After a morning of browsing and shopping in Ouray, we traveled over the Dallas Divide to Telluride, another quaint, old Colorado town that is popular with summer tourist and winter skiers.
In route along Colorado 62, I kept an eye out for potential photography sites, hoping to return for sunset photos. I stopped at one location to get a few shots of the afternoon storm clouds building over the mountain tops.
In Telluride, I only used my iPhone to shoot a few images in the old town.
There must be a story behind this mural painted on the side of a Telluride building, but I don’t know it.
Butch Cassidy reportedly took over $24,000 in the robbery of the San Miguel Valley Bank. That was quite a bit of money in those days, equivalent to about $857,000 in 2022 money. Butch should have retired after this haul.
In the late afternoon of September 17, as I lounged around a picnic table near my campsite in Ridgway State Park, Colorado, a park attendant stopped by, checking the occupancy of the sites and made a comment about my only staying one night. I struck up a conversation with him and asked if he had gotten any information about fall colors along Owl Creek Pass Road. He said no, but he knew the colors were good along Dallas Divide (Colorado Route 62, aka San Juan Skyway) between Ridgway and Telluride. I immediately changed my plans for early the next morning. I had planned to drive up Owl Creek Pass road the next morning, but I knew to do so would cost me one morning of photography, since I had no specific destination on that road for an early morning shoot and I thought it unlikely that I would be able to find a good spot on that route before late in the morning. So I decided to get up early and drive the San Juan Skyway route, taking a chance that I would find some place to pull off to shoot fall color scenes as the sun was rising, then drive the Owl Creek Pass road afterwards.
I’m not sure that I found the best place to shoot near the Dallas Divide, but I began to see the fall colors appearing as the darkness gave way to the early morning light as I drove along San Juan Skyway early on the morning of September 18 and I found a pull out near what I thought might be a suitable place just a few minutes before sunrise.
I used the fence line in this composition to lead into the Aspens in the background. I like the side lighting on the grasses, the fence and the shadows cast by the low angle, early morning light.
I used the side light on the foreground grasses as a lead in to the large gate framing the Aspens in the background. I suppose one could say that the ranch road leads into the photo, but it is subdued in shadows. I especially liked the side light highlighting the fence line and gate.
In the composition above, I liked the early morning highlights on the foreground grasses, the fence and gate and the way the fence line and tree line seem to converge near the gate.
Continuing along San Juan Skyway, I saw a number of national forest access roads and decided to explore one of them. I eventually stopped at one interesting looking spot and walked down an embankment into the edge of the forest. I could not go very far without trespassing, since there was a fence line that appeared to be electrified just a short distance from the roadway. I shot along and over that fence line. My main goal was to capture the backlit Aspens, which resulted in dark foregrounds that I had to bring out in Lightroom, but I did not want to overdo that adjustment, preferring to keep the shadows as a contrast to the bright background.
I’m always drawn to other photographers starburst effects, but I never have gotten a such an effect that I liked in my attempts. In these two shots I used Luminar software to add an artificial starburst effect over the real one.
As a point of self criticism of these shots (and others, to be posted later), I might have gotten sharper images by raising the ISO and/or increasing the aperture to get a faster shutter speed to ensure that the foliage motion was frozen; but most of my attempts at that yielded otherwise poor results. I attempted to overcome this limitation by waiting for calm, prior to shooting, but there is nearly always some light breeze or residual motion in the foliage.