After trips to Colorado in September and to Indiana in October, not much else happened with my photography hobby during the middle winter months of November, 2020 through February, 2021.
Part of this inactivity might be blamed upon the COVID19 pandemic, which suppressed much activity, but I’ve found that the deep winter months with holidays and severe weather and numerous personal things that tend to happen in this interval always seem to suppress my photography activity. Each year, I have tentative plans in this interval that always seem to get squashed for some reason or another.
This year was no different. My wife and I did get out more frequently after we received our COVID19 vaccinations and I made a few iPhone images on those outings, but nothing new or exciting. We were still wearing masks and taking precautions, which greatly reduce the pleasure of being out of the house.
In the middle of February the great Texas freeze of 2021 hit, which kept most people home for a week or so. We were fortunate that we never lost electric power, so we were able to stay comfortable in our home, unlike so many others.
It is not uncommon to get a brief, strong cold front here, but this one was exceptional. We’ve had ice form along the edges of the waterfall from the pool spa in the past, but this is the first time we’ve had the surface of the pool freeze. There was not enough ice in our pool to cause any damage, but some pools in this area were damaged due to the frozen pool water surface.
I have driven the same route through the Texas Panhandle numerous times in my travels, seeing numerous old, abandoned houses and businesses. Occasionally, I will take a few minutes to stop and photograph some of these, if I have time in my schedule to do so.
This house is just off of a highway and almost completely surrounded by high grass and trees. I had made a mental note of it several times and finally decided to stop by to photograph it.
The view above is seen as one is driving to the northwest. If driving from the the northwest, the house is almost hidden and can easily be overlooked.
The sun was almost directly overhead, the light bright and harsh, so I converted the images to monochrome, which gives more pleasing images under these conditions.
I photographed all around the house, but with the dense vegetation, I did not get good images from other view points.
After a strenuous previous day and getting to bed late with no firm plans for where to go for early morning photos, I decided to sleep in a bit and scout the area again during the morning and afternoon for possible locations for sunset photos.
After breakfast, I walked the trail to the visitor center looking around for possible photo locations along the way. Since I had hiked a substantial portion of the Guadalupe Peak Trail the previous day, I figured that I had earned the right to purchase and display a pin from the park in my collection, so I picked up the pin and inquired about the road into the Salt Basin, hoping to get time to visit the gypsum sand dunes in the western portion of the park. No one there had any update on the condition of the long clay road into that portion of the park. After thinking about this, I decided against attempting to get into the Salt Basin on this trip. I only had that afternoon and the next morning to spend in the park and the Salt Basin area is a day use area only, meaning no overnight camping or parking there. For sunrise photos, I would have to get up early the next morning and drive quite a way to get to the access road and then there was no way to know if I would be able to drive the last portion of the road and I would have no idea of where to go, anyway. For sunset photos, I ran the risk of losing my already paid for second night in the RV site, where the slots are on a first come basis; but there seemed to be no way to show that a site was already taken, if no vehicle was parked there. This eliminated the gypsum dunes for sunset photos.
Upon returning to my vehicle, I decided to check out the Tejas Trail from which I thought I might be able to get late day shots with golden hour light as I had observed it the previous evening on the mountainside to the east of the trail.
The lower portion of the Tejas Trail is much easier than the Guadalupe Peak Trail. Again I hiked with only my Camelbak with water, snacks, GPS (for safety and for recording waypoints at possible photo sites) and iPhone. I looked for possible photo sites along the trail, making a number of iPhone scouting shots. These shots were all taken around mid-day to early afternoon, so the light was harsh with the sun almost directly overhead, so there were not even any shadows to give the photos depth.
I am presenting a few of those scouting photos in this post with comments regarding the ideas for later DSLR images and some notes on editing photos.
This first image is an example of what is seen much too often and illustrates what one should not do in our national parks. Someone just could not resist defacing one of the trees along the trail.
