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07:04, Early Light, February Morning, Denver Basin and Rocky Mountains, Colorado

Thunderheads and Other Transitional Clouds, Rocky Mountain Front Range, Colorado

Mountain Goat in Colorado at 14,130 feet.

A pasque flower blooms at 10,300'/ 3100 m near Brainard Lake in the Front Range of the southern Rockies. Its lowland cousins were flowering 7 weeks ago. The populations differ greatly in height, a common adaptation to mountain weather. The high elevation populations are shorter, lowering exposure to high winds and keeping the flower closer to the warmer soil surface.

Flushing out pheasant in the corn fields in Colorado.

This was a first for me, a melanistic mutant pheasant. I have heard and seen the Imperial Pheasant at zoos but, not this variety. They are rare and unique. BTW I photograph game birds and I'm not a hunter.

 

www.instagram.com/bernieduhamel61/?hl=en

 

Setting Sunlight, Grassland, Colorado Rocky Mountain Front Range

Larimer County, Colorado

Late Afternoon, Rocky Mountain Front Range, Denver Basin, Colorado

Pike's Peak Regional Airshow, Rocky Mountain Front Range, Colorado, Hot Summer Afternoon.

High on the Continental Divide, separating waters which flow to the Atlantic Ocean (to the left) and the Pacific drainage (to the right), looking towards Navajo Peak (knob toward the left, 13409 ft / 4087 m), Apache Peak (13441 ft / 4097 m), and Mount George (12691 ft / 3868 m) from near the summit of Shoshoni Peak (12967 ft / 3952 m). This small plateau is a residual portion of a much larger uplift plateau that occurred starting in the Laramide mountain building period 70 million years ago. The uplifted plateau has been eroded by repeated glacial-interglacial cycles, which gouged deep valleys into this plateau- note the very steep drops on either side of the divide here. Remnants of the ancient high plateau occur on summit ridges in a few places of the Front Range of the southern Rocky Mountains.

 

In the distance are the Gore and Williams Fork Ranges.

 

Stitch of 6 vertical shots.

 

Thanks for your views, comments, musings, and favs

the smith farm - weld county, colorado

Mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) in "Pea Soup" (Eutrophication), Pond Nearby, October Morning, Colorado.

@20:20, Colorful Bands of Blue, Orange, Yellow, and Green, Front Range, Colorado.

Plus a Family Room Window Reflection, Rocky Mountain Front Range, Colorado

Finding myself on a high point during a little expedition around the Denver Front Range, I find a nice place to do a small pano of the mountains.

All in one morning at Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge

 

White on the Top and Blue at the Bottom, Mount Blue Sky, Mount Evans Wilderness, Rocky Mountains Front Range, Colorado, February, 10:07 AM. Hand-held shot from home.

 

This mountain has remained fascinating to watch over the years, seasons, days, and nights. It is the Fourteener Mountain (14,000+ ft high mountain) I'm able to see most often. In all seasons, I've seen storm systems forming and passing over this summit, the Denver Basin, along the Front Range, and counties farther to the Northeast, Eastern Plains, or Southeast.

 

There are wave, lenticular ("bean"), cumulonimbus (thunderhead), roll (arcus, horizontal), tornadic, and blizzard clouds, and billows of smoke from forest fires that develop or strengthen as they uniquely interact with mountains, flow forth, and even double-back (upslope fashion).

 

Fog, low cloud systems, and smog can also completely obscure this massive mountain for a few days at a time. It doesn't take long for me to miss seeing it and the neighboring mountains.

 

Several meteorologists of this region are known to preface their forecasts with such statements as, "Well, the weather conditions could be.... or perhaps they might be...." Even with the best technology, making accurate forecasts can make the most experienced forecasters sheepish. It still can be "difficult to say" and tough "to be forthright." It's because of THOSE MOUNTAINS!

;)

 

Finally, the sunrises and sunsets, with varying shadows, colors, and filtered light patterns, are often worth anticipating and pausing to see what beauty or curiosities await. If I have a camera nearby, I may pick it up and try to capture the awesomeness. Other times, I've just slowed only to watch and be still, . . and be thankful.

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