
Pentax K10D with Vivitar 105mm f/2.5
Backpacking Trip Reports & Photography

Now that we’ve turned the corner and put the Winter Solstice behind us, I thought I’d start posting some shots of what we’ve got to look forward to. These flowers bloom every year, right on the side of the road here in Irvine. I would never have noticed them, and in fact, hadn’t noticed them in the 10+ years that I’ve lived here (even though I walk past them daily!), until recently when I started looking for interesting Macro subjects. I find it incredible that so much beauty can be found in such small things, so near one’s house, yet so far from one’s attention. Nature is truly incredible.

All shots were taken with Pentax K10D and DA* 16-50mm lens, by Tim Lavelle.
I figure these speak for themselves, but everything should look like the green forest in the foreground. I’ve honestly never seen anything like this, and the closest I could compare the area to looking would be that of post-nuclear Hiroshima or Nagasaki. There is nothing left out there. Miles and miles of forest burned to a crisp, leaving nothing but dirt and ash in it’s wake. This terrible tragedy could have been averted, had we allowed smaller forest fires to burn through the area in the past few decades, clearing up old debris and leaving room for new growth. Devastating forest fires such as this will continue as long as we keep interfering with Nature’s way.
These were shot on December 20th, 2009 from “Echo Rock” on top of Mt. Wilson. You are looking North / North-East. That’s Mt. Baldy in the right side of the frame of shot #5. It’s snow cap was deposited by a storm two weeks ago, but it’s melting quickly, and will most likely be gone in early January unless another storm rolls through. Fortunately, the San Gabriel River needed water badly, and this run-off has provided just that. Other than the area completely destroyed by the Station Fire, the rest of Angeles is alive and strong. And besides- that forest will return- eventually. It’s just that none of us will still be around to see it.
Nature works on a much longer scale than we do!

Pentax K10D, with Vivitar 105mm f/2.5 at 1:1
I’d never noticed before that the growth shoot of of this little plant, only about an inch in diameter, was a sanctuary for a wide variety of different species of insects.
1:1 Macro photography is so amazing because it allows us a near microscopic look at the world around us, allowing us a glimpse of the tiny worlds that inhabit our own gigantic space.
There’s no other Photographic genre that I find even nearly as fascinating. And I love this Image.

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