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Nugget Falls – impressive falls through an impressive lens

November 24, 2010 by John L. Dengler

Hikers to Nugget Falls located next to the Mendenhall Glacier near Juneau, Alaska are dwarfed by the 377 foot waterfall. (John L. Dengler)

I would venture a guess that thousands of tourists visit the Mendenhall Glacier located just outside Juneau, Alaska every day during the summer cruise season.  Juneau is a major stop for cruise ships during the summer and the easy access for cruise lines to bus tourists to the glacier is likely to make a visit a somewhat crowded experience, particularly at and near the U.S. Forest Service visitor center.

Photo Gallery

Images from Juneau

With all these tourists armed with cameras, this past summer I wanted to try to get a photo different from the pack. In the past, I have taken some interesting landscape photos with my 600 mm lens — definitely not a lens often thought of for landscape photography. I figured why not try. Instead of focusing on the actual Mendenhall Glacier, I set my sights on the neighboring Nugget Falls, an impressive waterfall coming off the same icefield as the glacier.

I selected a slow shutter speed to give the falls the silky look. Obviously, that slow of a shutter speed with such a long lens, required the lens and camera locked down a tripod and the use of an electronic shutter release cable to take the photo.

Normally, I’m used to being the only person around when I’m taking photos. This time not only was I in a sea of tourists, I was the center of attention — not the falls nor the enormous glacier! It seems that the tourists were more impressed with my lens and began to snap photos of me and my long lens. Guess you could mark this one up to “lens envy.”


ABOVE: Hikers to Nugget Falls located next to the Mendenhall Glacier near Juneau, Alaska in the Tongass National Forest are dwarfed by the 377 foot waterfall. Photographed using a Nikon D3, 600mm f4 VR lens, on a Gitzo GT3541LS carbon fiber tripod with a Really Right Stuff BH-55 ballhead, and a Nikon MC-36 Multi-function Remote Cord. Image capture: 1/8 at f22, ISO 100

To license image, click image. To see our collection of fine art prints, click here.

Wide-open spaces of the Flint Hills tallgrass prairie

June 27, 2010 by John L. Dengler

Evening sunset light bathes showy evening primrose and the rolling hills of the 10,894-acre Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in the Flint Hills of Kansas in Chase County near the towns of Strong City and Cottonwood Falls. Less than four percent of the original 140 million acres of tallgrass prairie remains in North America. Most of the remaining tallgrass prairie is in the Flint Hills in Kansas. Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is the only unit of the National Park Service dedicated to the preservation of the tallgrass prairie ecosystem. The Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is co-managed with The Nature Conservancy. (John L. Dengler)

The tallgrass prairies of the American midwest are one of America’s classic landscapes — big skies and panoramas of never-ending seas of wave-like grass. Tallgrass prairies are also one of America’s endangered ecosystems. Before being plowed under for agriculture, tallgrass prairie once covered more than 140 million acres of the United States. Less than four percent of tallgrass prairie remains, most of it in the Flint Hills region of Kansas.

One of the places in the Flint Hills where the prairie is being protected is at the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve — an innovative public/private partnership with the National Park Service (primary land manager) and The Nature Conservancy (primary land owner). The preserve’s mission is to protect the natural and cultural history of the tallgrass prairie ecosystem — one of the most complicated and diverse ecosystems in the world.

Photo Gallery

Images from the tallgrass prairie

The Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is located within close proximity of the Kansas towns of Strong City, Cottonwood Falls, Council Grove, and Emporia and is located on the Flint Hills Scenic Byway – Kansas State Highway 177.

More than 500 species of plants, nearly 150 species of birds, 39 species of reptiles and amphibians and 31 species of mammals make their home in the preserve. In October of 2009, 13 genetically pure bison from Wind Cave National Park in South Dakota were introduced to the preserve. On Mother’s Day 2010 a calf was born and became the first bison born on the property since at least the mid-1800s when the property was fenced for cattle ranching. The preserve plans to add more bison form Wind Cave with a final herd size between 75 and 100 bison. America’s bison once numbered 60 million but were by the end of the 19th century, little more than 1,000 survived. Today the total number of bison in North America is 450,000 including those raised for food.

Most of the remaining tallgrass prairie is located in the Flint Hills because 200-300 million years ago the land was once a shallow sea whose sea floor that eventually turned into limestone and chert (also known as flint). This rock-laden layer of shallow soil was not suitable for plowing. Instead, the land was used and continues to be used to cattle ranching. I found particularly interesting that the cattle in the Flint Hills are referred to as “tourists.” Most of the cattle are shipped to the Flint Hills in the Spring to feast on the prairie grasses for the summer where they can gain up to two pounds a day.

Given that my visit was during the heat and humidity of summer, shooting during sunrise and sunset was as much for practical as photographic reasons — make sure you take plenty of water.

You also want to make sure you give bison, plenty of room as they are unpredictable and can be dangerous. They appear to be peaceful, but their demeanor can change instantly. Bison may look like they would be slow, but in reality they can reach speeds of up to 35 miles per hour and have great agility. In earlier times, bison were feared equally as much as a grizzly bears due to their ability to kill or inflict injury. For my visit I gave them plenty of room, shooting primarily with my 600mm lens.

I was lucky enough to find the herd easily on the vast open space of the preserve. It was even luckier that I was able to photograph the previously mentioned bison calf who was easily identified by it’s temporary light-colored fur. The older bison were shedding their much darker chocolate-colored fur. This shed fur is used by birds for nest building.

