Hi Everyone!
I just got back from a backpacking trip in Utah. We did a couple of nights in Zion NP and a couple in Bryce Canyon. I highly recommend both places, if you ever get the chance to go.
I'm a little dissapointed with the photos I got...maybe because I was so excited beforehand. Surprisingly, I found it very difficult to create interesting composition, especially in Bryce Canyon. Both places were huge in scale, and so different from what I've seen before. I felt a need to show tightly composed, detailed, close-ups, or wide-ranging all-encompassing landscapes, to illustrate the character of southern Utah, but they all came out kind of boring. Sometimes it's more difficult for me to compose when I'm in such a grand place. It's like trying to find the best food at a buffet, when you're just overwhelmed and sampling everything. (That actually happened to me too.)
Anyway, what I'm saying is, I think the best photos I got are ones that could have been taken in any number of places, and they don't really show the character of southern Utah as I intended. But all was not lost. Here are a few of my favorites...even if they aren't perfect.
Paul
1. This small yellow brush covered the ground in Zion's backcountry.
2. Evidence of 1993 forest fire...near our West Rim campsite in Zion.
3. Experiment with night photography, rear-curtain flash, and double exposure. That's me on the right. It was cold, and the moon was very bright...moon shot was 1/125 at f11 with 100 ISO, and it still overexposed. I know...I should have bracketed.
4. Sunrise over Bryce Canyon...about 100 ft from my sleeping bag.