Yesterday, I posted a couple of videos taken in Red Rock Canyon. Here are some stills, to show that this park in my back yard is as spectacular as ever. First, here's the outcrop of sandstone known as Calico Rocks, where visitors can climb right to the top!
While Calico Rocks is on the East side of the park, there are colossal sandstone and granit cliffs which rise on the South side:
There are some rough dirt roads hikers can take to get closer to the cliffs, and even climb on them. For the photographer, tey are an opportunity to get a bit closer!
It's really shameful how easily we photographers are thrilled!
I think of it as my childish innocence...
Please do look at the earlier videos!
After forty years of underwater exploration around the world, I'm now exploring the desert parks of the Southwest. All images displayed are copyright protected.
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Spring in Red Rock Canyon
After a long, cold Winter, medical science now has me ready for some new adventures!
To warm up and build up my strength on our first hot Sunday, I drove out to Red Rock Canyon to watch large numbers of hikers, bikers and climbers enjoying the day.
Despite the heat, the hikers and bikers were taking on grueling distances under that Sun. You can envy the climbers, though they are too tiny to see in the video below--they are on one of the most colorful climbs in America--Calico Rocks. This formation is near the entrance to the park, one of the first stops you encounter upon entry.
Now, on to Arizona and Utah for a busy season of adventures!
To warm up and build up my strength on our first hot Sunday, I drove out to Red Rock Canyon to watch large numbers of hikers, bikers and climbers enjoying the day.
Saturday, April 2, 2011
Home is where the, um, heart is...
Had to pause for a bit of heart maintenance. Had a catheter ablation last Monday, in which the surgeons inserted slender blowtorches and burned out some extra electrical circuits from inside my atria.
The procedure took my upper chambers' beat from 120 to 60. Much better (the understatement of the year)
. To celebrate, I drove over to Hoover Dam on a gorgeous warm day and looked out over Lake Mead:
On such a day, the view from up on the bridge is almost perfect:
What a pleasure to be out with a camera again!...
The procedure took my upper chambers' beat from 120 to 60. Much better (the understatement of the year)
. To celebrate, I drove over to Hoover Dam on a gorgeous warm day and looked out over Lake Mead:
On such a day, the view from up on the bridge is almost perfect:
What a pleasure to be out with a camera again!...
Friday, January 14, 2011
By helicopter over the Grand Canyon
I almost hate to put up this post, because it will push my December great white shark trip down the page. Oh, well.
On January 13, 2010, I made the four-hour drive over to the Grand Canyon and hopped on a helicopter.
It is a fabulous ride, eight thousand feet above the Colorado River.
Even though I have been at the North Rim and at Havasupai, the view from the air reinforces the colossal size of the Canyon.
It is Winter, of course, so the crest of the canyon walls and the surrounding Kaibab National Forest are brushed with snow.
I hope to do the flight again later in the Spring, with the hot colors of a brighter Sun. Still photos only suggest what it's like up there, so let's try some videos.
That gives you the idea! That is early in the flight, circling out over the Colorado. A little later, I pointed the video camera out the pilot's window across the immensity of the canyon. Pictures and videos struggle to do more than suggest the vast size of these formations.
The special contribution of Winter is snow in the upper reaches of the canyon. The snow betrays no tracks, accenting the remoteness and the impenetrable nature of these formations.
Well over a century ago, local Indian tribes would not tell the European explorers that there were safe ways to cross the Grand Canyon. The Spanish and other stried for years and finally gave up, declaring the Grand Canyon 'worthless.' In this century, we now know better.
Okay--now scroll down the page and enjoy those sharks!!
On January 13, 2010, I made the four-hour drive over to the Grand Canyon and hopped on a helicopter.
It is a fabulous ride, eight thousand feet above the Colorado River.
Even though I have been at the North Rim and at Havasupai, the view from the air reinforces the colossal size of the Canyon.
It is Winter, of course, so the crest of the canyon walls and the surrounding Kaibab National Forest are brushed with snow.
I hope to do the flight again later in the Spring, with the hot colors of a brighter Sun. Still photos only suggest what it's like up there, so let's try some videos.
That gives you the idea! That is early in the flight, circling out over the Colorado. A little later, I pointed the video camera out the pilot's window across the immensity of the canyon. Pictures and videos struggle to do more than suggest the vast size of these formations.
The special contribution of Winter is snow in the upper reaches of the canyon. The snow betrays no tracks, accenting the remoteness and the impenetrable nature of these formations.
Well over a century ago, local Indian tribes would not tell the European explorers that there were safe ways to cross the Grand Canyon. The Spanish and other stried for years and finally gave up, declaring the Grand Canyon 'worthless.' In this century, we now know better.
Okay--now scroll down the page and enjoy those sharks!!
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
Great White Shark in 3D video!!...
This was shot with the new Fuji 3D WD camera in a RecSea housing marketed by my long-time pal Howard Rosenstein of Fantasea.com. This is exactly the effect I had hoped to capture. Unfortunately for me, the instruction manual was so bad I didn't realize that the 3D function had worked--or I'd have shot a lot more!
Japanese companies should hire Americans to write their !#!$!%!^! manuals!
