Posts Tagged dogwood
Local Dogwoods
Posted by Doug Otto in Photography on July 29, 2010
I just love Dogwood blooms. So delicate and fleeting, it’s a magical flower. When not in bloom it’s a rather non-descript tree/bush but for a week or so in spring, they’re amazing. I’ve had a love hate relationship with the dogwood in Yosemite for a of couple years now. The timing of the bloom has proven to be my undoing. Try as I might, I always seem to miss “the peak” by a week or so. Maybe someday I’ll get it right.
With just one or two non-native exceptions, the dogwood in Yosemite are all, white petaled, Pacific Dogwood. This image was taken much closer to home and is a pink variety of Eastern Dogwood. By much closer, I mean 175 miles closer. I made this photograph at the Jensen Botanical Gardens just 2 miles from my house. It’s a tiny little garden that now belongs to a local parks and recreation district. Park policy, for years, has been that photographers must purchase a $10 daily permit to make images in the garden. Apparently you can drag your easel and paints in without a problem but to take a picture it costs $10. After pointing out that disparity to a park official I’ve been told that I can shoot there any time. I’m not sure what the original thought behind the regulation was but it seems a bit silly.
I made the image with my Canon 5D and 24-70 f/2.8f lens. I’ve considered replacing the lens with the 24-105 to fill a gap in my range but every time I see the buttery smooth bokeh this lens produces at f/2.8 I change my mind.
Fire and life
Posted by Doug Otto in Photography on July 6, 2009
Fire in Yosemite, or just about any other wild place, is a fact of life. Lightning and fire is natures way of taking out the trash. In our urbanized culture we see fire as a destroyer of life and property. In nature, while there is loss of life, fire is a birth process. The problem with our perception is that we operate on a different time scale than most of what we see around us. For the trees in the forest our little ~80 year life span is just a blink.
I spent a couple of days in Yosemite just prior to the Independence Day holiday. There are, as of this post, two wildfires burning in the park. While I rarely venture into the valley during the summer because of the crowds, I do still appreciate the view. Friday afternoon my wife and I hiked out to Dewey Point to have lunch. There was so much smoke that Half Dome was only a faint grey outline. It was still a good hike but it would have been nicer with a view to reward us.
I took this image a couple of years ago. It was from a stretch of Highway 41, North of the Glacier point road. The area had been burned, roughly a decade ago, but in that short length of time was already bursting with new growth. I’d driven by the area several times thinking, to myself, that there was a picture hiding there somewhere. The sky was grey, from some management fires in the valley, so I choose to exclude it. What struck me was the contrast of color. The green undergrowth, the yellow of the Elm, the gold of the Oak, the bright pink of the Dogwood all contrasted against the stark grey and black of the, still standing, burned forest. Color vs monochrome. Life vs death. Read the rest of this entry »
Yosemite Dogwood
Posted by Doug Otto in Photography on May 19, 2009
I have a love/hate relationship with the dogwood in Yosemite. I love the delicate flowers and how the light plays off of them. When back-lit, they light up. Caught in side-light, they have amazing texture. That is the love part of the relationship. The hate component is a little more complicated.
Every year I go to Yosemite, during spring, to shoot dogwood. Generally speaking, the first week in May is usually when the bloom peaks. All that it takes to change that date is an extra week of cold or unseasonably warm weather. Since I rely on a “day gig” it is difficult for me to adjust my schedule once I plan a visit. More often than not I just miss the peak of the bloom.
This image was taken during a trip that I mentioned in last week’s article. We were in the park at the right time for the bloom but it was a very breezy day. Read the rest of this entry »
Spring Time in Yosemite
Posted by Doug Otto in Photography on May 5, 2009
Yosemite gives you many different looks, depending on the season. In the fall, the leaves are turning many of the waterfalls have stopped completely. The lack of water makes Fall the ideal time to shoot reflections as the rivers and streams slow to a trickle.
Spring is the complete opposite. Spring time in Yosemite is all about water. The falls are booming and the rivers are swollen and raging. One of my favorite things about the Yosemite spring is the Dogwood. Timing the bloom can be a bit tricky but the first week in May is usually a pretty safe bet. These delicate flowers all come out of their winter sleep nearly in unison and are all over the valley. Their delicate nature makes them especially pleasing to photograph. Every year I try to time a visit to the park to catch them at their peak. This year is no different. I’ll be heading to the park in a few days to lead a small informal group.
In addition to catching the Dogwood bloom we’ll be there to capture the lunar rainbow over Yosemite falls. I featured a picture of the even last year in a previous article. With a little luck, I should have plenty more pictures next week.
Cheers