Even with mid-day light, it is sometimes possible to get interesting images. The one above is a portion of a gnarly, weathered, fallen tree, mostly in the shade of another tree with sunlight dappling across it. This is a jpeg image, so the editing is limited; but I’ve tweaked it a bit in Adobe Lightroom, then applied additional editing in DXO Nik software. I typically like to add several filters in Color Efex Pro 4, depending upon the photo, with a slight touch of brilliance, detail extraction, sometimes a graduated neutral density and a slight skylight filter. One has to be careful not to over do it with these filters. Sometimes, I will note that a favorite filter is just too much and I either have to tone it down or eliminate it.
I hoped to get sunset light on the features in the mountain side, but I also needed something in the foreground and/or framing objects. So I experimented with these concepts as I walked along the trail. I applied a little lens fall off vignetting in the above image to tone down some of the unattractive foreground and to reduce the plain sky.
Another foreground/framing possibility is illustrated here. Again, I used a little lens fall off vignetting to reduce the foreground clutter and to add a focusing effect into the image.
The image above has a vignetting filter, that I do not often use, applied in Nik Color Efex Pro 4. I thought it worth experimenting with in these flat, bland photos. I think this one serves quite well in this case. It tones down the foreground clutter, reduces the plain sky and focuses on the main subject.
I kept hiking along the trail, trying to get closer to this particular feature on the mountainside, hoping to find a good vantage point to photograph it later in the day. Here, again, I’ve added vignetting to reduce the foreground clutter and focus the eye on the main subject.
The boulder in the lower right anchors the foreground in this image and I think with it located diagonally from the peak in the upper left, helps to give this image some depth and visual tension. Vignetting is used again to reduce the unattractive clutter around the edges and guides the eye into the image. The vignette center can be moved and in this case, it has been moved slightly to the left.
This is just an experiment with a monochrome version of the previous image. Sometimes harsh light images can be more appealing images in monochrome. In this case, the lack of shadows results in too flat an image to be interesting.
Just another experimental foreground for the prominent feature in the mountainside. The Cholla is weathered and not very attractive; but there is at least a hint of clouds developing in the sky.
Ah, if I could find this at sunset, I think I would get a good image!
The second destination in my Spring 2019 road trip was Guadalupe Mountains National Park (GUMO). According to my map, the travel time to GUMO from the Sandhills via the shortest route should be about 2.5 hours. However, a backup due to road construction on US 285, just past a signal light at my turn off from US 285, resulted in an hour delay. The longer routes would probably have been faster, but I did not double check the traffic before I set out. My bad!
In the above photo the sharp drop off on the left end of the mountain range is a feature referred to as El Capitan.
After getting to GUMO, setting up in the RV parking lot and having a brief lunch, it was around 3PM. Since I had never visited here, I did not have any idea about where to go for sunset photos. After reviewing the trails and information on those trails, I decided to take the Guadalupe Peak Trail, but not to take my camera gear. It was overcast, so the prospects for good sunset light was slim and I knew the heavy camera gear would really slow my pace on the trail.
This trail is around 8-9 miles round trip, rated strenuous and the literature said to allow 6 to 8 hours for the round trip. By the time I made my preparations for the hike, it was well after 3PM. So even if I could make the round trip in only 6 hours (doubtful), it would be after 9PM and dark before I made it back. I took my headlamp and an extra flashlight and extra batteries, just in case, but I knew it was not a good idea to be on this trail in the dark.
Shortly after getting underway on the trail, I realized that not bringing the camera gear was a good decision. There are very strenuous portions of this trail, it is mostly steep with considerable rocky portions requiring care in hiking. As I met hikers coming down and heard their comments, I really began to realize that I would probably not make it to the top, if I expected to get back down before dark.
The weather was good for this hike, since it was cool and overcast. Even so, I quickly worked up a sweat, hiking with only a shirt and t-shirt on my upper body. I had put a fleece, gloves and windbreaker in my backpack, since I knew it would be cold somewhere along the trail. Indeed, in some windy portions it got quite cool with even a light snow off and on; but the effort going up the trail kept me warm.
