Category: Year in Review

Focusing After Dark – 2023

While taking a night sky workshop in Death Valley in March, I was treated to something I never imagined I’d experience: both seeing and photographing the northern lights. It was 10 p.m. when I read the charts and realized that if I were under clear skies back home in Minnesota, I’d be able to see an incredible aurora borealis show. Although our workshop would start in just a few hours at 1 a.m., I needed to see if I could capture the lights from Nevada. I drove a few miles from the Atomic Inn and found a small pullout along the highway. The clouds came in quickly as I got the 15-35mm lens onto the Canon R5 and set my exposure to ISO 1600, ƒ/2.8, for 10 seconds. Sure enough, I could pick up the northern lights on my camera’s sensor.

Beatty, Nevada – March 23, 2023
Beatty, Nevada – March 23, 2023

When the group met a few hours later, I suggested we try to capture them from Death Valley. The strength of the storm wasn’t as strong, but I was indeed able to capture a couple of pillars rising up from the horizon.

Death Valley National Park, California – March 24, 2023
Death Valley National Park, California – March 24, 2023
Death Valley National Park, California – March 24, 2023

During the workshop, a highlight for me was getting to experience Death Valley after dark with my husband. Setting up for a Milky Way shot over the salt flats, we both were excited to learn that the glow coming into the frame on the right side was the lights from LA. Our niece was currently going to school there. Drive time is just under five hours away.

Death Valley National Park, California – March 24, 2023

Back in northern Minnesota, when the next solar storm hit, I set up two cameras in an attempt to capture the lights dancing all around me.

Northern Minnesota – April 23, 2023
Northern Minnesota – April 23, 2023

The fascinating part to me is the constellations are different than most of my aurora images since I was facing south for many of these.

Northern Minnesota – April 23, 2023
Northern Minnesota – April 23, 2023

While I have tried many times to capture the aurora in Yellowstone National Park and have gotten a glow more than once, it was on September 18th of this year that I was blown away by the show I witnessed in Hayden Valley. Not only was my camera able to pick up an array of colors, I saw the display with my own eyes!

Hayden Valley Magic

The beginning of December brought an aurora show that was mostly captured by camera. I could only see a bit of that hot pink on the right side of the image with my eyes. My camera settings collected the rest of the colors on my sensor: ISO 2000, ƒ/2.8, 3.2 seconds.

Northern Minnesota – December 1, 2023

I follow spaceweather.com for possible aurora activity. It sounds like we are heading into solar max, so the potential to photograph more of this incredible phenomenon looks good!

Favorite moments from my year in review

With this season’s snowfall off to a solid start, it seems only appropriate to begin 2022’s favorites with the Never Ending Winter image photographed in the middle of April. We may be beginning right where we left off. 

Since moving to northern Minnesota, winter has become my favorite season; I make most of my captures during this time of year, which can last as long as nine months up here. January & February provide great dog sledding photo ops! Here Mike Bestgen & Lynne Witte end up side by side as I get ready to snap a picture. 

During the John Beargrease Sled Dog Marathon, the mushers are sworn in as mail carriers and bring beautiful artwork-clad letters on the trail. When their team crosses the finish line, the letters make their way into the regular US Postal Service. The officials gathering the bag from musher Damon Ramaker were surprised when they unzipped the sled bag, and a dog popped out to greet them!

I love looking through event photos and finding something I had not realized I had captured. How cool is this being able to see Andre Duval’s team and the spectators reflecting in his shades during the WolfTrack Classic Sled Dog Race in Ely?

I headed to Utah in April for a night sky workshop with Mike Shaw Photography. I bought a star tracker a few months before and was excited to learn how to use it from one of the best night sky teachers I know. Fiery Furnace Lookout in Arches National Park was a great place to make fourteen 2-minute exposures of the Milky Way rising with my star tracker and merge them into a pano using Adobe Camera Raw.

Mesa Arch in Canyonlands National Park was a great place to practice a variety of night sky techniques as well. Add to that you get the bonus of a fantastic place to catch the sunrise!

