grand Teton National Park, WY

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

It is hard for me to imagine approaching the Tetons from the northeast and not being awestruck as they come into view. There are no foothills or other obstructions to mask their size or beauty; just a row of serrated peaks lined up behind a series of wetlands, lakes, and the iconic Snake River. Darla, who was seeing this all for the first time, wondered aloud why it had taken us so long to visit this area given that it is only an hour south of Yellowstone.

Storm clouds were gathering over the mountains as we arrived at the Willow Flats overlook. Twenty-one years earlier I had taken a photograph of the moon over the Tetons from nearby. I wanted to see how much I remembered. We wouldn’t be here at dusk this time—and we wouldn’t be catching any views of a setting moon—but it was a dramatic and memorable scene nonetheless.

By the time we arrived at Oxbow Bend, a short distance further south, it was all but certain we would be seeing lots of clouds but no color as the sun dropped behind the mountains. As darkness fell and we continued on toward Jackson, the clouds opened up unleashing a violent mixture of rain and hail, thunder, and lightning. Some strikes were so close that they lit up the interior of the truck as if it were the middle of the day, eliciting a lively discussion about the likelihood of getting struck by lightning while in a moving vehicle.

[Click on a thumbnail to view the entire image.]

©2011 Timothy Linn. All Rights Reserved.