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Showing posts from June, 2020

Olympic NP Vacation Day 5: Deterred by Mud

Today we slept in till 6:30 AM, I know we really slept in a lot, but still made it to breakfast.   Today we tried the pancakes.   The pancakes were not anything special, just normal pancakes; however, Jim noted we are very close to Canada but can’t be supplied with real maple syrup.   After breakfast we headed up the South Shore Road to a couple of waterfalls, so I could take some pictures of the them using my tripod so I could get that nice fluffy water.    The first one was a short .3-mile hike to a bridge overlooking the falls.   Sadly, this bridge was in the wrong spot, because the larger falls was further down the stream and you could not get a good view of it.   So, I had to settle for the smaller falls.   I took a couple of pictures of it from the bridge, then climbed down to the water level to get a better picture of it.   After taking some pictures at streambed level we climbed back up to the trail and headed back to the car to move ...

Olympic NP Vacation Day 4: Lots of Driving, Little Hiking

View from Hurricane Ridge Today we got up at a bit before 6:00 AM to start our journey out to Hurricane Ridge.  It takes three hours to drive from Hurricane Ridge from Quinault, so we wanted to make sure we got an early start.  Leaving at 6:30 AM resulted in us skipping the lodge breakfast, they start serving at 7:30 AM, and pulling off at Ruby Beach to eat a breakfast MRE.  The breakfast MRE was hash browns and bacon with a toaster pastry, crackers, apple sauce, and jam.  After our breakfast we continued up 101 to Hurricane Ridge which took us past Crescent Lake to Port Angles the into the national park.   This particular entrance to Olympic NP does it right, by having a small parking area for people to pull off into, so they can then get out of their cars to take a picture in front of the national park sign.  Then right after that small parking lot is the entrance to the first visitor center.  The visitor centers are only partially open, in ...

Olympic NP Vacation Day 3: To the Bridge and a Rusty Truck

Today we got up around 6:00AM and had breakfast at the lodge.   We split the logger breakfast which includes three eggs, two strips of bacon, potato cubes, and a biscuit with jelly.   It is a good size for us to split and not be hungry afterwards.    After we finished breakfast, we got in the car to drive up South Shore Road to the Pony Bridge and Enchanted Valley trail head.    On the way out we stopped to see the Big Sitka Tree, which is large in diameter while also very tall. After viewing the Sitka Tree, we continued along South Shore Road stopping at Merriman Falls and then at Bunch Falls.   It should be noted that 10 miles of the drive was on a very curvy single lane gravel road, which the Chrysler 300 handled reasonably well.   The hike to Pony Bridge is considered a moderate 2.5-mile hike (one-way) with an elevation change of about 700ft.   We decided we were not going to do the full 13-miles (one-way) out to Enchanted Valley. ...

Olympic NP Day 2: Rialto Beach and the Rain Forest

Rialto Beach Sea Stacks Today we got up around 6:00 AM and took our time getting ready and had breakfast at the lodge.   After breakfast we made the 2 hour drive up to Rialto Beach, to see the sea stacks and a feature called the “hole in the wall”.   The drive up to Rialto was not exciting, but it did require a drive through the town of Forks.   This is the same town that the “Twilight” books and movies were set. In the town there is a store dedicated to Twilight. Rialto beach is a mix of sand and rocks, the upper portion of the beach was rocky while closer to the water was sandy.   The day was very cloudy, and the beach had a decent sea mist blowing across it which made the beach feel kind of moody.   The walk out to the “hole in the wall” can only be accomplished during low tide and about two miles long (one way) on a relatively flat beach. We got there at 10:30 with max low tide at noon, so we had plenty of time to walk the wall and back.   Along the wal...

Olympic NP Vacation Day 1: Early Morning Hike and the Beach

Early morning overlooking the lake After a good night sleep, we woke up around 5:00AM PST, but the lodge doesn’t start serving breakfast till 7:30 AM PST so we went for an early morning hike near the lodge.  Our first hike was 1.6 miles in the wood across from the lodge. It started out flat then started a climb upward, we heard a couple waterfall along the path but there were not good viewing locations along the trail to get pictures of the falls. The whole hike took us about hour and half to complete.  After splitting breakfast, which was eggs, bacon, potatoes, and a biscuit, we did a second hike.  The second hike was 3.5 miles long.  This hike took us along lake Quinault, over to the Rain Forest Loop, through the Cedar Bog, and back down to the lodge. This was an up and down trail with a few even spots. These trails are not for those who cannot handle hills and are considered a moderate level hikes.    We started the trail around 8:00AM and got back ...

Olympic NP Vacation Day 0: Travel in a Pandemic

View from our balcony at 7:30PM PST Our vacation started at 3:00AM EST time when we got up to go to the Columbus Airport for our 6:45AM EST flight to Detroit.   Originally, we were scheduled to fly Columbus to LA to Seattle, which would have put us in Washington state around 1:00PM PST.   However, due to COVID-19 and Delta reducing the occupancy levels on planes our itinerary changed.   So, we flew Columbus to Detroit to LA to Settle, which put us in Washington state at 3:00 PM PST.    Once we arrived in Seattle, we had a three hour drive out to Quinault Lodge in Olympic National Park.     We didn’t check into the lodge till about 7:00PM PST and got to bed around 9:00 PM PST.   So, our travel day lasted about 18 hours, needless to say the travel day was exhausting. A few notes about air travel in a pandemic, it is not scary it is fairly normal except for a few minor changes.   First off you must wear a mask the whole time, from the time you...

The Box

Last weekend I did a conceptual boudoir shoot with two new models, Hayley and Barbie.   The base idea of the shoot was to place the model in a plexiglass box, and fill the box with either ball-pit balls or flowers and tulle.   This concept was based on work done by @kimberly , on Instagram, where she filled a plexiglass box full of roses and posed inside the box.   This was not an easy shoot for the model, because they only had 16 cubic feet to work in, which is rather tight quarters.   I tested the box and set up before the shoot to determine were there might be issues,   besides it being tight quarters, it does get warm inside the box even with it having no top.   Thus, during the shoot, I made sure to ask if the models were doing ok and taking a break if needed. For this shoot I used: Canon 80D 2 Phottix strobes 2 Phottix rectangular soft boxes with a grid Soft white backdrop 4 Plexiglass panels (2-feet x 4-feet) to make the box Clear packing tape to h...