A few weeks in Yellowstone National Park in early spring usually provides an excellent opportunity to photograph grizzly bear cubs of the year. Last May did not disappoint. Here the Beryl Springs bear makes her way through a favorite thermal area with her two tiny cubs in tow.

During the summer, I spend as much time as possible at the International Wolf Center and North American Bear Center in Ely, MN. This year the wolf center added two new wolf pup ambassadors.

Blackstone (L) & Caz – Best Dad Joke Ever

I finally created a picture of one of my favorite black bears, Holly, at the bear center. I was standing in the building and caught a glimpse of her coming right toward the window, knelt, and made the image. 

My ‘best of’ collection would only be complete with some Amazing Aurora images!

As soon as I saw that glow in the sky, I quickly added a back-of-camera shot to my Facebook page to let others know the lights were dancing. It wasn’t until I looked back at my post the following morning that I saw the beautiful pink heart forming in the sky. The BEST part of photos on social media is learning what others see in my work. I asked for title suggestions, and we collected over a hundred ideas between the post, shares, and inbox messages. After much discussion, Tom and I feel this title fits perfectly.

Heartlight

The benefit of photographing with moonlight is that you can capture some nice natural light to bring out our beautiful lakeshore! 

Shimmer in the Bay

STEVE crossing the Milky Way galaxy during astronomical twilight.

STEVE: Strong Thermal Emission Velocity Enhancement – the phenomenon that looks like a ribbon of pink or mauve light and has a “picket fence” appearance, with green columns of light passing through the ribbon, according to space.com.

Stairway to Heaven

As the swirling streamers of light moved across the horizon, the pillars grew vivid before my eyes. Capturing one moment of the dance is never enough; catching the beauty of the reflection is always a bonus! Photographed Labor Day Weekend 2022 in Aurora, Minnesota

Dreamweaver

I can hardly wait to see what 2023 brings!

RootRiverPhotography.com

Six Memorable Photo Ops from 2021

With the Canon R5, Animal Eye AutoFocus, I could lock onto one of Alice White’s leaders as they burst through the starting chute in freshly falling snow. Homer and Wizard take center stage in this John Beargrease Sled Dog Marathon photo.

Wind Swept Ridge
They were three to four miles away, and the blowing snow added a little something to the mix. I had taken a couple of pictures of this wolf pack earlier in the day and went back to try to find them in the evening light. Evening light in Lamar Valley is some of the prettiest in the park. It often reminds me of the incredible light in a Tim Burton movie, almost surreal. This year, no other scene has topped watching the Junction Butte pack of wolves move across three ridge lines during the day’s last light.

As Tom took his solo canoe out to fill up the water jugs, I quickly got down on the rocky shore and dipped the camera into the lake to create this eye-level view of him paddling by.

Purple Haze
Shortly before sunset, while photographing sunflowers along the gravel road in Sax-Zim Bog, I noticed smoke from the Greenwood Fire beginning to settle in the ditch behind the flowers. Kneeling on the ground, I was not picking up the beautiful hazy background the smoke was creating. The scene only came together while photographing it from above, so I hopped back in my car and made this image through the open window.

Rose’s Aurora
Shortly before sunrise, I had the opportunity to watch the northern lights dance with my neighbors. That part is not unusual – everyone loves to be out when the sky lights up. This morning, Rose, 82 years young, witnessed the aurora for the very first time. She almost stopped giggling long enough for me to make a clean image. It’s close; the slight movement adds to the experience, in my opinion.

The series “Mom’s Day Out” needs at least three images to create the scene. This grizzly’s cubs took full advantage of the time they got to play with her. When she wasn’t chasing up the hill to find them, she was sliding in the thick fresh snow right alongside them. They’d climb on her, and she’d roll over on them. It was a scene to remember.

Favorite Clicks – 2020

Alphabetical by image title.

On July 12th, Tom and I went out after sunset to try our hand at photographing Comet NEOWISE. At 10:15, I switched from the 70-200mm lens I was using to get a close up of the comet to the 16-35mm to capture the entire sky. It was a thrill to see the sunset, comet, and northern lights come together in the same image.

First light on the mountains, the setting full moon, and a very handsome bull moose silhouette.

