For mother's day, I was feeling a little bit melancholy. My daughter is in L.A., my own mother doesn't know me, and I've been having so many health problems in the last few months that life consists basically of work and very little play.
Waaah waaaaah! I know...what a whiner! I know how blessed I am. And I am truly grateful for every blessing! But that doesn't mean I am impervious to feeling blue. So feeling blue of course makes me want to escape on a road trip. And what better place to be blue than beautiful Lake Tahoe?
So I got up early on Sunday morning. Like 4:30 a.m. early! Because I was hopeful that there would be some sun and perhaps a sunrise over the lake despite the stormy weather we'd been having.
I've been trying to learn more about the manual settings on my camera and how to use them to capture different looks, etc. One thing I'd been wanting to try was a slow shutter speed on a waterfall. So I headed to the west shore and beautiful Eagle Falls and Emerald Bay.
There was quite a bit of cloud cover which was too dense for any sunrise. But I did get some interesting shots with a silhouette feel and some with a misty look.
I've learned that you need filters in order to really capture some of the ideas I was going for. I don't have any. Yet. But I did the best I could. I confess I did have to do some heavy post-production on some of these, but mainly to adjust lighting, etc. Especially since one of the things I had read was to shoot with the landscapes underexposed. Which worked somewhat.
This is Fannette Island. I was going to hike down, but it was intermittently raining so I decided against it. This is one of my favorite shots of the morning. I loved how the island was framed by the bare, silver branches and that I got some reflection on the lake surface.
In this shot, you can see the teahouse on top of the Island. I will be kayaking there this summer. :-)
And this is Emerald Bay as seen from the Eagle Falls trail alongside Highway 89.
Bare trees can add so much to photos! I just love them and will use them to frame whenever I can. I particularly love this one.
This one I like due to the reflections on the lake, the moss on the tree trunk, and the wake from the lone boat exploring the bay.
One final landscape of Emerald Bay before we head for the waterfall. Again, I love the bare tree as a focal point. And the pattern in the water is pretty cool too.
I parked at the Eagle Falls trailhead and walked toward the falls. There was a thin waterfall falling right onto the shoulder of Highway 89.
This is a slower shutter speed which did result in the wispier water effect I was trying for, but also made the picture overall a little blurrier. And also taught me just how important a Neutral Density filter is! I need one!
This shot is of the very top of the fall. Again, with the same issues due to not having the ND filter.
I clambered down beside Eagle Falls using the small, steep staircase on it's left side. I had to use my tripod as a walking stick to actually reach the ground from the stairs. There's a bit of a drop!
But I made it and it was worth it. I climbed around the rocks and terraces of the pretty large waterfall, hoping and praying that I would not fall in. This is looking across the falls.
And this is looking down them. I used a very fast shutter speed to try to freeze the water to catch it gurgling and bubbling it's way down to the Bay.
Another shot of the frozen "boiling" water, this is from another part of the fall with a thick stream that roiled over rocks at a horizontal level before falling to the canyon below.
At this point, I climbed back up the terrace, rocks, and stairs to the road and made my way to the other side of the wide falls.
I then hiked my way back through the waterfall until I was somewhere kind of in the middle. I love the tree roots in the picture below.
The falls with a sliver of Emerald Bay in the background.
A closeup of those cool roots.
Meanwhile, looking back uphill, you can see Eagle Creek coming under Highway 89 through a cool tunnel into a wide, granite shelf that forms the top of the falls.
Through the tunnel
There was a cool, holy rock in the middle.
And, spinning around, I found myself looking over the STEEP drop of the falls into the valley below.
I had set up my tripod/walking stick to get some with wispy water. The next two photos are taken at exactly the same place. The first one has a fast shutter speed to try to "freeze" the water...
And this one has a slow shutter speed to make the water wispy and soft.
Cool!
And here's one of the pool and tunnel with a slower shutter speed.
And to finish off our first post from Lake Tahoe, one can't get enough of the cool tunnel! Especially with bare branches!
And a look through the "tunnel" in the holy rock.
Bye Eagle Falls! Thanks for being my guinea pig!
xoxo