Spring 2019 Road Trip – Bisti – Day 6 Scouting Near the South Parking Area

After returning from scouting the north area and having a late lunch, I decided to kill some time, while waiting until time to go out for sunset photos by walking around in the area just across the road, west of the south parking area.  Usually, I only went a very short distance into this area to climb a hill to get a cell signal.

This area, as far as I know is not a part of the designated Bisti Wilderness and is probably on Navaho land, but it might also be BLM land.

Day 6 March2019 Scout @ South Bisti Across Road from Parking Area
South Bisti area scouting photo. iPhone photo, edited in Adobe Lightroom and DXO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

Just into this area, I spotted this small arch with a view through it into the parking area.  The red blob within the arch opening is my Sportsmobile.

Day 6 March2019 Scout @ South Bisti Across Road from Parking Area
South Bisti area scouting photo. iPhone photo, edited in Adobe Lightroom and DXO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

This photo is a close up of the arch with the parking lot visible through it.

Day 6 March2019 Scout @ South Bisti Across Road from Parking Area
South Bisti area scouting photo. iPhone photo, edited in Adobe Lightroom and DXO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

A really close up shot through the arch in which my red Sportsmobile is visible near the center.

Day 6 March2019 Scout @ South Bisti Across Road from Parking Area
Red capped hoodoos in a wash iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

Continuing through the wash behind the arch, I found these small red capped hoodoos in the wash.

Day 6 March2019 Scout @ South Bisti Across Road from Parking Area
This automobile carcass is on a hill side bordering a wash. It must have gotten here via a flash flood. iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

A little further down the wash, I found this upside down automobile body on a hill bordering the wash.   I wondered how this got here, since there is no road, not even a reasonable way to drive into here to dump a wrecked vehicle.  Then I realized that it must have been deposited here by a flash flood.

Day 6 March2019 Scout @ South Bisti Across Road from Parking Area
This must have been deposited here via a flash flood. iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

This view from the opposite side gives a better context for its location.

Hiking through this wash I encountered more automobile parts, which may have come from this vehicle.  One such part is in the photo below.

Day 6 March2019 Scout @ South Bisti Across Road from Parking Area
Deposited here via flash flood(?) iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.
Day 6 March2019 Scout @ South Bisti Across Road from Parking Area
The dark rock chips scattered over much of Bisti come from this dark layer of rock. iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

The dark layer in the side of this hill is the geological deposition from which all the dark rock fragments scattered all around Bisti are derived.

Day 6 March2019 Scout @ South Bisti Across Road from Parking Area
Dark rock layer weathering creates horseshoe pattern on a hillside iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

I saw the horseshoe like features on this hill side from a distance and they looked like a strange geological feature, so walked closer to investigate.  This photo clearly shows that there are exposed portions of the dark rock layer that are weathering.  The loose rock fragments are then washed downhill creating this geometric feature.

Day 6 March2019 Scout @ South Bisti Across Road from Parking Area
The many red rocks scattered across Bisti come from this red rock layer. iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

The red rock layer above is probably the source of all the red rocks scattered all around Bisti.  This is the only place that I consciously have observed this rock layer still contained within other layers of rock.  I frequently see it as caps over the underlying layers, where the overlying layers have already eroded away.

The geological observations and/or conclusions/conjectures here are my own and not necessarily academically robust.

Day 6 March2019 Scout @ South Bisti Across Road from Parking Area
Clothes dryer shell. Deposited here via flash flood (?) iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

A hoodoo on the wash wall with a clothes dryer visible in the wash in the lower left of the photo.  I’m guessing that this clothes dryer shell also got here via a flash flood.

Day 6 March2019 Scout @ South Bisti Across Road from Parking Area
Deposited here by flash flood (?)  iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

And a roll away bed frame that probably got here via a flash flood, too.  I suppose it is possible that some of these type items might have been intentionally dumped into a wash somewhere, then got moved around via flash flooding.