Autumn Light

Bull moose along the Gros Ventre River.

Boys Club

This fox kit was leaping up into the air and pouncing down on thick pieces it dirt; it would then toss back up and repeat the process! So much fun to watch!

Earth Bound

She was a vision to watch this spring while I was in Yellowstone National Park. Most of the time, I photographed her with a full-frame camera with a 500mm lens and a 1.4x. The image is cropped in so that I can see her face more clearly.

Face Wash

This young fox kit was always interested in what dad brought home for dinner!

Foxy Family

I had just finished photographing moose and was chatting with some friends. I knew it was close to cresting the horizon but hadn’t used an app to figure out just where, so I kept scanning the skyline while keeping up with the conversation. As soon as I saw it, I bolted, threw the Canon 5Div with a 500mm + 1.4x on a tripod, and lined up the horizon! Now, if there only would have been a big ol’ bull moose up on that ridge…!

Full Moon Rising

This summer, I had the honor of having my niece in front of my camera for her senior photos. Blowing glitter into the frame was her idea! LOL! We both love how this one turned out!

Glitter

“Raspberry” and her cub. Maybe not the most colorful image since the road is the backdrop, but I love the curious look on the little one’s face!

Lil’ Bravado

Monarch egg on a milkweed leaf! Our Andover home came with 8-10 milkweed plants scattered throughout the garden. Three seasons later, I’ve counted over 50 plants! Thanks to my friend Gordon Dietzman for teaching me how to find these treasures!

Monarch Butterfly Egg

Bull moose, Shoshone the evening he rubbed off his velvet. While I watched, he seemed to be using berry bushes with thorns to strip off that protective covering at a rapid rate. I understand that the process is not a painful one – but really, how would we know? Just walking through miles of sage can take its toll on human legs!

Ready for the Rut

Raspberry and her cub in flowers after enjoying some breakfast.

Red Blush

An incredible finish to the end of the John Beargrease Sled Dog Marathon! Here Liza Dietzen asks lead dog Sphinx, “are you going to retire now?” The dog is ten years old and enjoyed every minute of this marathon! There were happy tears all around! Note, I also photographed her boyfriend proposing to her shortly after she crossed the finish line.

Red Lantern Finish

Young bull moose about to cross the Gros Ventre River – Grand Teton, Wyoming.

River Walk

Grizzly bear #399 and her four cubs of the year. Grand Teton National Park

Royal Family

Every time I have seen a wolf with this unique coloring in early spring, it has shed to reveal almost solid black by early summer. Is this winter bleach from the sun? In Yellowstone National Park, I saw it with the Agate pack wolves in 2011, the Junction Buttes in 2019, and now the Wapitis in 2020.

Sage Wanderer

Bull moose in velvet.

Say Cheese

After an evening of getting eaten alive by mosquitos while photographing comet NEOWISE as the sun set over Burntside Lake, Tom and I kissed in front of the camera before calling it a night. Okay, so maybe this was the fourth or fifth try, but I think we got it!

Silhouettes in the Night

“Raspberry” and her cub of the year. Seriously… just look at those faces!

Snuggle Bug

I absolutely love it when I get two different species in the same frame!

Squirrel! & the Boreal Owl

Here’s a photo of comet NEOWISE crashing into the aurora borealis early one July morning. It’s a spectacular thing to see. No special equipment necessary; you could pick it out in the northern sky above the tree line after dark! Tofte Lake • Ely, MN.

Summer Lights

Grizzly bear #399’s cubs of the year – four of the many reasons I chose to spend time out west this spring.

Teton Gold

Hard to beat the perfection of a sunflower.

The Golden Ratio

Bull moose – Grand Teton National Park. These three hung out for several days together before rubbing off their velvet. Once they polished their antlers, their behavior changed as they began looking for love!

The Three Amigos

There was sunshine, wind, and a little bit of snow, all playing together. As I drove into the valley, this bison was resting on the ground, covered in a blanket of white. There was zero sunshine at that moment, so I kept on driving. As I saw the clouds part to my East, I quickly turned around and went back for the shot. The majority of the white stuff had fallen off, but I like the standing portrait with a bit of light bouncing off his coat as he moved forward into the wind.