As I progressed and became hungry, I realized that I had forgotten to put my trail bar snacks into my day pack. Fortunately, I had a full reservoir of water in my Camelbak. Otherwise, I would have had to turn around. Wanting to go as far as possible, I pushed on and I was able to ignore the hunger and my decreasing energy level.
The haze in the distance of the photo above is actually a light snow.
As I neared the upper portion of the trail, I even began to think that I might actually make it to the top. However, as it passed 6PM, even though thinking I only had about 30 minutes more to hike to the top, I decided it was best to turn back or I would surely be hiking down in the dark.
I went some distance past the campground, so maybe I was only a few hundred feet below the peak, when I decided to turn around. It was disappointing to be so close and have to stop before reaching the peak. I just needed to have started about an hour earlier in the day.
The feature on the mountain side at the upper right-center of the above photo is El Capitan.
Since the trip back was mostly steeply downhill, I was able to make much better time than I had expected. I was almost sure that I would have to stop and put on the fleece at some point, but I never wanted to stop long enough to do that. Even had I put the fleece on, I would have had to stop and take it off as I got back to lower elevation.
There is at least one trail visible along the mountain side in this photo. I think the one in the center is the Tejas Trail.
On the way down, I had to frequently remind myself to slow down on the more treacherous portions of the trail. There were plenty of places with tripping or sliding hazards. I was making such good time on the way down that I passed a few people that I had met on the way up as they were coming down.
The golden hour light in the above photo is what I looked forward to finding the following day.
A zoomed in, noisy iPhone photo of the late day light on a peak opposite my route on Guadalupe Peak Trail is above.
I was greeted by a nice sunset scene over the plains from the lower portion of the Guadalupe Peak Trail.
I made it back to the RV lot just after dark, with sore, sensitive, achy feet, a strong appetite and no plan for where to go the following morning. I had been on the trail for about 5 hours, so I think I would have made it to the peak and back before dark, if I had started up the trail just an hour earlier.
I finally got time to get away for a couple of weeks in March. My destinations were largely determined by weather patterns and the distance between those possible destinations. The first stop was Monahans Sandhills State Park between Odessa and Monahans, Texas. This is a place that I first visited briefly in the 1980s, while on a business trip in the area.
I arrive at the Sandhills about mid-afternoon on a Saturday, where I had reservations in the RV camping area for two nights. My campsite turned out to be in an advantageous site, adjacent to a dune that helped block the prevailing winds. It had been very windy here just a few days prior, which is good, since the wind erases the surface disturbances created by visitors to the dunes. However, I was there during a weekend, so I expected to have to work around the weekend visitors and their tracks in the sand dunes.
The park was fairly busy, as I expected, but the nightly winds helped mute the daily human disturbance of the sand dune surfaces. Initially, I was not impressed by the photographic possibilities in the dunes and many of my photos lived up to those low expectations. However, in the end I think I managed to get a few descent photos. I will let the readers judge the results for themselves and maybe provide some feedback on the posted photos.
It was rather cloudy, especially the first day at sunset, so the late day light was intermittent and not as good as one would have liked for landscape photography. The clouds added drama to the sky, but I never got the brilliantly lit or colorful clouds that I had looked forward to.
It was a bit of a challenge to find large areas of undisturbed sand, but as you can see in the above photo, I managed to find a few such areas. Although, there are muted footprints in the sand in the upper left side of the photo. In the previous photo, there are muted footprints evident in the right portion of the photo. I do not think these are so strongly apparent as to distract from the natural appearance of the sand.
The two trees in this photo are weather beaten and scraggly, but I like the glow in the sand at their base and the alternating dark to light in the sand ripples leading from the base of the photo to the trees. This originally started out as a wider landscape view, but there were distracting elements on the right hand side, so I cropped the photo to remove the distraction.
This sunset photo was taken at the end of my first day in the sandhills. There are notable human infrastructure item along the horizon, some of which I removed or muted via editing, but I could never get all of those features removed without leaving unattractive artifacts, so I left most of them in the photo. These are only visible and distracting, when one enlarges the photo.
