A grunion on Venice Beach

A spotlit grunion on Venice Beach

I went out last night to join the Venice Oceanarium‘s Grunion Run Party at the Venice Breakwater. The grunion are apparently abundant in the South Bay and their unique mating ritual brings them up on the beach during full moons on spring and summer nights, allowing them to be easily observed and even picked up. They’re supposed to be good to eat too, though most see it as more trouble than it’s worth to scale so many of them for such little meat. I went out at 11 p.m., when the party was starting and after 20 minutes they started popping up on shore one or two at a time. There they flopped about as they did their thing before being washed back to sea by the next big wave. It was a fun thing to see and the sizable crowd that turned out was very entertained. More can be learned about grunions and the specifics of their spawning practices here.

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Death Valley Sand Dunes
Eureka Sand Dunes, Death Valley, Calif.

I have lots of new photos to post, but most are from magazines assignments and haven’t been published yet. So, in an effort to avoid stagnation I went back through my Death Valley  photos and picked out a few new ones to post. More info about this trip can be seen 3 posts back, so I won’t repeat it here. More new work coming soon! Continue reading »

Salt flats in Badwater Basin in Death Valley National Park

Eureka Sand Dunes Death Valley National Park

I recently spent a great couple of days camping and hiking with Erinn and my friend Matt in Death Valley National Park. I don’t think it rose above the low 80s during our visit, which was perfect for long days of exploring. It won’t be long before the summer temperatures start moving toward 120 degrees, at which point I would not want to be there! We did all of the usual stuff while there, getting up early for sunrise at the Eureka Sand Dunes on the first morning and Zabriskie Point on the second. We spent a couple of hours hunting for a 110-foot waterfall that we found out the next day had long ago dried up (not sure if the park ranger who sent us out there was messing with us or just didn’t know?), visited the salt flats at the Badwater Basin, and brought plenty of great food to grill up once the sun had set. One unusual aspect of our visit was that the park has had more rain in the first 3 months of the year than it normally receives in a year, which left pools of water over the normally parched salt flats. It was pretty and also interesting to see the salt crystals taking form in the water. The last photo in this entry is indeed a scorpion, which I spotted underneath Matt’s tent as we were packing up on the final morning. We did not, however, eat the scorpion, as the photo might imply. Just a way to examine it before tossing it back into the brush. Until this moment, we hadn’t seen any significant wildlife during our 48+ hour visit. It was a funny parallel to our previous visit to Joshua Tree N.P., where we also didn’t see anything until a rattlesnake crossed our paths on our very last hike before heading home.

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Humming bird at dusk

Woman with umbrella in El Escorpion Park, Los Angeles

I’ve been bad at posting lately, but do have some new work that I’ll be able to share in the coming weeks. Things have been fairly busy, with a couple magazine assignments for London’s Financial Times and the Chronicle of Higher Education, a few fashion portfolio shoots and a wedding this coming Saturday. Hopefully after that I’ll be able to share more. Now that I think of it, it’s not going to get any slower after that, as I’ll be in Vegas for the WPPI trade show on Tuesday and hopefully back there again a week or so later for another SoCal Scene fashion shoot. Other than a quick detour I took while driving west on my move to L.A., I’ve never been to Vegas before! So I’m definitely looking forward to it. Hopefully sometime in there I’ll manage to put up some new posts In the meantime, these are a couple I took last week while scouting locations for other shoots. The top is a surprisingly noisy hummingbird I came across in Venice and the bottom is Erinn strolling through El Escorpion Park in Canoga Park, where I have a shoot this Sunday.

Just some more stormy weather photos taken on Venice Beach over the past week. I was hoping to find someone out there surfing, but the surf was too rough. I don’t know what it’s called, but the shot of the crashing wave after the jump is something that happens when a wave coming in from the ocean collides with a wave that’s coming back out to sea from the coast. I think it’s caused by a steep incline near the shore that forces the water back out. On a smaller scale I found myself in that spot in El Porto, a beach a couple miles south, while surfing a couple weeks back and was pretty close to getting hit in the head by my own board by the force of it. On the scale seen in this photo I’m not surprised no one was out in the water! The fire spinner is Ricky Otterstrom, who was out practicing atop one of the winter dunes on the beach. A few days ago I complained on Facebook about getting sand in everything. This was when that occurred. Despite the wet sand from days of rain the wind was strong enough to dry off the top layer and send it whipping across the dunes. I shot him for a couple minutes until I couldn’t take the beating anymore and called it quits.

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After a meeting with an agency in Irvine today I decided to drive up the coast from Newport Beach to Long Beach just to explore. When I got to Huntington Beach there was a gorgeous light coming from behind an approaching storm cloud that forced me out of my car just south of the Huntington Beach Pier. Just north of the pier I spotted some kites and figured they were just power-kiters out on the beach, but then I saw one pop up in the air and realized there were actually people out kite surfing, despite, or more likely because of the large choppy waves being produced by the stormy weather. I hustled over their way and despite their moving quickly away from me I was able to catch up enough to get off a couple shots just before they packed it in as the black storm cloud got too close for comfort. I’d hoped to get one of them popping out of the water or a close-up of them battling the waves, but was still happy with what I got. I then spent a few minutes with John Moynihan, 24, as he packed up his gear and walked his kite back to the car. A self-described ‘gypsy sailor,’ Moynihan lives on a sailboat that currently resides in nearby Newport Beach. After this I parted ways with him. And just in time, as the rain started to come down and I was a quarter mile away from my car. I packed up my gear and headed back. We’ve had an unusual week here with daily storms and even a few tornados touching down. There was even one in Seal Beach today, which I drove through after shooting this, but I didn’t see anything. I’ve got a couple more stormy weather photos I’ll put up tomorrow or the next day.