Still, this captures the big shark known as Big Bro as he examines me. The 3D camera only has a 35mm lens, so it can't take the wide angle shots like my stills in the earlier posts below. The shark has to be coming straight in--which Big Bro obliged me by doing.
By the way--of course, you can't see the 3D effect unless you have a 3D TV or computer monitor. They will be replacing current sets over time. At that point, Big Bro is coming for you!.
Do you get the idea that Big Bro is intensely fixated on the Chicken in the Basket?
The chicken does...
Here's another clip. It goes without saying that I'm heading back to South Australia with the 3D rig in June now that I know it works.. Stay tuned!:
Japanese companies should hire Americans to write their !#!$!%!^! manuals!
Still, this captures the big shark known as Big Bro as he examines me. The 3D camera only has a 35mm lens, so it can't take the wide angle shots like my stills in the earlier posts below. The shark has to be coming straight in--which Big Bro obliged me by doing.
By the way--of course, you can't see the 3D effect unless you have a 3D TV or computer monitor. They will be replacing current sets over time. At that point, Big Bro is coming for you!.
Do you get the idea that Big Bro is intensely fixated on the Chicken in the Basket?
The chicken does...
Here's another clip. It goes without saying that I'm heading back to South Australia with the 3D rig in June now that I know it works.. Stay tuned!:
Monday, December 20, 2010
He's ba-a-a-a-a-ck, Part two
Please don't miss my first post on this fabulous trip to South Australia, just below this one. Now for part two!
That is Big Bro, a big shark, searching for the bait. If you look in the water in the background, you see a messy kind of mist affecting the picture.
The shot above shows you where that comes from: It cost me lots of pictures--think of it as sharks in a snowstorm. Sigh.
However, there were some really good dives where the cages weren't being tossed around by the swells.
That's our pal Big Bro as he prowls in the open water.
We also had another sea lion entertainment. A sea lion came to the boat and repeatedly buzzed Little Bro.
The pesky sea lion henpecked poor old Little Bro unmercifully.
It all ended in a kamikaze attack.
Little Bro lost interest in the sea lion, and the sea lion drifted off. Later, Little Bro made an amazingly savage attack on a handing bait.
I surely had a lot of fun dodging the big teeth as the big bull known as Big Brother came by!!! Sometimes I pulled the camera back as here with not much time to spare.
That was another shot from Mark Enarson's polecam. His series of shots taken while standing on the rear platform are a great souvenir for me!
That is Big Bro, a big shark, searching for the bait. If you look in the water in the background, you see a messy kind of mist affecting the picture.
The shot above shows you where that comes from: It cost me lots of pictures--think of it as sharks in a snowstorm. Sigh.
However, there were some really good dives where the cages weren't being tossed around by the swells.
That's our pal Big Bro as he prowls in the open water.
We also had another sea lion entertainment. A sea lion came to the boat and repeatedly buzzed Little Bro.
The pesky sea lion henpecked poor old Little Bro unmercifully.
It all ended in a kamikaze attack.
Little Bro lost interest in the sea lion, and the sea lion drifted off. Later, Little Bro made an amazingly savage attack on a handing bait.
I surely had a lot of fun dodging the big teeth as the big bull known as Big Brother came by!!! Sometimes I pulled the camera back as here with not much time to spare.
That was another shot from Mark Enarson's polecam. His series of shots taken while standing on the rear platform are a great souvenir for me!
Sunday, December 19, 2010
He's ba-a-a-a-a-ack!...
After a couple of years of recovery, I finally got back to South Australia for what I believe was my 33rd great white shark expedition.
Ensconced in what Geri Tzimoulis unkindly called the Popemobile,
The Canadian photographer Mark Enarson came oin the trip with his polecam
Mark didn't even get his feet wet and shot some excellent portraits of me with my little friends:
From the cage, two sharks stood out from the seven in the bay. Big Bro was a good-sized male who spent one day making repeated passes
Note the ubiquitous Polecam in the right center below. many of Big Bro's sweeps ended with an attack on the cage
Sometimes giving us the tonsil view
Or even the dentist's-eye view
All in all, Big Bro was a Great Performer!
His pal Little Bro was, on the other hand, a snatch and grab shark, who appeared suddenly from the depths and snatched the bait in a flash
On one dive, Little Bro kept us all waiting for a half-hour, then erupted in a swift attack
More later, but that is a taste.
I'm ba-a-a-a-a-ack...
Ensconced in what Geri Tzimoulis unkindly called the Popemobile,
The Canadian photographer Mark Enarson came oin the trip with his polecam
Mark didn't even get his feet wet and shot some excellent portraits of me with my little friends:
From the cage, two sharks stood out from the seven in the bay. Big Bro was a good-sized male who spent one day making repeated passes
Note the ubiquitous Polecam in the right center below. many of Big Bro's sweeps ended with an attack on the cage
Sometimes giving us the tonsil view
Or even the dentist's-eye view
All in all, Big Bro was a Great Performer!
His pal Little Bro was, on the other hand, a snatch and grab shark, who appeared suddenly from the depths and snatched the bait in a flash
On one dive, Little Bro kept us all waiting for a half-hour, then erupted in a swift attack
More later, but that is a taste.
I'm ba-a-a-a-a-ack...
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