Tag: Photography

  • Travel: Mount St. Helens, Washington

    I don’t remember anything more than fleeting before i was a teenager — not world events, not personal experiences … nothing. Well, except for thinking that a volcano erupting in the Pacific Northwest was pretty dern cool.

    Obviously, I was a little young to understand or appreciate the tragedy associated with a natural disaster (I had just turned 5 the monthe before the eruption) but I was about 2 classes away from being a Geology majory, so it must have done something for me.

    Mount St. Helens is only about 2 hours from Portland, and half of that was on the mountain access road itself. The trip was devistatingly gorgeous, though it was one of those days (that I can never explain) where the photos just don’t do the day or the subject justice.

    Mount St. Helens, washington state
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/unclevanya/sets/…8834/
  • Hike: Shotgun Park, Oregon

    Spent the day hiking around “Shotgun Recreational Site” outside of Springfield, Oregon (don’t bother Googling “shotgun” and “Oregon” … nothing useful turns up. Fantastically large trees.

    The picture here isn’t actually of the park (or “Recreational Site” as it were) but was of sunset on the drive back to Portland.

    Shotgun Park, Oregon
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/unclevanya/sets/…6808/
  • Travel: Pacific Coast Highway, Oregon

    Ever since I was old enough to spell the word “car” I have wanted to drive the length of the Pacific Coast Highway. Stoked by visions of s-curves and towering cliffs (visualized from 30 years of car commercials, no doubt) I have wanted to rent a convertable and tear down the PCH at impractical speeds.

    Turns out my vision of the PCH and the reality of what is now called U.S. Highway 101 didn’t quite match up. Don’t get me wrong, the views were spectacular but the drive itself wasn’t quite worthy of the words “vroom-vroom.” It’s frankly pretty hard to do much of anything when you are trapped behind a seeminly endless supply of 1982 Toyota pickups going 25 miles an hour.

    Regardless, the coastline was stunning … as were the state parks that lined the coast almost uninterrupted, and I guess that was the main point. For now, however, I will have to get my driving excitement watching TV.

    Pacific Coast Highway, Oregon
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/unclevanya/sets/…1587/
  • Photos: Fireworks

    Watched Portland’s fireworks from the top of Mt. Tabor, a community park that sits several hundred feet above and about 60 blocks away from downtown. After the big fireworks, we can back home and the community had gathered to shoot some off behind a nearby elementary school …

    Fireworks
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/unclevanya/sets/…5505/
  • Travel: Mt. Adams & Gifford Pinchot National Forest, Washington

    Explored a huge area between Mt. Adams and Mt. St. Helens, called the Gifford Pinchot National Forest. There’s a several thousand acre lava bed (above) that’s stocked with pumice, wild flowers and bear grass. There’s also a series of ice caves (below) which has icicles year round.

    Gifford Pinchot National Forest, Washington State
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/unclevanya/sets/…4606/
  • Travel: Columbia River Gorge

    Drove the length of the old historic Columbia River highway, and took in half a dozen (or more) of the waterfalls that line the river. Most of them were bigger than any that I had ever seen before, and all of them were VERY photogenic.

    Columbia River Gorge, Oregon
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/unclevanya/sets/…0590/
  • Travel: Mt. Hood

    After driving through the Columbia River Gorge, we set off for Mt. Hood. After decades of east coast mountains, it’s hard to put a 11,000 ft volcano into perspective. Spent the latter part of the day wandering around the Timberline Lodge, a ski-resort on Mt. Hood that is operated by the U.S. Forest Service.

    Mt. Hood, Oregon
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/unclevanya/sets/…4471/
  • Travel: Rose Garden, Portland

    Just outside of the Japanese Garden is a HUGE Rose Garden, which serves as a kind of public square for Portland families. The garden has hundreds of different kinds of roses, each layed out in 8 foot by 2 foot plots, side-by-side and end-to-end across acres of land. It’s simply overwhelming.

    Rose Garden, Portland, Oregon
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/unclevanya/sets/…2809/
  • Travel: Japanese Garden, Portland

    Summer vacation, finally, and I am hanging with the hippies of Portland, Oregon.

    Part of the Oregon Zoo complex on the outskirts of Portland is a Japanese Garden, which is maticulously maintained. It’s rare that I feel like something was worth the cost of admission, but here not only was it a steal, I felt that my $8 was actually being folded back into the park itself. I can’t imagine how much they spend to keep this place up, but it is certainly more the cost of admission.

    Japanese Garden, Portland, Oregon
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/unclevanya/sets/…0520/

  • Hike: Prince William Forest Park

    I made my third shooting trip in three days today. It was miserably hot, and while I was pleasantly surprised at how big Prince William Forest Park was, I was startled at its lack of photogenic-ness (at least the Pyrite Mine Loop). A butterfly flirted with me for a couple of minutes (highlight of the afternoon), but then grew bored with me and flew off.

    Prince William Forest Park
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/unclevanya/sets/…6003/