As amazing as it seems, although I’ve been living in the Pacific Northwest for more than a quarter-century, virtually my entire time has been spent west of the Cascades, with a few trips over that ridge to shoot foliage and festivals on their eastern slope. Until this past July 3rd, the furthest east I had [...]
Like every photographer, I have a “bucket list” of locations I have yet to visit, but where I want to eventually shoot. In the immediate Northwest area, my top “must-photograph” locations going into 2010 were places such as Shi-Shi and Second Beaches, the lavender fields at Sequim, more of the Oregon coast, Crater Lake, and [...]
As much as it galls me, as a Washington resident, to have to admit this, but there’s no better place for tulip-field shooting than Woodburn, in Oregon’s Willamette Valley. Don’t get me wrong — the Skagit Valley area north of Seattle still has far more tulip-growing areas than Woodburn, and offers, in Roozengaarde, the best [...]
Unlike last year, when the tulips only reached their peak in the last days of April’s Pacific Northwest tulip festivals, we’ve had a very early spring this year, with some fields already coming into full color by the beginning of the month. Peak color should be lasting for the next two weeks. Although I normally [...]
Traditionally, I’ve always considered the annual Pacific Northwest “photography season” to begin with the first daffodils appearing in the flower farms of the Skagit Valley (whose much better-known tulip season begins about a month or so thereafter). Last year, after the notorious 2008-09 winter, the daffodils didn’t make their first appearance until mid-March, and weren’t [...]
As the end of the Northwest “shooting season” draws near, I (along with many other of the area’s photographers) find myself rushing to get in as much of autumn as I can before hunkering down to the coming four-to-five months of steady rain, slate-gray skies, bare branches, and brown vegetation. (Not that there’s nothing to [...]
Tagged in: Autumn, Fall Foliage, James David Walley, James Walley, Klickitat Canyon, Mount Adams, nature photography, North Falls, Oregon, pacific northwest, photography, raven falls, Raven Falls Photography, Silver Falls, Silver Falls State Park, South Falls, Trout Lake, Upper North Falls, Walley, Washington, Waterfalls
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While rewarding, the Hoh Rain Forest is, by far, the most difficult forest subject I’ve ever shot. Compared to the Hoh, other forests in Washington state (including the Sol Duc Trail, Grove of the Patriarchs, and so on) have a certain flow — there’s a layering of trees, undergrowth, rivers, and other features that make [...]
Tagged in: forest, forest photography, hoh rain forest, James David Walley, nature photography, olympic, olympic national park, pacific northwest, photo tips, photography, rainforest, raven falls, Raven Falls Photography, Walley
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The first thing you notice are the crickets. There are hundreds of them — colliding with you, getting in the way of your compostion while the shutter is open, perching on grasses and stones. Why so many? You start to wonder what could explain the cricket population — is there a typical predator that hasn’t [...]
Tagged in: James David Walley, James Walley, Mount St. Helens, Mt. St. Helens, pacific northwest, Photographs, photography, raven falls, Raven Falls Photography, Volcano, Walley
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If you have the chance and live near Mount Rainier, drive up to Tipsoo Lake sometime this week. Rainier is known for its wildflowers, and rightfully so. Thousands of people have visited Sunrise (now slightly past prime) over the past month, and tens of thousands will visit Paradise during the remainder of this month, hiking [...]