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The Agile Fox Friday Foto – 07.06.2012

After a year and a half of including a ‘pic of the week’ at the end of my weekly training summary, I’ve decided to let it stand as a post of its own.  I’m also implementing a rule that the Friday Foto needs to have been taken sometime in the last week.  No recycling.  I am doing this to keep me engaged in building my photography skills, and to make me work harder to get fresh shots.  Click here to see my previous Friday Foto posts.

After spending the afternoon doing a 5.5 hour hike with the kids in Bryce Canyon, I went for a walk from the hotel to see if I could get any interesting sunset shots.  The western sky was filled with smoke from the day-old Shingle Fire, creating an intense orange curtain hanging over the edge of the plateau.  There was a rodeo arena two blocks away and I headed over there even though there was not an event schedule for the evening.  I lucked out and happened to get there as a guy was getting ready for the next night’s rodeo with a few friends helping and cheering him on.  I hung out and enjoyed the show.

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Sunset Rodeo
f/8, 10mm, 1/80 @ 250 ISO

The Agile Fox Friday Foto – 06.29.2012

After a year and a half of including a ‘pic of the week’ at the end of my weekly training summary, I’ve decided to let it stand as a post of its own.  I’m also implementing a rule that the Friday Foto needs to have been taken sometime in the last week.  No recycling.  I am doing this to keep me engaged in building my photography skills, and to make me work harder to get fresh shots.  Click here to see my previous Friday Foto posts.

Right time, right place, right lens.

This scene stopped me in my tracks while descending the final 14er of what had been a five summit day.Fires are raging in Colorado right now.  This one, the Treasure Fire near Leadville, was 3 hours old at the time of this photo.  It is in extremely difficult terrain, but remains on the small end of the spectrum and is not threatening any structures.  It was burning on the opposite side of the ridge from the area we had been hiking in all day.  Timberline and some green meadows are helping to contain the fire’s north and eastern spread, while 125 fire fighters work to construct a line to set the southern perimter and get full containment.

The smoke particles and heating of the air triggered the formation of a pyrocumulus.  Literally, a fire cloud.  There are many examples of huge and dramatic thunderheads forming over large fires (and even dropping rain back on the fire in some cases).  I thought this one was unique because of it happening so soon after the fire started and while the sky was otherwise crystal clear.  Thankfully I had my 10-24mm wide angle zoom to capture it all.

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Treasure Pyrocumulus
f/11, 10mm, 1/320 @ 100 ISO

The Agile Fox Friday Foto – 06.22.2012

After a year and a half of including a ‘pic of the week’ at the end of my weekly training summary, I’ve decided to let it stand as a post of its own.  I’m also implementing a rule that the Friday Foto needs to have been taken sometime in the last week.  No recycling.  I am doing this to keep me engaged in building my photography skills, and to make me work harder to get fresh shots.  Click here to see my previous Friday Foto posts.

I was driving home late one night last week when I spotted an intense storm going on to the east of where I live.  I had all of my camera gear in the car, so I decided to take a detour into Chatfield State Park and see if I could get some shots from up on the dam looking over the city.  I was up there for a little while when a park ranger drove by and asked me to leave.  Apparently the only allowed activities after 10pm are fishing and boating.  Bah.

I packed up and headed towards home, but the storm seemed to be getting more active so I set up in another location about a half mile from my house looking over my daughter’s elementary school.  It ended up being a more interesting setup than Chatfield, anyway.  I stayed there for about half an hour capturing some awesome cloud-to-cloud lightning activity in the distance.

lightning

Zap
6 frame composite, 10 second exposures