“Remember the dreams you had as a child and realize it’s never too late to make them come true.” ~ Constance A. DeFlitch

Via Flickr:
Copyright © 2011 Deborah M. Zajac. All Rights Reserved.

I got to spend a full day with my friend Big Jay while in Montana. I had read about a Mission in St. Ignatius,MT and wanted to go tour it . Fortunately he was game. While in St. Ignatius we spotted this Barn and pulled over to shoot it.
I was busy photographing it when a young man drove up to the gate and unlocked it to let himself out. Big Jay asked if we could come around the gate to shoot the barn a bit. The young man was very sympathetic. He said he was a painter and was doing an acrylic of the Barn himself. He said he comes out to this very yard with his easel and paints. Wouldn’t I love a photo of that! I also wish I could paint like that. He left the gate open and told us to take our time, and have fun. We stayed about 30 minutes walking through many of the fields getting different angles and views of the barn. I liked this view with all the wildflowers growing over the fences.

Nikon D90| Nikkor 17-35@ 19mm| f8| 1/40| ISO 200| Manual Mode| Tripod| Self Timer

Have an iphone 4 and shoot Nikon? Now you can attach Nikon lenses to it.

Photojojo sells an adapter that allows you to attach your Nikon lenses to the iphone 4.  Find it in their online store here.

They have one for Canon users too. At the link!   I won’t be getting this one…I’m behind on the cell phone front. After 5 yrs I’ve just upgraded from a Blackjack II to the iphone 3s. 🙂

H/T Nikon Rumors

View Nikon RAW files in Windows 7!

Microsoft released a new Codec that allows one to view Nikon RAW files in Windows Explorer or your Photo Gallery.  Download the codec here.

H/T Nikon Rumors

 

Update: The release also supports some Canon, Minolta, Leica, Olympus, and Sony cameras just to name a few. More brands at the link.

Ed Hendler Bridge

Ed Hendler Bridge, originally uploaded by dmzajac2004-.

Via Flickr:
Copyright © 2011 Deborah M. Zajac. All Rights Reserved.

On the way the Glacier National Park I spent the night in Pasco, WA. I was told about this bridge last year and wanted to shoot it then while on my way to Glacier, but arrived late and tired. This year I arrived earlier so wasn’t too tired to scout out a location for a night shot of the bridge.

This is looking south toward the Blue Bridge, and Kennewick, WA. This bridge looks gold at night, but it is white. Last year the people at the hotel called it the White Bridge when I mentioned wanting to photograph it. Keeping it simple I thought since it’s so close to the Pioneer Memorial Bridge which is blue and called the “Blue Bridge”.

For the historians:
“The Cable Bridge, officially called the Ed Hendler Bridge and sometimes called the Intercity Bridge, spans the Columbia River between Pasco and Kennewick in southeastern Washington as State Route 397. It was constructed in 1978 and replaced the Pasco-Kennewick Bridge, an earlier span built in 1922 and demolished in 1990.

At the time, the bridge was thought to be the first in the United States to use a ‘cable-stayed’ design and is constructed almost entirely of pre-stressed concrete (knowledge of the Captain William Moore Bridge, an asymmetric cable-stayed bridge near Skagway, Alaska, which was completed three years earlier, was not widespread outside Alaska. The bridge towers were constructed first, with the bridge deck, which was cast in individual segments, raised up and secured to each other.

The bridge was named after Ed Hendler, a Pasco, Washington insurance salesman, as well as the city’s former mayor, who headed up the committee responsible for obtaining the funding for construction of the bridge. Hendler died in August 2001.

A controversial feature of the bridge was added in 1998, when lights were added to illuminate the bridge at night. Many thought this was unnecessary and a waste of both electricity and money. During a power crisis in 2000, the lights were turned off, but they were turned on for one night to honor Hendler’s passing. Now the lights are turned on at night, and turned off at 2am.”~ Wiki-pedia

Nikon D90| Nikkor 17-35@ 17mm| f13| 13 seconds| ISO 200| Manual Mode| Tripod| Cable Release

Mt. Umunhum and Bald Mountain

View of Mt. Hamilton, Woods Trail View by Deborah M. Zajac © All Rights Reserved.

Copyright © 2011 Deborah M. Zajac. All Rights Reserved.

Sunday July 10, 2011

Since I’ve been training to hike up to Cloud’s Rest this August I’ve been hiking in the mountains that surround Santa Clara Valley. I’ve hiked to Mission Peak, Mt. Allison, and Black Mountain. I decided that I’d like to conquer Mt. Umunhum too. It is a mountain that lies to the south of me in the Santa Cruz Mountain Range.  Its name is from the Ohlone Indians that once called this valley home. It means “Resting place of the Hummingbird.”

It is a peak that has been a landmark, and barring marker to me since I moved to Santa Clara Valley in 1968. On top of Mt. Umunhum Summit sits a 5 story early-warning radar Station. Mt Umunhum was a former site used by Almaden Air Force that operated from 1958 to 1980. Years ago the county acquired the land for Open Space and is in the process of cleaning up the summit so we all can use the space for exercise and leisure. I hoped I would be able to get up there.  This was my goal to conquer/summit Mt. Umunhum. I was in good company too. Heman joined me for this hike, and I was hiking it sans hot tea, caffeine of any sort, and with only 4 hours sleep!

Mt.Umunhum seen from Bald Mountain by Deborah M. Zajac.© All Rights Reserved.

Our route started on the Woods Trail which is aptly named. It is shaded by large trees, and the first 3 miles is mostly flat, with some gentle ups and downs. I moved really fast here.

At Barlow Road we turned left.  You begin to climb straight-away on this fire road. You climb 800 ft in the space of 1 mile. There are fewer shade trees along this road, but there are views of the canyon, and of the valley looking south.  Several Butterflies and I enjoyed the late-blooming Red Maids, and Brittlebush lining the road.

California Sister by Deborah M. Zajac ©. All Rights Reserved.
Red Maids, and Brittlebush by Deborah M. Zajac © All Rights Reserved.
Western Tiger Swallowtail by Deborah M. Zajac © All Rights Reserved.

The trail ends at Mt. Umunhum Road. Here I discovered the “No Trespassing” signs and warnings NOT to venture up to Mt. Umunhum’s summit.

Alas, it isn’t open yet, so we hiked up to the summit of Bald Mountain instead.

Turning left on Mt. Umunhum Road we followed it about 0.3 miles to the trail-head of Bald Mountain. This is an easy 0.7 mile trail to the summit. Also aptly named; this mountain has no shade, it’s a grassy summit.

Survey Marker on Bald Mountain by Deborah M. Zajac © All Rights Reserved.

The views are very nice in every direction. To the west you see Mt. Umunhum, and to the east the view is of Almaden Reservoir, and beyond.

Heman at Bald Mountain; eastern view by Deborah M. Zajac © All Rights Reserved.

It was a long hike. Best done in the morning during the warmer months. I liked the Woods Trail best for its shade, and the views.  Mt. Umunhum is still on my list to conquer. I’ll hike this route again when it’s open which I’ve read since doing this hike could be this fall.

Hike Stats:

11 miles

1800 ft elevation gain

4 hours 40 minutes total time

UPDATE: Reader Steven Christenson sends this KQED report on Mt. Umunhum

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rO-Pw3AHwno