This is enough for this post. I will continue with more photos from the sandhills in the next post.
I’ve just returned from a two weeks road trip and, as usual, after such trips there is much to do before I can get around to reviewing the photos taken during such trips. Added onto the usual catching up with items around the house, I’ve had to work to correct some software issues, at least some of which I created myself due to the way I decided to use a portable hard drive for Lightroom photos and the Lightroom catalog, so that I can work from both laptop and desktop computers.
In addition, I decided to upgrade my old Nik software, which has not been supported for some time now, to the new DXO Nik version. The software installed and ran on my MacBook Pro, but it did not want to run properly on my iMac. It took quite a bit of work over a couple of days to sort this out. In the end, I’m not sure what action(s) actually cured the problem, but at least now it is operational. In the process I learned how to remove the links to the old Nik versions from Lightroom. One would think this would be an easy, straight forward task, but no search of Adobe’s Help yielded any results on this topic, nor was DXO support completely helpful. Finally, I got suggestions from the Adobe community forum, none of which related directly to my installation, but at least got me onto the right track, allowing me to find and remove the problem files.
So now back to the subject of this post. Experienced landscape photographers need not read any more of this post, since I’m not revealing anything new here. However, beginners or novice landscape photographers might benefit from information shared here.
Light is the essence of photography. It is light that allows one to make photographs and the properties of light affect the resulting photographs. Readers may have heard the term “Golden Hour Light”, used by landscape photographers. This term refers to natural light just as the sun is rising or setting. At these times, when the sun is low in the sky, sunlight has to travel through more of the earth’s atmosphere, which favors the transmission of the warmer colors, filtering out the cooler colors. It is the “warmer light” that really bring to life objects illuminated by such light.
In this post I am showing an example of a scene shot with only the beginnings of this light and one with much more of this golden hour light.
The photo above, while lacking in great depth of field, shows the effect of muted late day light. It was a cloudy day and only a little golden hour light is getting through the cloud cover. This photo is taken looking north with the sunlight coming from the west. This is referred to as sidelight and is good for casting shadows, adding depth to a 2 dimensional photo. Note that there is only a sliver of brighter light going diagonally from the lower left corner towards the upper right and there are minimal shadows, but at least the light alternates in a repeating cycle from dark to light across the photograph. The overall tone is dark. Compare this to the photo below, taken just moments later.
The cloud cover is still muting the light in the second photo, but it is obviously much brighter and warmer with stronger shadows. The original image files for each of these final images are raw camera files with adjustments in Adobe Lightroom and Nik software. I’ve applied essentially the same edits to both photos. The difference the light properties make in these images is obvious. The second image “pops” much more than the first image.
As a side note, there is a photo shoot within these photos, which I did not fully realize, until enlarging these images during the processing. In the first photo, near the upper center in the sand just below the sky there are three figures, one female on the left in a red dress and two males to her right. At the time I took the photo, I just noted that there were three people walking in the background. While processing the second photo, I noted these same three people now grouped together just below the skyline on the left side of the photo. The enlargement shows a lighting umbrella device on a tripod, hence the conclusion that this is a photo shoot of the female in the red dress. These figures are only clearly visible (but not in sharp focus), if one enlarges the photo.
That is all for this post. I will have much more to share from this trip in subsequent posts.
This post goes back a few years and some of you may have heard this story before. My first visit to Big Bend National Park remains one of the most memorable, though unsuccessful, trips that I have taken, so I’m revisiting it here, since I will not have anything new to blog about for awhile.
This trip to Big Bend was supposed to cover a total of 10 days (Dec 30 – Jan 8), two for travel and the rest in the park; but our plans went considerably awry due to circumstances beyond our control. It was a bit like those comedy vacation movies you have probably all seen.
This is a bit of a long story, so I apologize in advance and will understand, if you elect not to read all the details.