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I think I’ve taken that first seagull photo before. Nothing much here but a few pretty shots I took on a sunset stroll a couple weeks back.

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Last night we returned from a rainy Florida vacation served sunny-side up. Although we may have been hoping for sunshine and 75 degrees, much of the week turned out to be cool and wet. But, since neither of us have experienced but one or two rainfalls in the past year of Southern California living, we didn’t let it get us down and were actually happy to be reminded of just how nice a little variety can be. On the first night we enjoyed the rain s0 much we slept with the bedroom window open in order to better hear the rhythmic pounding of a midnight storm as we drifted off to sleep after a 12-hour day of coast-to-coast travel. It was really very peaceful, although it did lead the next morning to a hostile encounter with a Palmetto Bug – a Floridian euphemism for a cockroach – who seized the opportunity of the open window to come in from said rainstorm and dry off atop our bedspread. A fun reminder of some of the other variety that Florida has to offer in terms of wildlife. The next night the window stayed closed. After the rain subsided later in the week we decided to visit nature instead of inviting it in and took a couple trips to the great outdoors. And of course I took my camera! The first night out was a visit to Myakka River Park at sunset, where we encountered alligators, wild pigs and a young doe standing quietly in the woods. It was surprisingly brave, allowing me to get within 30 feet or so to make an image. Later, at sunset, we walked out on the birdwalk, a long pier extending over a marsh along the edge of the Upper Myakka Lake. There you can see numerous birds such as ibises, eagles, herons and sandhill cranes, which I got an image of as a pair came in from the distance to join a group of others who had gathered in the water at dusk.
Two days later a break in the weather allowed us to go out on kayaks in Sarasota Bay off Siesta Key. Again we were hoping for the sun to break through, but it turned out to be better that it stayed behind the clouds. It was both the perfect temperature and the even light was great for taking pictures of the wildlife that I wouldn’t normally be able to take in the middle of the day. Out among the mangroves we came across scores of egrets, tri-colored herons, ibises and cormorants feeding on shrimp, bait fish and eel. The highlight though was when a trio of cormorants decided to hang out and play. For a good half hour the birds followed us around, swimming back and forth beneath our boats. We weren’t sure what their interest was, but we’re guessing it had something to do with our oars stirring up food from the shallow waters. It was a really unusual and exciting experience.
Of course we did more than watch nature on our trip – mostly eating actually – but since the photos here pertain only to that I’ll end here for now.

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Acadia National Park

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Bar Harbor Lobster!

None of these pictures are actually from Bar Harbor. It’s just fun to say. Following my visit to Sebago I joined Erinn at her aunt and uncle’s place in Town Hill, Maine, which is right on Mt. Desert Island next to Acadia National Park and Bar Harbor. Although I wish we were there to see the leaves turn, it was still a beautiful time to be there. On my first morning we tried to get up to be out in Acadia for sunrise. It’s supposedly the first part of the United States to see the sun at the beginning of each day. As I said, we tried, but it proved to be too early for us. We were up around 5:30 and out the door by 6, but by the time we were in the park the sun was 10 degrees off the horizon. Ah well. Next time. We still had a great time hiking up a hill called the Beehive and on cliffs next to Sand Beach. In the middle of the day we took a break to play with her aunt and uncle’s pet bunnies and to prepare a delicious lunch of fresh Maine lobster, which Erinn’s uncle bought off the docks for only $3.99/lb! I understand that’s a bit lower than the lobstermen would like, but we thought it was incredible. After cooking them up on the back deck we made up some lobster rolls and chocolate chip cookies and went up on top of Cadillac Mountain for a picnic. Amazing. We also had fun picking and eating fresh blueberries right off the trail. Can’t wait to go back!

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Acadia National Park

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Fly - Lake Sebago, Maine

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Canoeing in Lake Sebago, Maine

In early September I joined about 40 other Aurora photographers for the annual photographers meeting at Sebago Lake, Maine, about half an hour west of Portland. The gathering takes place on the western shores of the lake at Camp O-AT-KA, a boys camp owned by the family of Aurora photo editor Peter Dennen. The meeting is designed to allow contributing photographers and the Aurora staff to get to know one another, as well as to discuss the state of the stock photo industry and the company’s place within it. There were also one-on-one portfolio reviews with editors from PDN, Sports Illustrated, Aurora Select and former National Geographic editor Rich Clarkson, who is pictured after the jump telling one of many entertaining stories to the attendees in the cozy central lodge where most of our official gatherings took place. After the scheduled meetings the group had time to enjoy the lake and socialize over some fine local beer. There’s something about both of the Portlands that makes for great microbrews. There was plenty more too, including great meals prepared by the camp staff (check out that paella!), tug-of-war, soccer, swimming and jumping over campfires. While I didn’t do that, I did make sure to take a few dips in the lake. The water was cold, but refreshing and calm and not so bad once you were in for a minute or so. It was getting out that hurt. Overall it was a great and worthwhile trip and I was glad I got the opportunity to meet the staff and so many fine photographers.
I didn’t really take a lot of pictures there, but here are a few I liked, starting with a fly that landed on a fellow photographer’s head as we were arranging ourselves for the official group picture. This trip kicked off 10 days of travel around the northeast with Erinn, who was at her aunt and uncle’s place up the road at Bar Harbor during the three days I was at the meeting. More photos from the rest of the trip will follow.

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Lake Sebago

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