The Flint Hill prairies along with the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve seem to have been good for the local economy. I first visited the area in the mid-1990s. Back then the Chase County towns of Strong City and Cottonwood Falls seemed pretty sleepy. Today, I sensed a resurgence in these communities. For part of the visit, the five-unit Millstream Resort Motel in Cottonwood Falls served as base (no camping at the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve). It was a charming and restful place. Part of the reason that I only stayed there for part of the visit was, because unbeknownst to me, the Kansas City Symphony was performing out on the prairie nearby and rooms were unavailable for much of my stay. “The Symphony in the Flint Hills” sounds like a pretty incredible experience. Every year a different ranch serves as the host for the one-night event. In 2010 Lyle Lovett performed with the symphony to a crowd of approximately 6,000 who hiked in to the prairie performance site — in a county whose population is only 3,000.

The Flint Hills region is beautiful. I often tell people that in my mind it’s comparable with Alaska. I always get the strangest looks when I describe it that way, but when it comes to big sky panoramas they are much the same. I am looking forward to documenting the prairies of the Flint Hills in the years to come.


ABOVE: Evening sunset light bathes showy evening primrose and the rolling hills of the 10,894-acre Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in the Flint Hills of Kansas in Chase County near the towns of Strong City and Cottonwood Falls. Less than four percent of the original 140 million acres of tallgrass prairie remains in North America. Most of the remaining tallgrass prairie is in the Flint Hills in Kansas. Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is the only unit of the National Park Service dedicated to the preservation of the tallgrass prairie ecosystem. The Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is co-managed with The Nature Conservancy.

To license image, click image. To see our collection of fine art prints, click here.

The other Hawaii

August 31, 2009 by John L. Dengler

A hiker makes her way through the forest of Hanakapiai Valley to Hanakapiai Falls in the Na Pali Coast State Wilderness Park. The 120 foot falls are reached by way of a two mile primitive side trail off the Kalalau Trail which runs along the Na Pali coast on the northern shore of the island of Kauai in Hawaii. From the trailhead at Kee Beach in Haena State Park, the strenuous hike to Hanakapiai falls is eight miles roundtrip. (John L. Dengler)

I have always been fascinated by the natural beauty, environmental challenges and the history of the Hawaiian Islands. Because of this I’ve made close to a dozen trips to the islands including Oahu, Kauai, Molokai, Maui, Lanai, and the Big Island over the years.

Most of those visits have not been at fancy resorts but rather the backcountry of the island’s national and state parks. While most visitors to the islands camp out in fancy resort hotels, much of my time is spent camping in a tent, slogging through a rainforest bog, or camping where steam from a nearby active volcano was coming out of the ground outside my tent.

Photo Galleries

Images from Kauai

Images from the Big Island

It’s been a while since my last trip to the islands. Much of my outdoor photography in recent years has been focused on Alaska. So I decided I wanted to freshen up my offerings and revisit some of my favorite outdoor haunts in Hawaii. For this trip, the islands of Kauai and the Big Island were on my list. Places of focus on Kauai included the Na Pali Coast State Wilderness Park, Kalalau Trail, Hanakapiai Falls, Kilauea Point National Wildlife Refuge, Waimea Canyon State Park, Alakai Swamp Wilderness Preserve. On the Big Island the primary target was Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. The main pit crater, Halemaumau which is part the Kilauea caldera had been the scene of some volcanic activity earlier this month, but as luck would have it, it died back on my arrival.

Actually, my luck wasn’t good much of the trip. On this trip I experienced much more rain (some of it heavy) than I have in the past. I attributed it to hurricane Carlos which passed south of the islands. While Carlos was never considered a threat to the islands, I can’t help but wonder if it was a factor. My luck didn’t hold out either for the view from Kilohana overlook at the end of the Alakai Swamp Trail, but realistically I didn’t expect that it would. I’ve hiked the trail several times in the past with the same result. Despite this outcome I enjoy the otherworldly look that the fog and low, mist-laden clouds give the swamp (technically an alpine bog, not a swamp). The fact that the Alakai Wilderness Preserve is located on a plateau near Mouth Waialeale, one of the wettest spots on Earth raises the odds dramatically that you will not see the view from Kilohana.

Hawaii is a difficult place to photograph, because so much of it has been photographed, and the part that hasn’t, is difficult to access due to the tropical environment, and rugged terrain. It’s a challenge that is rewarding for those willing to work at it. While many flock to the beaches for sunset photography, I have found the early morning sunrise and light equally beautiful — and devoid of tourists. While I have to admit I get suckered into taking the setting sun photos (how can you not?), I do try to look the other direction and see how the light is dancing on other subjects.

Every time I go to Hawaii, I always make the same mistake of wanting to take too much equipment out into the field (on long day hikes or longer backpacks). And each time after the first day, I realize my mistake and adjust accordingly. The weather in Hawaii is deceptively beautiful — until you start hiking up and down the same ridge or cliff for the xth time. Hopefully, I will be able to find the notes to myself that I took on how to configure my equipment the next time.

As of now, I have some serious editing to do before posting those images. Look for new images in my Hawaii-focused galleries and archives over the upcoming months.


ABOVE: A hiker makes her way through the forest of Hanakapiai Valley to Hanakapiai Falls in the Na Pali Coast State Wilderness Park. The falls are reached by way of a side trail off the Kalalau Trail which runs along the Na Pali coast on the northern shore of the island of Kauai in Hawaii. From the trailhead at Kee Beach in Haena State Park, the strenous hike is eight miles roundtrip. Photographed using a Nikon D3 and a Nikon 20mm f2.8 lens. Image capture: 1/320 at f5.0, ISO 200

To license image, click image. To see our collection of fine art prints, click here.

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