Fairy Silhouettes

As I turned away from the last light of the day setting behind the profile of the North Cascades peak, I saw the crescent moon, high in the cloudless sky slowly making its way to its own twilight. A trio of conifers rose up towards the heavens, framing the graceful gradation from orange hues to the dusky twilight sky.

I tried to imagine what it would look like on camera, but I didn't have to. A quick snap with my phone revealed that this composition would work, and that eventually led to this fairy silhouette against the moon-lit night sky.

Paseytan Wilderness
WA USA

High on Light

When we found these delightful little blooms, my partner referred to these as Einstein heads, for they had a straggled appearance of Einsteins unkempt hair. Later, I discovered that these were the seedpods of the Western pasqueflower. And they are really soft as they look.

So I returned back to the spot for sunset, hoping to capture these delightful little blooms at sunset. I just wished I had cleaned my lenses prior to taking the photograph.

Paseytan Wilderness
WA USA

Hidden in the Forest

One of the hidden gems of the PNW is catching the vibrant cascades in the innumerable creeks cutting through the forested slopes of the Cascades. As the heavy winter snow starts to melt, the tiny brooks become flush with snowmelt and breathe life into the surrounding vegetation.

I noticed this creek while hiking up to a glistening lake in the Cascades. While from afar the cascades were loud, up close, I could spend time and admire the tiny rivulets coursing through the rocks, and small plants hanging on for dear life. It was a breath of fresh air in the hazy days of the pandemic.

Mt Baker Snoqualmie National Forest
WA USA

The Early Bird

It pays to wake up early, but sometimes this action borders on the verge of stupidity.

I had a grand old goal of climbing to a viewpoint near Mt Rainier to catch sunrise in the summer. And when it was announced that the roads had just opened to the area, I thought it was the perfect opportunity to head up there. What I didn't factor into the calculations were the early 5:30am sunrises that meant leaving home at 2:30 in the morning to give enough time to drive and hike up in the dark.

And yet, I somehow managed to yank myself out of the cozy confines of my bed after a mere 4 hours of sleep, drive in the pitch black inkiness of the night, and hike up the rocky trail just as dawn colors were breaking in the sky.

But the reward was worth it: a beautiful sunrise over a serene mountainous landscape, with Mt Rainier to give me company.

Mount Rainier National Park
WA USA

Stranger from a Strange Planet

Neowise was perhaps one of the few comets that appeared in the right place at the right time: visible fairly clearly from where I was living, and at a time when technology had advanced sufficiently to capture its feathery elegance with my camera. My previous comet sighting was the Hale-Bopp in 1995, which while bright, was not amenable to capturing with a digital camera.

So when this two week window opened up to see this stranger from a strange land, I didn't say no to it.

Here is one such visual of Neowise from Edmonds Harbor, with its NW-facing shoreline providing the perfect viewpoint to shoot the comet framed by the distant peaks of the Olympic range.

Edmonds
WA USA

Mountain Magic

Grand Park was unlike any other place I have been: a vast meadow budding with wildflowers, with the classic profile of Mount Tahoma and and Little Tahoma framing the background. It almost took me back to a fairytale wonderland, and I would been transported to such a place, were it not for the swarms of mosquitoes, I certainly would have been.

Mount Rainier National Park
WA USA

Mountain Magic

The billowing clouds gathered moisture over the Pacific and moved inland, where it encountered the mighty peaks of the Sierras. Never before had it seen such a formidable foe blocking its path. But as it got closer, it realized the mountains needed help, needed rain.

And the clouds whispered to the mountains, you look a little parched, and then let loose a torrent of rain and snow into the freezing winds.

June Lake Loop
CA USA

When Out of Officee

A few years ago, I decided to take a break from work and go back to school for a couple of years. And while that was a high loss of opportunity cost (compared to staying at work), I never regretted that decision. Apart from those two years being a life-changing decision, I got quality time to take leisurely trips and enjoy the outdoors, do backpacks in amazing destinations and tick off a few bucket list items.

Driving cross country was one of them. Revving up my Civic through those sinuous mountain roads while enjoying glorious sunsets with vistas of endless peaks was nothing short of sublime. That trip made me realize that there is so much out there to see, and I have but experienced just a fraction of it.

Perhaps one of my most memorable trips was to the heart of Italian Dolomites. I spent a week climbing steep rocky terrain, hiking through incredible landscapes and witnessing incredible sunrises and sunsets from rifugios aptly placed on mountain-tops. And while the days were exhausting, the urge for photography kept me going. The Dolomites are like nothing else.

Looking back at those pictures from mountainous north of Italy, memories come flooding back to me of this amazing trip, replete with the delicious food paired with crisp local wines, friendly company, towns and cities steeped in history and culture, and so much more. It pains that I cannot travel and retrace my steps at these destinations, but I hope that fortunes turn in the future.

But this trip, and the many others I took during a two year break from work, taught me that gathering experiences by immersing yourself at a location, and expanding your worldview is perhaps as important, if not more, than the pedantic knowledge obtained through books and lectures.

Hidden Delights

“There is a waterfall in every dream. Cool and crystal clear, it falls gently on the sleeper, cleansing the mind and soothing the soul.”

Few things bring mind to peace as hearing the sound of a gurgling creek gushing out onto a roaring waterfall. And on a hot day, the gentle cold sprays carried in waves by the wind is mana from the heavens.
This one was no exception, where a seemingly nondescript creek plunges through a deep ravine in the thick forested slopes of the Columbia Gorge.

Columbia River Gorge
WA USA