When we (myself and three of my four sons) planned the trip, there were no available rooms in the lodge in the park until Jan 4; but we were able to get lodging in Terlinqua Dec. 30 to Jan 4 and the park lodge from Jan 4 until Jan 8.
A winter storm was forecast for the initial day of our trip and we drove through rain, freezing weather, sleet and snow showers on the way to Terlingua. Ice accumulated on the vehicle and windshield, but the roadways did not ice over during our journey. Fortunately, we got into Terlingua, prior to the really bad freezing rain and icy road conditions over most of southwest Texas that day and night.
For the best photography, we wanted good early morning and late day light. Instead, we got heavily overcast skies for most of our useable time there. Consequently, we spent the first day Dec. 31, driving around the park and checking out the area in general. We did hike about .8 miles into Santa Elena Canyon and hoped to come back when the weather cleared. I made a few shots in the canyon, but they were just blah.
The evening of Dec. 31, we had dinner in a local restaurant/bar and watched a football bowl game (Oregon beat Florida State to our enjoyment). When we got in our vehicle, after dinner, (a 2014 Nissan Rogue, that one of my sons, who was supposed to go with us, but backed out due to his business considerations, had let us use), we had low air pressure indications in one tire. The tires were run flat, so there was no spare. We had sufficient air to drive the short distance back to the motel. The next morning (Jan 1) the tire was completely flat. We were able to inflate the tire, using our little air compressor and we could drive the vehicle; but we were afraid to get far away from the motel for fear of getting stranded somewhere and no way to call for help (there is very scant and weak cell phone coverage in the area). Being New Years Day, there was no way to get the tire repaired that day and there was only one place in Terlingua to fix the tire. I was at that place before it opened the morning of Jan 2 and got the tire repaired; although they could not reset the low tire indicator.
While we were considering our options for that day, the power went out, due to a truck reportedly taking out numerous power poles somewhere to the north of us. The local motel restaurant/gas station employed a large portable generator to continue operating, so we could at least eat; but since the roads were iced over north of us, no gasoline deliveries were being made. The one and only gas station in Terlingua at our motel ran out of gas. We were able to get gas at one of the two stations in the park that had a generator, shortly before it ran out of gas. Some portions of the roads in the park were icy, requiring great care driving on them.
It is a long drive into and out of the park, so by the time we got back to our lodging in Terlingua, our gas level was down a bit. We heard there was gas at a small store in Lajitas, 17 miles from Terlingua, so we drove over there to top off our tank, arriving there just before the store closed. They were also running out of gas; but we were able to top off our tank.
With gasoline in short supply and uncertainty on when delivery of additional supplies would resume, we were reluctant to get out and about. So we hung around our lodging, hoping to get updates on road conditions, fuel deliveries and weighing our options.
{I had purchased the last 8-D cell Coleman lantern with detachable, rechargeable lights on it and batteries in the motel store, so we had light for our room. The detachable LED lights’ batteries were charged via the 8 D cell batteries, so we could detach one ofthose smaller lights to take into the bathroom. I now take this lantern with me in the Sportsmobile, just in case I need it, and maintain its batteries here in case of a power outage in our home}.
On Saturday, Jan 3, our motel was running out of water, due to no power for the well pump. The motel managers were asking all that had enough gas to get to Alpine to leave. The local cell phone tower was out and the local phone lines did not work, so no one could call anywhere to check on anything. We decided to go to the park lodge and check on conditions there. We had already been there on our trip into the park to get gas and knew they had no power; but we did not know what their water situation was. The park lodge had rooms available, due to cancellations, and they had water (and hot water), so we decided to stay there.
{An aside about the hot water system in the park lodge: Before we decided to stay, I asked at the lodge check in desk about hot water for showers. No one there had any idea about what kind of water heating system they had or whether they even had hot water. They said they would find out, but we decided to stay anyway, not having any other good choice, other than to drive somewhere else. We never got an answer to our question from the front desk, but we had hot water, so apparently they had gas water heaters}.
The lodge restaurant had no power, were not getting food deliveries due to road conditions, but they were operating with a reduced menu, so we were able to eat.
