Friday, April 7, 2023

Pt. Reyes in April, Pt. 2

 

Drake's Beach Sunrise



Iris Sunrise, Bluffs at Drake's Beach


One Elk


Two Elk


Three Elk


Five Elk


Wooly Sunflower


San Francisco Owl's Clover


Cotton-Batting Plant


Dead Cow Removal


* * *

Wednesday, April 5, 2023

Pt. Reyes in April, Pt. 1

 

Elk in Velvet

Sea Rocket & Cattails, Abbotts Lagoon


Abbotts Lagoon


Sunrise With Iris Patch


Tracks #1


Tracks #2


Tree Swallow, Abbotts Lagoon


Pussy Ears at Abbotts Lagoon


Deer Among Wildflowers and Coastal Scrub

* * *

Monday, April 3, 2023

April on Mt. Vision

 

Sunrise from Mt. Vision

Just a few shots from a dawn patrol to Pt. Reyes National Seashore where the moon was setting as I passed through Point Reyes Station on my way to catch sunrise at Mt. Vision (in early April 2015). 


The Old Western Saloon With Setting Moon


Point Reyes Station With Setting Moon


Iris Sunrise, Mt. Vision


Mt. Vision Dreamscape


Bishop Pines in Chaparral

* * *

Saturday, April 1, 2023

Merced River Canyon

 


Looking through file photos for good wildflower destinations to check out this spring, I found these shots of crazy swathes of California poppies I photographed in the Merced River Canyon in 2009. I doubt it's always like this, but I do wonder what it's like right now, either here or elsewhere, in the Sierra foothills.











* * *

Friday, March 31, 2023

Mountain High

 

Above the Fray

There was a surprising amount of traffic as I biked up Mt. Tam yesterday. Maybe folks were on spring break or just looking for a mountain high. Or an ocean high. I think most of the cars continued down toward Stinson Beach.

I'd left home under a virtually cloudless sky at 9 a.m., but two big ice cream scoops of clouds had formed over both ends of Mt. Tam by the time I'd reached the northwest corner of the Presidio, and clouds were all over by the time I reached the mountain itself. The patch of calypso orchids was still going strong at Bootjack, but the sky lupines are still just leafing out. It might just be wishful thinking, but the critter action around my trail cams seems to be on a springtime upswing, and a bobcat was kind enough to pass by twice. 


The old Douglas fir whose sculpted top branches made it often mistaken for a Monterey pine has been considerably whittled down this year.

 
James Bond, looking for a mountain high, detours from his flight path to make this unusual pass parallel to the length of Mt. Tamalpais.

Band-Tailed Pigeon at the Top of a Doug Fir


I was surprised the pigeons didn't all fly away as I hiked past them.





















Tam Cam Video Clips

* * *

Wednesday, March 29, 2023

A Trio of Triptychs

 

Click to view larger.

On Monday I walked to the beach along Noriega Street and was struck by how different Ocean Beach looked since last Wednesday, so I snapped a photo. On my way back home I spotted some lovely California poppies at Noriega and Sunset, so I texted a photo to my wife. Up at 24th Avenue, as I was about to walk past the 76 service station, I noticed that someone had placed an apparently brand new syringe on a ledge of bark on this sidewalk tree, at about kid height. This is a couple of blocks from where an alleged drug house recently exploded. (I dropped the syringe in a trash can.) Anyway, I thought the juxtaposition of found objects would make a fun triptych of my Noriega Street walk.

Although I was glad to just hang out indoors all day yesterday and read a new library ebook (The Undertow, by Jeff Sharlet), I was determined to get out for a walk today, and I thought I'd try another triptych of my "other" walk, which goes down Noriega, then along Sunset and back via Irving and 16th Avenue. With the syringe triptych on my mind, I thought I would call it "Two Cities & a Gritty". But I ended up cheating a little by using only two shots from today's walk, plus a cat-shot I snapped on Sunday as my wife and I were walking to the 9th & Irving area to get some Easy Breezy frozen yogurt.

The coast looked clear when I checked the weather radar before heading out on my walk, but I still had to take cover beneath a garage door overhang to escape a downpour the radar missed. The radar looked good again when I got home, so I packed the FZ80 and headed out for a bike ride, ending up at the Cliff House where I was dazzled by the wildly tossing ocean and a line of incoming storm clouds. I had good cover and figured I wouldn't be trapped for very long, but I was wearing shorts and became a bit chilled by the time the rain let up. There was another even larger and darker mass of clouds on its way from the south not far behind it, so I high-tailed it out of there and got home just ahead of the drenching rain.





* * *

Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Shell Creek Road

 


We're heading out for my wife's spring break soon and plan to check out Shell Creek Road on our way to and through Carrizo Plain National Monument. Our destination is farther south, so we're hoping check them both out again on the way back. Work obligations kept me from going down for Carrizo's amazing bloom of 2017, so I'm eager to see the plain and its surrounding mountains in at least some of its potential glory this year. I'm also feeling some excitement building for this year's wildflower season all over the state, especially after so many years of drought. These photos were taken along Shell Creek Road in early April of 2008.

















* * *