Weathering the Storm

This Short-tailed weasel looked in my direction for a split second before going about its business foraging for food.

Winter White – Ermine

Thanks for following along! Happy New Year! ~ Heidi

Photo Review 2019

This year’s highlights are revealed through nature in a way that not only creates heart-pounding moments but sparks a sense of joy in your soul.

Standstill Along the River

Driving down the road in search of wildlife, I glance over and see a deer standing in the river. Fifteen years of photographing wildlife have me turn around in a heartbeat. I know for a fact that a deer is not just going to stand in icy cold water for no reason at all. Even though I didn’t make out the wolf on the first pass, it was certainly there when I pressed the shutter!

As I walked back to the car to get my long lens, the wolf slipped away. The deer stood there for another hour before making her way to the shore.


Ice Shards on Lake Superior

As I sprawled out along the frozen shore of Lake Superior, the colorful shards of ice seemed to create architectural beauty in every direction. At just about 30˚ above zero, it was a comfortable way to generate intriguing images.


Spring Snowfall

Where the resident American Bison comes face to face with the migratory White-faced Ibis. Photographing these two species in the same frame would have never crossed my mind, but as the scene played out, it was a fantastic find to see the two standing side by side.


Spring Cubs

One of the main reasons I spend so much time in Wyoming during the spring! These tiny creatures emerge from their dens, and with mom’s help, try to navigate the world around them. “Survival of the fittest,” they say. Most of their little lives are short-lived, so capturing adorable moments like this one is a treasure in my book.


Scratch That Itch

More than likely, this female grizzly was doing double duty as she is scent marking a favorite tree to communicate with other bears. A couple of weeks later, I watched two different male grizzlies follow her around with hopes of breeding. Fingers are crossed that we’ll see her emerge with new cubs this coming spring.


Feeling Silly

With a few patches of snow remaining on the spring landscape in Yellowstone National Park, this sub-adult grizzly found the perfect spot to do a little stretching.


Evening Rendezvous

Excitement ensued as the bands came together. With storms looming on the horizon, I realized that the advanced planning of this adventure was rewarding us with dozens of horses in a variety of scenes! Ambassador Horses of the McCullough Peaks Herd.


Taking the Plunge

This image shows one of fifteen Wood ducklings that jumped from a nest box at just one day old. As I sat in a big camo blind several yards away, this little duckling stopped for a split second before taking that leap of faith and throwing itself into the world of the unknown. Within two minutes of the first jumper, mom and siblings were swimming off to the far end of the pond.


Early Morning Light on the Forest Floor

This Ram’s-head lady’s-slipper is a rare orchid in Minnesota. I am beyond thrilled to be able to photograph this threatened plant species in our boreal forest.


Wake Up Call

When a red alert comes across the phone at 12:45 a.m., Country Club Road is generally the first place I head to get a full-frame shot of the northern lights. This go-to spot, just a mile from home, is dark enough to see ribbons gliding along the horizon even during the faintest of shows. This night, however, I was treated to more than a glimpse. The clouds were parting as I headed toward the dock, allowing me to capture not only manmade structures but a bit of the heavenly sky as well.


More Beauty from the Sunshine Field

While driving home on an August afternoon, I passed a field of flowers blooming with color! Working the scene from a variety of directions, with an array of lenses, I found the one that catches my eye the most is this sunny delight that makes the sunflowers look a little larger than life, popping out in front of the cloudy sky.


Indian Island Silhouette

From the shore of Burntside Lake in Ely, MN, I was able to capture this stunning display of northern lights while my in-laws were in town visiting.


Sunrise Along the Madison River

As the rising sun burned the morning mist, I nestled down among the riverbank to capture the subtle hues of color developing before my eyes.


Watching You, Watching Me

On an icy cold day, when most of the roads were closed to travel, I laid my fleece blanket on the ground along the snowy shore to create a buffer between myself and the cold. Luckily the otters have a built-in system where their underfur has a scaly surface that locks together to keep the water out. And that’s in addition to their hollow guard hairs! I went back to my vehicle cold and wet, but it was worth the extra heat my car needed to pump out for the one-of-a-kind shots this scene provided.