Day 6 March2019 Scout @ South Bisti Across Road from Parking Area
The water here is either rich in minerals or dissolves minerals as it flows over the terrain, later dropping out of solution as the water evaporates. iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

Walking back towards the parking area, I looked more carefully around the drainage flowing out of Bisti into the area across the road.  It is apparent that there are salts or other minerals in the water that drop out along the stream as the water floods over the land, then evaporates.  This area is very soft and it is not advisable to walk into it.

Day 6 March2019 Scout @ South Bisti Across Road from Parking Area
Abstract art form in mud along a shallow stream bed.  iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

The stream creates abstract art like patterns in the mud,  some outlined with colorful mineral deposits.

Day 6 March2019 Scout @ South Bisti Across Road from Parking Area
Abstract patterns in mud in a shallow stream bottom.  iPhone photo, edited in Adobe LR and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

The above mud pattern makes a really nice abstract photo.

This has gotten into a much longer post than I intended.  I hope you have not been too bored by it.

Ken

Spring 2019 Road Trip – Bisti – Day 2 – Sunset

{Readers might note that this post is out of chronological order.  Apparently, I overlooked the draft of this post as I was publishing my blogs}.

My oldest son arrived in Bisti during the afternoon of my second day there.  We decided to go to the place that I had scouted the previous afternoon for sunset photography.

It was another very cloudy day near sunset as we arrived at our destination and began preliminary shooting and picking our spots for sunset shots.

Muted colors previous to sunset in Bisti Wilderness. Nikon D850, Nikon 24-70mm at 70mm, f/11, 1/40s, ISO 64. Edited in Adobe Lightroom and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

Adobe Lightroom now has a new Texture adjustment that I discovered while editing this photo.  I probably pushed it too much in this photo, but I wanted to experiment with this new toy.

The tall feature in the upper right is a good navigation item here.  It can be seen from far away and from various directions.

A photographer getting a sunset shot in Bisti Wilderness. Nikon D850, Nikon 24-70mm at 24mm, f/11, 0.4mm, ISO 64. Edited in Adobe Lightroom and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

My oldest son is standing on the slope that I scouted the previous afternoon.  Some late day light is apparent at the fringes of the rocks; but the cloud cover is making it brief and muted.

Cloudy, muted sunset light on Bisti Hoodoos and Bluffs. Nikon D850, Nikon 24-70mm at 32mm, f/11, 1/3s, ISO 64. Edited in Adobe Lightroom and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

My shot from the slope, where my son was standing in the previous photo.  Note the cloudy sky.  There is golden hour light, but it is not as brilliant as one would like to see.

With such intermittant light it is always difficult to know what to do or where to be for the best photographic opportunity.  One can be patient and stick to one place or move around, looking for other compositions.  It is probably best to pick one composition and wait patiently.  Sometimes I have patience, sometimes I don’t.

Sunset highlights on Bisti Wilderness features. Nikon D850, Nikon 24-70mm at 24mm, f/11, 1/3s, ISO 64. Edited in Adobe Lightroom and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

Even with brief and muted light, I like the image above with the contrasting highlights and dark shadows.  I’ve used the alignment of the rocks and hoodoos as a leading line into the photo.  This line also intersects with the line formed by the big hill in the upper center of the photo, which then leads the eyes to the sunset sky.

A cloudy, sunset silhouette in Bisti Wilderness. Nikon D850, Nikon 24-70mm at 36mm, f/11, 1/50s, ISO 64. Edited in Adobe Lightroom and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

A cloudy sky can make for dramatic sunset silhouettes.

A sunset silhouette taken from atop a hill in Bisti Wilderness. Nikon D850, Nikon 24-70mm at 70mm, f/11, 0.4s, ISO 64. Edited in Adobe Lightroom and DxO Nik Color Efex Pro 4.

Another sunset silhouette with colorful, striated clouds.  This image is cropped from a much larger image, most of which was just dark shadow in the foreground.  Details in the shadows could have been brought out via editing, but there was really not anything there to add interest.

And that is it for this sunset shoot.

Ken