A selection of photos from a prairie ecologist’s family vacation in the mountains of Colorado…
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A rocky mountain stream not far from the door of the cabin we stayed in last week. South of Idaho Springs, Colorado.
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Since I don’t see fast flowing water (or rocks) very often in my part of Nebraska, I don’t often get to play with the old photography trick of using a slow shutterspeed to show the movement of the water.
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I spent way more time than I should have on the slow-shutterspeed-trick…
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We got to climb high enough to see the melting snow that was feeding all those streams. It was fun to think about the fact that the snow melt we were looking at would be flowing right past us in the Platte River when we got home. Hell’s Hole Trail.
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One evening, the boys and I climbed up a ridge near our cabin just because it was there.
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John thought it was funny to pretend he was clinging to the edge of a cliff. (His feet are solidly on the rocks below.)
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My favorite parts of the mountains are above treeline where I don’t feel so closed in. Chief Mountain.
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Daniel (and his brother) lobbied hard to climb Chief Mountain, even though we’d done the same hike only a year before. The scenery WAS very nice…
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Bristlecone pines are found only at very high elevations. Both the live and dead ones are very picturesque.
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One cool evening, we dodged some light showers and took a short uphill hike from Summit lake near Mount Evans. The scenery was enough to take your breath away – though the 13,000 foot elevation helped with that as well…
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A panoramic view of Mount Evans and Summit Lake from the trail.
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Of course, despite the gorgeous scenery, many of my favorite photos from the trip were close-ups. Just as in prairies, close-up photography helps me see details I would otherwise have missed. For example, did you know Douglas fir cone had these funny little trident-like appendages on them?
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A close-up of Colorado spruce needles.
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Venus’s slipper orchid, aka Fairly slipper orchid (Calypso bulbosa). My wife found several of these near our cabin. After I photographed one, I looked it up in one of the field guides in the cabin. My favorite quote from the guide was: “Although one of our smallest orchids, Venus’s slipper is the most exquisite, as well as the most elusive.”
It was great to spend a week in cooler weather and see some different landscapes, and I really enjoyed the concentrated time with my family. Pine and spruce woodlands are very pretty, though the alpine meadows above them were certainly my favorites. I can see how some people really enjoy living in the mountains. However, while I like short trips to the mountains, I am always glad to get back home to the wide open landscape of the Nebraska prairie.
Image may be NSFW.
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