Autumn Mist

Having photographed this bear for at least the past nine years, I’ve gotten to know her territory and how she moves through the area. Even at that, she’s still a bear and has a mind of her own. I took my chances by moving away from the crowd of people and setting up with hopes she’d walk through the thermal feature just behind the colorful foliage. With fingers crossed and a racing heart, I was filled with delight when she did just that!

All in all, it was an incredible year of photography. Connecting with nature in a variety of ways and expressing my art of the natural world brings completeness to my life. I appreciate your following along.

Looking Back

Some favorite snapshots from 2018

“Captivating Impression”

While teaching a wildlife photography class at the International Wolf Center we take a number of breakout sessions while the wolves are active. This gives us an opportunity to practice what we’ve learned. Here a child has just walked up to the window to get a closer look at Ambassador Arctic Wolf, Axel.

Out scouting for John Beargrease Sled Dog Marathon locations, we came across this handsome red fox as it rested along the forest edge.

“Long Winter’s Nap”

Canada Goose photographed during our never-ending winter!

“Snow Goose”

Is there anything cuter than watching black bears play? These three are probably the tiniest I’ve photographed to date.

“Cubs Among the Logs”

Seems if little critters aren’t playing, they’re resting. The two on the left soon bounded into action!

“Family Connection”

Making the time to watch this grizzly mom teach her little one how to live in a park filled with danger and opportunity, filled many days of the past three and half years.

“Yellowstone Moment”

An evening hike around Indian Pond provided the perfect foreground for this autumn sunset.

“Surrounded by Color & Light”

Three juvenile Great Gray Owls were flying around the meadow this September morning. Deciding where to set up the camera and tripod in a direction you’d like them to land is one thing, having them choose that perch is quite another. Sometimes… you get lucky!

“Incoming

Forty-six hours waiting at a badger den, with this nocturnal family coming into view for exactly 46 of those minutes. Visualizing shots comes easy when there is so much time to kill. This one, with fresh morning dew and the entire family of five, was high on my list. If you can only see four, that’s because the smallest badger kit is in the process of rolling back down into the hole.

“Where’d He Go?”

One afternoon while driving the interior road of Grand Teton National Park, the sun rays were streaming through the clouds and bathing the mountains in this ultra soft light. Almost every car pulled over. Folks got out to make an image of what we were all witnessing. Some simply shot with their cellphones, while others drug out their tripod, cable release, and set up for what looked like a full-fledged photo shoot! My friend Todd had pulled over and made his way up the road, so I added him to one of my shots. To me, the human element adds to this image, since it is a large part of what was happening all around.

“Teton Light”

In addition to individual images, there is often that entire scene that plays out before you. The sun was getting low in the valley as I stopped to watch some bison spar in the distance. This was the third challenger that came along. Seems he had a bit more energy to expel after his loss.

“Locking of Horns”
“Leaving in a Huff”
“Tizzy Fit”

Looking forward to what 2019 will bring!

Favorite Images Made in 2017

It was a year filled with opportunity and adventure.

“Under the Cover of Darkness”

This image alone, is the best wildlife image I have made, from start to finish. No, it may not be the prettiest, and it can certainly be difficult to look at, but this was the scene playing out as I pulled up to a carcass one morning in Yellowstone National Park. The day before, a friend informed me of an elk carcass a little more than a hundred yards off the road. As I watched and photographed ravens, eagles and a female coyote eat their fill, I couldn’t help but wonder if the elk was a pregnant female. The head was facing the other direction, and the body was sinking into the deep snow as the day progressed. It was the thought of a wolf coming in and taking out the unborn calf that kept me at the site the entire day. As I arrived to the location at o-dark-thirty on this morning, the shape of a large canine next to the elk had me stop and shoot the scene trying to capture what was happening, and as it played out in my head the day before, it was now occurring right in front of my eyes.

