2018 Colorado Fall Color Road Trip – Day 4

The last night camping along Owl Creek Pass Road was the coldest night I experienced on this trip.  When I awoke in the pre-dawn hours the temperature inside the Sportsmobile was 45 degrees F.  I turned on the furnace to bring the temperature up to a more pleasant 55 degF, as I dressed and prepared coffee.  As I was preparing to leave the campsite for the final day of photography, I noted a patch of frost on the inside of the windshield and a bit of frost on the exterior.  The frost quickly disappeared after starting the van and putting the heater setting on defrost.

I drove on Owl Creek Pass Road towards Silver Jack Reservoir and pulled into a wide pull out just before a cattle guard just south of an access road to Silver Jack Reservoir.  This area was a mile or so further north of the area where I had shot the morning before.  I gathered my gear, including knit hat and gloves, since it was still a bit frosty prior to sunrise.  I walked down a slope in a pasture towards the broad drainage into Silver Jack Reservoir, looking for a good vantage point from which to shoot the mountainside to the west, dodging cow patties as I went along.

A frosty cow pie. iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

I set up the tripod and camera in a place where I thought the view was best and one that allowed me to move around a bit, if necessary, then waited for the sunrise, choosing initial compositions and taking a few test shots.

The sky was clear, much different than the previous morning.  I made a number of photos, as the morning light moved from the top of the mountainside downward towards the drainage, from a couple of slightly different vantage points.

A fall scene off of Owl Creek Pass Road near Silver Jack Reservoir, Colorado. Nikon D850, Nikon 24-70mm at 32mm, f/11, 1/6s, ISO 64, edited in Adobe LR and Skylum Luminar 2018.
An early morning fall scene near Silver Jack Reservoir, Owl Creek Pass Road, Colorado. Nikon D850, Nikon 24-70mm at 32mm, f/11, 1/5s, ISO 64, edited in Adobe LR and Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

The compositions from my chosen location were a bit limited.  It was difficult to avoid the foreground clutter, with the 24-70mm lens that I had elected to use this morning, and many of the shots looked so similar or otherwise just did not turn out as I wanted, that I am posting only a couple that I liked best.  I chose to shoot with the 24-70mm, since I was rather sure that the 14-24mm wide angle lens, that I had used the previous morning, would be too wide for what I wanted to shoot today.  It is possible that the 80-400mm lens might have been a better choice in this location for shooting beyond the foreground clutter and I certainly could have gotten some good shots of the mountain peaks with that big lens.

Finished shooting here, I drove north on Owl Creek Pass Road, exploring the area and looking for favorable places to maybe get mid-morning shots of the colorful Aspens.  I walked around in an Aspen forest, shooting with the wide angle 14-24mm, which I found to be a bit difficult to work with in the woods.  Nearly all of the shots that I had high hopes for, turned out poorly, but I do like the one below with the long shadows cast by the trees.

Fall forest shadows. Nikon D850, Nikon 14-24mm at 15mm, f/11, 1/100s, ISO 64, edited in Adobe LR and Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

After shooting in the forest, I continued driving along Owl Creek Road, enjoying the great fall day and the scenery, stopping occasionally to shoot with my iPhone.

A scene in one of the Silver Jack camp grounds that are run by the forest service. iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and Nik Color Efex Pro 4.
A side road off of Owl Creek Pass Road, Colorado. iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and Nik Color Efex Pro 4.
A mid-morning fall scene along Owl Creek Pass Road, Colorado. iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

Along the roadway, I encountered a lone cow that stood in the middle of the road, staring at me.  I stopped to wait for it to move along.  As it continued to look at me, I picked up the iPhone with the intention of getting a photo of it.  As soon as I did this, it turned and started to walk away down the road.  I followed, slowly.  Eventually, it moved to the edge of the roadway and I pulled up beside it, stopped and it stared up at me.  Again I picked up the iPhone, aimed it at the cow and it immediately turned and walked away.  Again it stopped in the middle of the road to stare back at me.  Again I started to shoot it with the iPhone and again it began to walk away.  I can only surmise that it was a camera shy cow.  I really wanted a shot into its eyes as it stared, but I only got shots of it walking away.

The camera shy cow. iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and Nik Color Efex Pro 4.
Owl Creek Pass Road near Silver Jack Reservoir, Colorado. iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and Nik Color Efex Pro 4.
Aspens in fall color and evergreens along Owl Creek Pass Road, Colorado. iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

I began to make my way along Owl Creek Pass Road towards highway 550 and Ridgway, where I would spend the night in Ridgway State Park before heading to Bisti in New Mexico the following morning.

Along the way, I was hailed by someone driving a jeep coming up the road in the opposite direction.  I stopped to see what was going on, thinking that they might be wanting to warn me about road conditions ahead.  It turned out to be the couple that had visited my first campsite (the ones that wanted to use my campsite the following day).  They easily recognized my vehicle since it was the only one like it in the area and they just wanted to chat.  We only had time for a brief conversation, since other vehicles began to accumulate behind them.  I also had conversations with others (campers, tourist, photographers, hunters) that I encountered at various locations in this area.  It is always interesting to learn about others and their backgrounds, experiences, etc.  and surprising how many times we find people with similar backgrounds, who are familiar with seemingly unusual places we or our family members have lived.

Future posts will cover the couple of days that I spent shooting in the Bisti Wilderness area in New Mexico, which is becoming one of my favorite places for photography.

4 thoughts on “2018 Colorado Fall Color Road Trip – Day 4”

    1. Thanks, Fay. A shot with it looking directly at me would have been much better; but that is the problem with shooting animals, they move. As a vegetarian, I’m sure you know that cow is destined to be food for a carnivore.

  1. Oh… and one more comment! Only a passionate photographer would edit and post a “cow pie”! You make me laugh!

    1. Thanks, again, Fay. Yes, I meant that photo to be humorous way of pointing out that it was a frosty, fall morning. I could have edited that photo to disguise its true identity, but as a more scientifically leaning, literal person, who struggles with any artistic expression, I had to keep it true to reality and, if not for the humorous aspect, I would not have taken that shot, anyway.

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