Big Trees, Big Lens, & Sam the Snowman

A black-tailed fawn eats leaves from a blackberry vine in a meadow in Prairie Creek Redwood State Park

When packing for my trip to the redwoods, I went back and forth on whether I should bring my big telephoto lens. It’s so large and heavy that I wasn’t planning on hiking with it and didn’t expect to have much use for it among the big trees in any event. But with the hope of seeing harbor seals on the coast, I packed it alongside the rest of my camera gear.

A fortuitous decision but not because of harbor seals — I did see seals but not in good light. No, it was the meadows in the southern half of Redwood National Park that caught my fancy with the big glass, several families of black-tailed deer grazed one meadow and a herd of elk another.

Near sunset on my first full day in the park, a family of blacktails browsed on the blackberry vines that grew sporadically amongst the tall grasses of the meadow. I pointed the big lens at one fawn and was particularly delighted to see who was staring back at me: Sam the Snowman, the narrator from the Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer Christmas special I watched many times as a child.

Face of a black-tailed deer fawn

We Three Kings

Three large redwood trees grow close together in Jedediah Smith Redwood State Park

Three giants growing close together, redwoods all with the two closest colored green by moss. All trip long I enjoyed studying the old trees up close due to the wonderful character of their bark.

These three kings aren’t growing as close together as the picture suggests, I used the telephoto end of the zoom to compress the scene. I took this picture in my first few minutes in the park and wanted to retake it to get more sharpness in the furthest tree, but I had so much fun in other parts of the park that I never was able to get back before it was time to head for home.

The Quiet Ones

Juvenile bald eagle calling out to other nearby eagles

The bald eagle’s cry is rather surprising. Given its majestic look, its large size, its imposing beak and talons, I expected its call to be the mightiest of the birds of prey. However, when they lean their heads back to call out, what emerges is a soft, timid cry. Filmmakers may use a bald eagle when they need something that looks powerful but will often use the red-tailed hawk’s piercing cry when they need something that sounds powerful.

I was glad it was raining as the ice gave a diffuse reflection and I knew a little bit of rain would smooth out the surface, allowing both the icy look and a stronger reflection. I had to work quickly though, as the rain soon melted the ice entirely and the eagles disappeared as well.

Gargoyles

A black-and-white image of a juvenile bald eagle flies at Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge

I’m not a big fan of black-and-white photography, but even for me there are images that either work better or at least present an interesting alternative sans color. This picture of a juvenile bald eagle is an image that I slightly prefer in black-and-white, combined with the pose it reminds me more of a stone gargoyle high in the skies than a flesh-and-blood bird coming in to feed.

A juvenile bald eagle flies at Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge