I recently did an interview with SmugMug talking about my decision to quit my job two years ago and focus exclusively on travel and photography (and not so much, as is apparent, on this blog). So, please read it if you're interested in what I've been up to the last two years: http://news.smugmug.com/2013/06/07/quit-your-job-and-run-for-the-hills-ron-coscorrosa-speaks-out/
2012 - Year in Review (Sort Of)
I haven't written a blog post in over a year - and it's not because I have nothing to say (I do!), but I have been incredibly busy traveling, photographing, and moving from Seattle to Denver to move in with my girlfriend (and gifted nature photographer) Sarah Marino. All great things and all much more important than keeping this dark lonely hole of the Internet universe partially illuminated. Also, and this is the real reason: I'm lazy.So instead of writing about all of the great things that have happened in the last twelve months I'll just briefly recap the year by showing some of my favorite photos that I have processed to date.
Many people are doing their "12 favorites of 2012", so in order to be different, and because I can't edit photos, I'm going to show my 20 favorites of 2012 (20 is in 2012 too, damn it!).
The photos are arranged in chronological order with the location above each photo.
Cannon Beach, Oregon
Mono Lake, Mono County, California
Ibex Dunes, Death Valley National Park, California
Ibex Dunes, Death Valley National Park, California
Marlboro Point, Canyonlands National Park, Utah
Roaring Fork, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee
Botany Bay, South Carolina
Jökulsárlón Beach, Iceland
Selfoss Waterfall, Iceland
Toroweap, Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona
Yakima Peak, Mount Rainier National Park, Washington
Paradise, Mt. Rainier National Park, Washington
Alvord Playa, Harney County, Oregon
Tonquin Valley, Jasper National Park, Alberta, Canada
Groton State Forest, Vermont
Oneida Falls, Ricketts Glen State Park, Pennsylvania
White Pocket, Coyote Buttes South, Arizona
Virgin River Narrows, Zion National Park, Utah
The Racetrack, Death Valley National Park, California
Lower Antelope Slot Canyon, Page, Arizona
All You Keep is the Getting There
It's only the second afternoon of my trip and already I have no idea where the hell I am. I'm sure it won't be the last time. I crawl out of the sleeping bag in the back of my car, peek out of the window, and eventually I remember: West Yellowstone!
The previous night I watched Great Fountain Geyser erupt at 11 PM, all by myself, lit only by the light of the stars. It was the sound, not the sight, that alerted me to its presence, and I really hoped that I was outside the spray zone, and I was (but it was in mine, Yellowstone indeed!). The night before that I was racing from Seattle to make sunrise, and did, with five minutes to spare and no speeding tickets.
I'm in Yellowstone, the sixth time in two years, for a single purpose: to photograph fall colors in Colorado. While there aren't a lot of Colorado fall colors in Wyoming (even in peak years) it's only a few hours from Yellowstone to Colorado, and a natural stopping point on the way from Seattle.
All my non-photographer friends told me I should go to New England for fall colors. I told them New England can suck it, I'm going to Colorado. Where in Colorado? I didn't know, but I knew John Denver wasn't full of shit and was going to prove him right.
The colors are late this year, but I don't really care when they peak, I just want to be there when they do. It should only take a few weeks. I have all the time in the world, and while that's still not enough, it's as close as I'm going to get.
Now it's eight weeks and 12,000 miles later and I'm back at home with a handful of photos, a head full of memories and wondering what the hell just happened. I'm hoping it won't be the last time.
From that foggy afternoon in Yellowstone until my return home, I would visit Grand Teton NP, Rocky Mountain NP, Western Colorado (Aspen, Ridgway, Crested Butte, Telluride, and points in between), Black Canyon of the Gunnison NP, Great Sand Dunes NP, Mesa Verde NP, Aztec Ruins National Monument, Shiprock in New Mexico, The Bisti Badlands Wilderness, White Sands National Monument, Saguaro NP and the Sonoran Desert near Tuscon, Red Rock country in Sedona, Grand Canyon NP (south rim), Havasu Falls, Zion NP, Bryce Canyon NP, Arches NP, Canyonlands NP, House on Fire and Fallen Roof ruins near Cedar Mesa, Monument Valley in Arizona, Lower and Upper Antelope slot canyons near Page, Horseshoe Bend, slot canyons near Escalante (Utah), Death Valley, and the Columbia River Gorge.