Both of these images were made on the same night while in Sax-Zim Bog. Some friends and I had been looking for owls along one of the roadways when I noticed a glow and went back to the truck for a wide angle lens. The sun hadn’t even fully set as the northern lights began to show their true colors.

“Beauty in the Bog”

“Lights Over the St. Louis”

It’s difficult for me to show one of these without the other. So although the second one ranks in my top favorite images made in 2017, it’s the beach scene that adds to the story.

“Grizzly on the Beach”

“Obstacle in the Natural World”

After watching this handsome grizzly swim the river, lumber up a snow covered slope and cross the road right in front of my truck, I was thrilled to see it climb over a corral fence as the sun backlit the water droplets still falling from its fur.

“Screeching Halt”

On its way into a carcass, this juvenile Bald Eagle seemingly puts on its brakes as it comes in for a landing. Whether it’s northern lights or critters, it’s all about capturing the action in my book, and this shot fits the bill perfectly.

“Morning Light”

The forecast for a northern light show was excellent which had me out the door and at the ready before it was even dark outside. Going to a couple different locations during the night and not seeing anything can get frustrating, but something inside me said stay, so I did. It wasn’t until the sun began to rise the following morning that the lights began to dance. In this image the orange glow is the sun shortly before cresting the horizon.

“Nature’s Charm”

What a great way to end the day while camping in the northwoods! I don’t think either Tom or I have experienced more mosquitos and biting flies during a single trip. But the critters we saw, along with the solitude of no one else around made up for the amount of butane we used in our themacells!

“Walk This Way”

Part of the series One Less Tune in the Forest. While driving at a snail’s pace down the gravel road looking for critters, a rustling down in the ditch caught my eye. I slowed down, grabbed my camera, and up flew a Great Gray Owl. As it landed in a Tamarack tree, a smaller critter began making its way across the road from where the owl flew up. Presuming it was a vole, I kept snapping images as the owl went down to grab it and bring it back up to the tree. Also made a quick image of the White-throated sparrows making a heck of a ruckus nearby. After the owl downed its morsel, it flew down to the ditch again where it proceeded to pounce on presumably more prey. The grasses were too tall to tell for sure. Then it was back onto the road where it did the walk, before it flew deep into the woods. 

Interestingly enough, looking back at my images, I could see that the owl had picked up a White-throated sparrow chick, not a vole.

“Fox on the Run”

A bonus for taking the scenic drive home, was getting to watch some fox kits romp around in the north woods of Wisconsin.

“Constant Attention”

If you’ve ever watched a nest of birds as the parents come in with food, you know that look of multiple necks stretching out as long as they can with open beaks ready for that morsel of food. While camping at Wyalusing State Park with my sister and her husband, we spotted an Oriole nest hanging from a branch at the end of our sites. For two full days, we watched the wind toss the nest around on what seemed to be a very thin branch, but even in the strongest gusts, the babies stayed sheltered. Add to that scene the parents who came to feed those young who were too tiny for us to even see yet.

“Oh, That Look”

I almost melted when this Great Gray Owlet looked in my direction. Either that, or I was sinking up over my boots in bog water. It was probably the latter, but so worth the experience!

Root River Photography’s Year in Review

January found me still riding the wave of an Amazing Aurora Exhibit at the International Wolf Center in Ely, Minnesota.

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That is the month teaching Night Sky Photography Workshops also began. The wolf center staff encouraged and taught me how to create a great learning platform for students wanting to acquire a skill from someone with years of field experience. The classes filled up quickly and often had a waiting list. The initial group was filled with friendly faces who did nothing but encourage me as I stumbled a bit trying to find my way.

January Class: Image courtesy of Tom Pinkerton via Judy Hunter’s camera.

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February workshop demonstration: Image courtesy Jackie Runions.

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February brought the Great Nordic BeardFest! Not doing much event photography, I will admit that capturing images of this lively group was a highlight of my winter. A special thank you to Shaun Chosa of Wicked Son Designs for all of the time and effort he puts into great events like this. The 2nd Annual BeardFest is February 5th & 6th. Have you signed up yet?