There is a trail from the lodge area that follows a drainage down to a place referred to as “The Window”, where there is a drop off into the valley below and a view through the canyon window of the valley. We only ventured a short distance along that trail, shooting a few moon light photos that night.
The next day, Sunday, Jan. 4, the report had not changed. No one really knew when gasoline would arrive and power was not expected to be restored until Tuesday. We might have been able to do a bit in a limited area around the lodge; but we were reluctant to use our gasoline to get around in the park, so we decided that since we had more than enough gas to get to Fort Stockton, that it was worth the risk to try to make it there. We did not really know what the conditions were in Fort Stockton. We had heard mixed reports about power, gasoline availability and road conditions.
We passed through Marathon, which had no power and hence no gasoline. We passed several stations in Fort Stockton that had no gas, began to worry, but we found a convenience store station with gas. We filled up and were on our way, thinking we would be back in Rockwall that day.
A few miles (about 30, I think) north of Fort Stockton on route 18, as I was driving, the auto engine died. I coasted off of the roadway and tried to restart the engine with no success. My older son, who had pumped the gas, began to worry that he might have put the wrong gasoline or even diesel in the engine. Fortunately, we had cell service (earlier portions of this road did not) so I called AAA and learned that the nearest place they could find that had an auto shop that could service our vehicle was in Midland/Odessa, 60+ miles away and the nearest tow services they had were also in Midland/Odessa. Since there was a Nissan dealer in Odessa, I arranged to have the vehicle towed there. I was also able to find a motel a couple of blocks down the street from the dealer and was able to get a room reserved there. There were three of us and normally, the tow trucks have room for only two passengers; but AAA checked with the tow service and they said they could accommodate all of us, since we did not have a child seat to deal with.
The tow truck arrived a couple of hours after the initial call to AAA. Needless, to say the front seat of the tow truck was a bit crowded with the driver plus the three of us. I let the kids use the two available passenger seat belts and I sat forward on the edge of the seat with no seat belt, leaning on the dash. The driver told us to not bother with the seat belts, saying “We never use those”, and he was not using one. He was also doing paper work, texting and other things while driving. My older son later told me he was sure we were going to die in that truck.
As we neared Odessa, my phone buzzed. I check it and had a recorded message from the reservation system for the lodge in Big Bend, informing me they were canceling my reservation due to weather conditions, lack of power, etc. No doubt that message had gone out to my phone, when I had no service and I was receiving it much too late, when it no longer mattered.
The tow truck driver stopped by the motel and let us unload our luggage, then I rode with the driver to the dealership. Due to ice on the drive in front of the service entrance, it was a chore to unload the vehicle and I had to help the driver work the vehicle off of the flatbed. Of course, being Sunday the dealership was not open. I filled out the drop off form, etc. I had planned to walk back to the motel; but the tow truck driver was going back that way, so he dropped me off.
We walked a few blocks from the motel to a bar/restaurant, had a late lunch and watched an NFL playoff game. Back at the motel, we settled in for the night. I began to have the initial indications of getting a cold that Sunday afternoon; but I initially though it was just a dry cough from the cold weather. The cough and sinus drainage was enough that I had considerable trouble sleeping. My two kids like it quite, when they sleep and were using ear plugs. My older son likes it dark, so he was wearing an eye mask, too.
Sometime between 11:00PM and midnight, the room entry way light came on. Turning over, I saw someone in a dark coat leaving the room. I could see one son still in bed, so I though my older son might have gone to the lobby for a snack or something to drink. I lay in bed for a few minutes, but being a little concerned, I got up, went to the bathroom and sipped warm water to sooth my throat. When I came out, I saw that both of my sons were still sleeping. I thought maybe the older one had come back, while I was in the bathroom. I noted that the safety latch on the door was not closed, so I closed it. Just to be sure, I looked around and did not see anything missing (we had a considerable quantity of camera gear about the room). I turned out the light and went back to bed. Shortly afterwards the room phone rang, waking the two kids. I fumbled in the dark for the phone; but did not get to it in time. Since the kids were awake, I told them what I had seen. They were sure that I had dreamed it and were sure the light had not come on, until I turned it on after the phone range. The phone rang again as we were talking and it was the front desk, apologizing for calling, but asking if there were any belonging in the room when we moved in. I told them there weren’t anyone else’s belonging in the room and I reported that someone had just been in my room. They confirmed that, telling me that someone from the electric power transmission repair company had been checked into our room. I did not really understand how this was possible and did not get more details until the next morning.
