View allAll Photos Tagged Idaho
On our recent trip to the Pacific Northwest we were driving along Int 84 through Idaho and I came upon this vast beautiful farm that caught my eye. It was truly a beautiful scene and I just had to stop and take a picture of it. If you look closely you can see vehicles on Int 84 in the background :)
Blanco Brown - The Gitup
Alongside US Route 26 near Craters of the Moon National Monument, Idaho. Processed with Lightroom, Photoshop and Topaz filters.
A lucky fly fisherman casts about on Little Redfish Lake on an ideal autumn day.
The Sawtooth's Grand Mogul, Mt. Heyburn and Horstmann Peak provide a nice backdrop.
Tis the season when I'm out and about hunting images. I'll be away occasionally making memories and filling memory cards. Fun ahead!
As always, your comments, faves, support and Friendship is greatly valued.
A couple of weeks ago I got in my car and took a 4.5 hour drive to the Palouse Region of SE Washington. The Palouse is a region with crops all over rolling hills and many abandoned towns and farms along old dirt roads. I spent most of the day driving along the dirt roads and enjoying the countryside.
I photograph many roads, but my favorite photographs of them are the ones where there's more to see than just the road. It's never just the road.
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'The Powers are Frightened'
Camera: Chamonix 45F-2
Lens: Steinheil Rapid Antiplanet 6,5; 27cm
Film: Fomapan 100
Exposure: f/12; 1sec; Yellow Filter
Process: FA-1027; 1+14; 9min
Idaho
July 2022
I spent Thanksgiving in Driggs Idaho. It is the Idaho side of the Grand Tetons. If you look closely, you'll see a little glimpse of the mountain peaks. Hopefully our next outing will have a few less clouds.
The wildflowers were in full bloom during our recent camping trip to the Hells Canyon region of Idaho, on the Oregon border.
I wish you could smell the sweet scent of lupine that filled the air.
This was my fourth visit to a place nobody ever really goes. Some folks pass through, and a few of the farmers pass by now and then, but a tourist, which is what I suppose I am, almost never.
But there I stood once again looking over a field of wheat planted next to an untouched plain of sagebrush. I've shot this before, a number of times. This time the sky was cloudless, the sun hot to my back and setting.
I like to think that each time I shoot something different, even in the same scene. I'm not sure if it's true, but I like to think that.
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'Walking Distance'
Camera: Chamonix 45F-2
Lens: Steinheil Rapid Antiplanet 6,5; 27cm
Film: Kodak Tri-X; x-01/1981
Exposure: f/16; 1sec; Red Filter
Process: HC-110; 1+90; 18min
Idaho
July 2022