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Me, taking a break!
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The deep freeze of winter proved to be perfect for working on projects. When Alanna Dore, executive director of The Listening Point Foundation, asked me to pair a dozen of my images with Sigurd Olson’s writings for their 2016 calendar, I simply couldn’t say no. Humbled to follow in the footsteps of Jim Brandenburg, whose images graced the pages of the current year’s calendar, I scoured thousands of my own images as I reread through passages of Sigurd Olson’s books The Singing Wilderness & Listening Point.

One of my personal favorites turned out to be July’s Pileated Woodpeckers.

“There would always be lesser types on the point, the diminutive downy, the sapsucker, and the hairy. These I could take for granted, and I enjoyed them none the less, but it was the pileated that really put the stamp of wilderness on the area.”

Listening Point Chapter 23, page197

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Photographer’s Field Notes: For a week and a half I returned to this spot, watching the adults tend to the nest cavity and the presumed offspring. Just days before this image was made, I could hear the meep, meep sounds of two chicks. I can only presume they were conversing about the crazy lady sitting in her car on those hot summer days trying not to make a peep herself.

This image is not in the calendar, but I thought you might enjoy it just the same.

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Take a moment to read any passage from Sigurd Olson’s books and you will be drawn into the beauty that fills our wilderness. I have a handful of Listening Point calendars still in stock, if you’re interested. Here is a quick link to the store.

With a new Exhibition on the horizon, I worked with Scott Mehus at the National Eagle Center in Wabasha, Minnesota during late February and into March. He taught me how to find both the national bird of the United States, the American Bald Eagle, along with the Golden Eagle which is known as one of the best birds of prey in the northern hemisphere. The opportunity to spend weeks watching these birds in their natural habitat helped me gain an understanding of how they thrive in our ever changing environment. Most of the images I gathered of the Golden Eagles were simply at a distance too far for my equipment to make a proper image. Yes, one day I do hope to own an 800mm lens! If you want a good look at live Golden and Bald Eagles, make sure to visit the National Eagle Center. Winter is a fantastic time to learn more about them.

Layers of winter wear kept me warm as I waited for action. Image courtesy of my assistant for the trip, Kristen Williams.

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“Landing Gear”
Bald eagle just about to set foot on some ice floating down the Mississippi River. While photographing 6 other eagles doing acrobatics at a distance, Kristen kept a keen eye out for the “wings spread position – flying into the light”! After working with me for a week, we became quite good at reading each other’s signals. Within a minute of making this image a train rolled in between us and the river. Needless to say, the birds did not stick around!

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Springtime did not disappoint where the auroras are concerned. As in previous years, around the solstice and equinox we are often graced with amazing displays of the northern lights dancing overhead. Here are some of my favorites!

“Edge of Night”
There really is nothing better than photographing the night sky alongside of my husband, Tom.

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“Singing in the Rain”
It surprises me how often our eyes pick out common shapes in the movement of the colorful curtains that make their way across the horizon.

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“Infinite Bliss”
Not able to capture the entire display with the 16-35mm lens, I quickly swapped it out for a fisheye allowing for a clean shot of the entire swirl!

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As May brought the Aurora exhibit to an end at the International Wolf Center, a new collection of my images became the subject of the current exhibition in that gallery: Raptors – Predators from the Sky. If you have not yet seen this display, it is still up for another few months! The Center is open on the weekends during the winter. Besides the display, it is amazing to see the ambassador wolves in their full winter coats!

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The final few weeks of the month took me out to Montana and Wyoming where I was given the opportunity of a lifetime to photograph grizzlies in the wild with their young! Special thanks to my colleagues for pointing me in the right direction at the right times!

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Making it back to Minnesota just in time for the Grand Opening of the Raptor Exhibition in June, along with setting up shops and shooting a yearly event along the shores of Lake Michigan, I was lured back to the Rocky Mountains for a chance to photograph a very light colored grizzly cub of the year along with its littermate & mom.

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The remainder of July, August and September kept me in the midwest. It provided time to not only catch up on office work, but gave the chance to spend time with family and friends!

