Prepare ye for brilliance.

When I went into the basin Saturday evening, this was the view to the northwest beyond Spring Creek Basin, its namesake canyon and lower Disappointment Valley. You can just see eastern Utah’s northern La Sal Mountains at the right edge of the vast curtain of storm-rain.

This pic, with its sage-covered foreground, semi-jagged horizon and gorgeous-glorious sky with angel rays above an isolated downpour of distant rain, illustrates *The West* to me.

Fast forward a couple of hours, and this was developing above our southeastern horizon: end of Valentine Mesa, Temple Butte, McKenna Peak, the crowns of submarine ridge and Brumley Point over Knife Edge, The Glade in the far distance (hi, Rick!) beyond Round Top and Flat Top.

At the same time as above, this was the view to the west. I thought we were going to get last light through that window to the right of the sun, but the clouds had other ideas.

While my very long lens is perfect for capturing pix of the mustangs, not even my wide-angle lens (if I’d had it along) is wide enough for this amazing view of Storm’s band under the, uh, storm clouds (he WAS born under a storm!).

The light on those clouds – and the very far ridges (bottom center between submarine ridge and Brumley Point) – with that narrow band of dark, dark blue (that’s rain away off yonder) … WOW. And just right of very bottom center is a young wild pony who recently left his family and is usually with a calm elder-ish bachelor but this evening was having fun (between peaceful-grazing energy-restoration periods) creating havoc among a few other widespread bands.

Storm at right heading back to his band after leaving a deposit on a stud pile on the road (where I am … really needing to leave as dark approaches but unwilling to leave the gorgeousity).

Other than sharpening, this pic is exactly as it came out of my phone’s most-excellent camera (how DID we survive without cameras in our phones that we can take to the wildest places on Earth?! I won’t be without my camera-cameras … but I do love my phone’s camera for the wide, wild shots). Nerd info: The other pix also had some shadow-lightening applied (with sharpening) to better see the horses in the foreground, but that’s it. WHO NEEDS AI when you have this kind of light happening right in front of you????
It’s straight-up magic, folks. Ma Nature is kind of a genius. 🙂 All I do is point and click. And share. 🙂
We didn’t get rain out of either of those storms … but we got *divine* and very fabulous rain Sunday morning!
(Thanks to Harry Potter for this post’s title/quote!)
That’s the word, TJ – “gorgeousity.” What a beautiful evening in that beautiful place. God’s creative genius on display captured by your “alternate” camera. Thank you for sharing this incredible late-day scenery with us! 🥰
Gorgeousity is the best word – real or not! 🙂 As you might imagine, I use it all the time.
So very, very beautiful! Love all the pictures! Glad you got some rain!
We got crazy-good rain Sunday! Spring Creek ran like a RIVER again!
Glorious photos indeed! I have similar photos that I have taken on my walks. On those days it always takes me longer to return home. 🙂 My walking turns into just standing and taking the beauty all in.
Walking into these gorgeous views – how lucky are we?! Are your walks during sunrises or sunsets? I admit I’ve never been a morning person, so I’m glad the skies get painted in the evenings, too. 🙂
I’m a morning person. Sunrise photos on my long walks. I do walk the property during sunsets with the dog and they can be just as beautiful.
Glorious! ❤️
Yes, it most definitely was. 🙂
I love the sky. 💙 These are beautiful shots.
Right?! The sky and our planet; can’t live without ’em. 🙂