I said my main goal was to photograph the fall colors in Colorado. That's actually not true. My main goal was to be flexible and go wherever I felt like going. Colorado was the start, but not the end. There is no end.
I drove on pavement, gravel, dirt, sand (red, brown, and white gypsum), snow, ice, and mud. Well I didn't actually drive on mud, but I slid on it pretty damn good. I didn't get stuck once and I'm going to attribute that to skill even though luck deserves all the credit.
I only got lost when following my GPS.
I was 12,000 feet above sea level in Colorado and almost 300 feet below it in California. I experienced temperatures ranging from 0F to 105F, and dressed so that I would be uncomfortable in any temperature.
I slept in motels (a few nights), a tent (many nights), and my car (most nights). I had no reservations, anywhere.
I showered. Rarely.
I had cold food and hot food but mostly bad food. Except for the free food, free food is always good food.
I met many old friends, made a few new ones, and didn't lose any that I'm aware of.
I had weeks of complete solitude and peace and weeks with friends, laughter, and a different kind of peace.
I made a few jokes, some happened to be funny, most happened to be vulgar.
I saw uncountable crimes against photography and only a few of them were mine.
I had one lens spontaneously break, at Havasu Falls, ten miles down canyon. I had one tripod break. Somewhere. I fucking hate tripods. All of them.
I had bison surround my car when I was 200 feet away from it.
I herded cows with my car, more than once, and I also heard cows in the act, more than once.
I saw geysers, mountains, rivers, sand dunes, ruins, sandstone (rocks, arches, canyons, slot canyons, and hoodoos), forests of aspen and saguaro, salt flats, playas, waterfalls, the milky way, a couple full moons, and not a single ocean. I saw beauty both spectacular and subtle and it was everywhere.
But mostly I realized that experiences are the only possessions worth keeping and time the only price to pay.
Townes Van Zandt said that living on the road will keep you free and clean. He was only half right, but got the part that matters.
There's More Pretty Girls Than One
There are only three months left in the year and I haven't been anywhere, or rather I've been to the same everywhere, which may as well be nowhere. There's a point in here somewhere. The point is (I think) that I've been negligent in visiting new places.
There's always a delicate balance between depth and breadth.
The best images almost always come from places I know well, not just because I'm maximizing my chances of having good light with repeated visits (but that certainly helps), but because there are no distractions. I know where things are. I know how to get there and how long it will take. I know what types of shots are possible for the given conditions.
The problem, of course, is that I think I know more than I actually do. I settle into a pattern. I stop being creative and start being reflexive. Reverence loses ground to disappointment. With experience it becomes easier to spot this trend happening and, if I'm lucky, to stop it. But the threat is always there and will sneak up on me if I'm not paying attention.
Which is why it's important to visit new places. To be overwhelmed and confused and in awe. To not know where to start or what to do. To lose any preconceived notions. To be inspired. To try and tame the chaos and also to fail so that you can get it right the next time, and most importantly, to piss off the locals by getting epic light on your first visit!
So I'm going to hit the road. I'll be visiting some places I know well (Yellowstone and Grand Teton), some places I only know superficially (Arizona and Utah) and some places I don't know at all (Colorado and New Mexico). I'll be trading the volcanoes in the Cascades for ragged peaks of the Rockies; the autumn vine maples, mountain ash, and huckleberries for the gold and crimson aspens; evergreens for sagebrush; wet beaches and waterfalls for the desert and sand dunes, and brown dirt for, well, red dirt.
Lessons I've learned in my familiar territories will still be applicable to these new places. The inspiration I get from these new places will allow me to see the old places in a new way.
There's really nothing to lose (except sleep, money, and gas - but I was going to lose those anyway). I'll return armed with memories, experiences, a huge backlog of photos that will take forever to process, and, if I'm lucky, no speeding tickets that I can't bribe my way out of.