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Fall in the San Juan Mountains is my favorite time of year. I only got about 30 minutes (literally) to photograph it this last year. We normally spend a week there but it wasn't possible due to some work complications. I only got these photos due to having to pick up my mom for a family funeral. It was the end of the season but I was thankful for those 30 minutes soaking up the views.
Creede Colorado USA
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I was exploring along the tracks, a little north of Trinidad. I spotted an old cabin in ruins in an overgrown meadow. There is no road or driveway, maybe there was back in the day! This image is compressed from my 500. The cabin is about 300 ft from the tracks behind, and double that to me. I shot this at F4, I'm still getting used to this lens.
Copyright © Silent Eagle Photography
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123 Pictures in 2023 #105 "Tracks"
I had originally intended to use actual bear tracks, but we were not able to get off the boats we were using for a bear viewing trip. (we could get fairly close to the bears while the hunted the fish, but could not go into their land based territory. So I used these painted track at Rust Flying Services in Anchorage, who flew us to the lodge we used for viewing bears. THey lead from the lobby waiting area to the restrooms in the other building.
These tracks are easy to distinguish from the numerous dog tracks on local beaches because otters have five toes while dogs have four. Also, their bounding gait creates a characteristic pattern that is somewhat puzzling at first sight.
I very frequently come across such tracks on the beach, often multiple tracks running side by side. I don't often see the otters themselves. I think they frolic on the beach at night or at the crack of dawn, but they are definitely present and I do see them swimming in the water.
Despite being on a Pacific beach, these are river otters living in the Rogue River, not sea otters. The back feet of sea otters are more like flippers. Also, since being brought to the very edge of extinction by European fur hunters, sea otters have not returned to the Oregon Coast. Hunting has been banned since the 1911 International Fur Seal Treaty, but there are still no sea otters in Oregon although there are healthy populations in California and Alaska.
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On my last desert shot, many of you have suggested to try B&W, so here it is! This is the track leading to the Fossil Rock on the far end.
The desert would surely look better without those tracks...but we gotta get there somehow. Well, the most ecological way would be the camel, walking is definitely not an option! ;-)
Merry Christmas to all of you my dear friends!. Hope you had a nice Christmas eve with your loved ones!