I stopped at the front desk before I went out to the Nissan dealership early Monday morning. The night person who had called in the middle of the night was still there and was briefing the day shift about what had happened. Apparently, the Oncor repair person had a room there with his belonging in it and was beingreassigned to another room, where his belongings were to be moved. Apparently, he had been given our room number by the crew changing his room assignment, then we were given that room, when we checked in. The day shift did not pass the correct information to the night shift, which had no clue into which room his belonging had been moved and apparently took his word for the room that he was to be assigned to, not checking to see that that room was already taken. When the Oncor person came in, he was given new key cards to our room, which wiped out our key cards. I got new keys while at the desk. I, also, explained our situation to the front desk people, telling them that we might need the room for a few days. I was assured that that was not a problem.
I walked to the Nissan dealership to be there at opening time, to find that it was still locked up and no one around. I stood outside in the cold, until someone finally showed up late to open the dealership. I got to, at least, talk to the master technician, who opened the place, about the vehicle symptoms and, explaining our situation, asked that he expedite the repair, if possible. I asked that he call me as soon as possible after the diagnosis, since we needed to make a decision about our motel situation. Getting no call prior to the motel check out time, I called and was informed that the fuel pump was the culprit and they would have to order it; but at least the part was covered under the warranty. They thought they might get it on Tuesday; but were not sure, because of the weather issues. At least we had a place to stay that night.
An hour before check out time on Tuesday morning, I began calling the Nissan dealership to get an update. I had to leave a message with the phone receptionist, who promised a call back. Thirty minutes later, having received no return call, I called again, was put on hold and after more than 10 minutes on hold, I hung up and called again. It took several renditions to finally get to talk to someone, who knew anything. The fuel pump had arrived and the best we could get out of them was that the repair would be completed by 6pm. Just to be sure, that we would still have a room that night, I called the front desk to make sure our stay was still extended. The very same person who told me that he would extend the room for three days, told me they had no capacity for extending our stay. They, at least, agreed to call around to help us find another room. There were other motels very nearby, but none of those had rooms available. We walked to the dealership to try to get a better idea of when the vehicle would actually be ready and learned it would be ready around 3pm. So we decided that was early enough to safely (we were still concerned about road icing late at night) drive home that day.
To end of a long story, we made it back home safely around 9:45PM.
We did see much of the park from the roadways. There was one stretch of the basin road with heavy frost cover, from the mist hanging over it, that was absolutely beautiful.
Please remember to always fasten the safety latch on your public lodging room.
But wait, there is more. Some weeks later, prior to going on another trip, I could not find my Nikon 24-70mm lens. I knew I had loaned it to one of my sons and I knew he had returned it. I thought maybe I had loaned it to another one, but they all confirmed that they did not have the lens. I thought that it might turn up somewhere. Months went by and I had not found it. Finally, resolved to having lost the lens, I purchased the newer version of that lens, which cost $1000 more than the one that I lost and which I had only purchased less than two year prior. A few weeks later, I was informed by the son whose vehicle we had used for the Big Bend trip, that he had found my lens in an inconspicuous place in his vehicle! (He had checked his vehicle for the lens, after I reported it missing and not found it). Now having two Nikon 24-70mm lens, I gifted the older one to one of my sons, who also shoots with Nikon cameras. So at least he got a positive outcome to this trip. (His manager, overhearing him tell a colleague about this trip, told him “I’m giving you your vacation days back”).