Rimrock lady

21 11 2024

The warm days are definitely at an end. This day, even without a breeze, was nippy. The horses have pretty good coats and are ready for winter – and still eating last season’s grasses. 🙂





Napping while handsome

20 11 2024

Flash perks up from his nap long enough to give me a handsome look. He has two of Storm’s mares, so at least they’re together.





Pretty in gold

19 11 2024

Cassidy Rain, catching up with the band, racing the setting sun.





Classic profiles

18 11 2024

Juniper is sporting her own unique braids these days.

There’s been a shakeup. Storm is no longer with any of his mares, and the mares are split into two groups, each headed by a young stallion. I don’t know where Storm is, but I hope he’s OK.





All of a hue

17 11 2024

The warm tones of this near-sunset pic of Odin and a bandmate invoke thoughts of summer, but summer is past … and summer is another year away. The snow may have melted, but the horses (and I) were slipping and sliding through still-messy mud this day, a couple of days ago, in Spring Creek Basin. I love this long-lasting moisture.





Morning delight

16 11 2024

Third rifle season finally is over in Colorado.

I think it’s not an understatement or anthropomorphism to say that I and the animals (of all species) are in a state of relief. Interestingly, I think the hordes were fewer this year, and while I think most were well-behaved (and I met and talked to a few very nice individual hunters – including a very friendly young man from Oregon), there was at least one instance (relayed to me by a hunter who witnessed it from quite a distance and up a ridge away) of shooting from the road (totally illegal), possibly after the 30-minutes-after-sunset rule, onto private property (which may or may not have been properly noted as such on their OnX map apps).

I witnessed at least two hunters leaving their camp well past 30 minutes after sunset to go … somewhere? And when starting to head out of the basin one night after sunset, from deep-east in the basin, was passed by two hunters going even DEEPER into the basin. Flouting the rules?! Draw your own conclusion.

The horses have been nervous to the rifle shots and accompanying echoes, which caused everything from startling in place to taking off running en masse.

Relief? Huge.

There’s still fourth season, which starts Wednesday and runs through Sunday (blessedly short), but we rarely get hunters during that season – and not the camping-here, driving-up-and-down-the-road-from-5:14 a.m.-to-well-after-dark (I lose track) hunters that third season is (in)famous for hosting.

Early Friday morning, I saw subtle color in the scudding clouds in the southeastern sky and decided to see what was happening (let alone keep an eye out for any nefariousness). … That subtle color had faded to grey by the time I got out on the road. … But then … starting with just a couple of bands of flame above the horizon … THE LIGHT EXPLODED.

And behind me to the west:

There was quite a lot of distortion as the moon sank – quite unlike the sharp views when it rises? – but take my word for the marvelousity (kinda like gorgeousity – all phenomenal!).

My big camera and long lens simply can’t take it all in, so I switched to my phone. In the foreground is Disappointment Road heading southeast. Visible in the distance are Temple Butte and Brumley Point.

Presented in the order in which they were taken. I know they all look similar … but the sky went from spectacular to SPECTACULAR, and show me a photographer who can *stop* taking pix of a such a scene (you can’t, and we certainly can’t).

Bear with me (because you know there’s more).

Continuing in order … looking a bit more to the east (left). I laid down in the middle of the road to take this one, something I’d never have done at the height of the hunting season.

Meanwhile, what was happening behind me, where the moon had already set?

More gorgeousity! Looking northwest to Utah’s La Sal Mountains.

Back to the southeast … starting to see a different color hue as the Earth continued its rotation and the sun edged closer to its morning debut.

Clouds and light and land to the southwest, where the moon set before the colors took off (darnit!).

One more of our beloved horizon mountains.

Apologies to sailors for swapping words to the usual rhyme. 🙂 (Not really.) It WAS very windy, which I imagine wouldn’t be so fun if you had to row against it or sail with it propelling you away from your destination. But wow. I hope many, many photography-minded and beauty-loving people stopped what they were doing and admired the sunrise yesterday.





Super special

15 11 2024

Lovely lady Rowan, glowing gold under the rising, almost-full beaver supermoon.

The gorgeousity of the natural world comes in SO many different forms. Some obvious and spectacular; some subtle and stunning.

In Spring Creek Basin, we’re blessed to have gorgeousity in all directions … and even in the great vault of heaven over Earth.

Tonight is actually the full moon; the pic was taken last night, and the sky was clear blue and pink alpenglow pastels within probably about half an hour after I first spotted the curve of it rising over the northeastern basin horizon. It always ends up looking black in the images because the moon is SO bright and beautiful.

Get out and enjoy it. 🙂





One of those moments

14 11 2024

Winona gave me just a minute or so in that soft light before she dropped out of sight with her band. I walked out to them, but they were low, which didn’t allow the highlighting of the very lovely light on the basin’s icons to the east. So I left them to their grazing and trudged back up the still-very-muddy hill … with a bit more of a spring in my step.





Snow queen

13 11 2024

It’s hard to beat any pic of Terra, in any light … but especially in snowlight!





Comfort food

12 11 2024

Speaking of big babies … Odin is still dependent on mama Shane (or so he probably likes to think … and she seems content to let him continue to think). 🙂

(Reminder: All that snow is gone now, currently.)