Making an image of a bull elk in the mist is on my radar every time I am in the habitat where these magnificent creatures live! Often seeing them separately, October provided me with the ultimate opportunity. I still remember photographing the “big boy” next to the road with dozens of other tourists, then out of the corner of my eye I saw this elk make his way along the tree line and head toward the river. The filtered morning light was perfect as I hightailed it away from the full frame subject to take a chance on making the landscape image I had envisioned for years.

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Driving through Canada may seem like taking the long way home from Wyoming, but with good friends and the allure of auroras, it turned out to be the perfect thing to do!

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The end of the month brought the Great Lakes Aurora Hunters Gathering along Lake Superior where I was a guest speaker. Ninety-nine people had signed up for the session, and as nervous as I was, many of those initial students from the first workshop back in January were there giving the support I needed to make it through an hour plus presentation. It’s their commitment that’s instrumental in helping me realize my full potential. A true gift, and I am beyond grateful for their friendship!

With a high-speed stream of solar wind reaching Earth at the beginning of November, I headed out shortly before moonrise. Positioning myself at an angle that would allow me to capture the color of the moon cresting over the horizon (it was surprisingly bright orange!) and picking up the glow of the northern lights, I created the scene with stark trees bordering the landscape under a star-filled sky.

“Moonlight Glow” • November 2, 2015 • Babbitt, Minnesota

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Frankly, December was filled with fun! Christmas parties, cookie and ornament exchanges, judging a lighting contest and of course learning the new game Pie Face! If you have not tried this one, I guarantee it is fun for the whole family!

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Thanks for following along on another year of crazy adventures!

Root River Photography’s Year in Review

First of all,  a huge thank you to the folks at the International Wolf Center who brought my Aurora exhibit to life! If you have yet to see it, the exhibit runs through May 11, 2015.

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January 1st was spent on Lake of Woods photographing the northern lights in -40˚F.

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The time-lapse video “Dance of Enchanted Light”  is currently showing at the International Wolf Center in the gallery adjacent to the Aurora exhibition. The entire video is 2000 images from that night on Lake of the Woods.

Here is a link to it on my facebook page.  Watch in HD for better quality. https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=732181403470373&set=vb.195444223810763&type=3&theater

Other January fun included making soap bubbles in -27˚F,

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along with photographing Flying Squirrels!

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The middle of January through mid-March was spent observing and capturing the flight patterns of the beautiful Snowy Owl.

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“The Joy of Winter” made its way into my heart when a friend alerted me to the fact that she had a Canadian Lynx sleeping in her woods. Spending two hours watching it from her dining room window is an experience I will probably never forget!

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February 18/19 brought about one of the best aurora displays of 2014! This one is captured with a fisheye lens.

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March and April were filled with many trips to Sax-Zim Bog to photograph winter birds. A favorite is this Great Grey Owl image titled “Snowy Perch”.

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At the beginning of May, Mother Nature made certain to show us we can not rely on calendar dates when it comes to predicting the seasons.

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June provided the best experience to date. Thanks to a friend, I was given the opportunity to photograph Northern Hawk Owls and their young for nine straight days! Granted, the mosquitos almost carried us away, but the knowledge and images gained from that time in the field was worth every single bite received.

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July brought the beauty of flowers! A first for me was Minnesota’s state flower, the Showy Lady’s-slipper.

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August was another wonderful month for Auroras!

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September into October was Yellowstone and Grand Teton!!! Yep, three exclamation points! I have only begun processing the images from that trip. As much as I will fall in love all over again with the critters and landscapes, nothing can supersede the fact that I got to spend ten days showing my parents around my favorite place. Perhaps it wasn’t exactly what they were expecting, but they got it! More so, they got me! They had the opportunity to see ME in my favorite place doing what I truly LOVE! Pictures can not even begin to describe the experience, so here is simply one of the few favorites I’ve already processed.

Adrenaline Rush – Bull Moose in Grand Teton National Park

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November brought winter back to Minnesota.

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And… December is going out with a BANG!

Warp Speed auroras at -20˚F.

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Thanks for following along through facebook, exhibits, shows & the website!

2015 is going to bring exciting new challenges, more exhibits,  and advanced technology in photography!
Happy New Year!