Landscapes

A Maze of Hoodoos

After a mere four hours of sleep, I trudged myself on that freezing morning to the knife's edge at Inspiration point. The dawn skies were still dark, save for a sliver of light on the eastern horizon. Below me, the vast amphitheater of hoodoos were cold and pale, awaiting the morning light.

And as the sun broke through the clouds, the warm light lit the amphitheater aglow. The steep slopes down below were a bright orange, while the maze of hoodoos turned a deep red from the afterglow. It was a scene I could not take my eyes off.

Bryce Canyon National Park

UT USA

To the Mountains

To the mountains.jpg

Thousands of tired, nerve-shaken, over-civilized people are beginning to find out that going to the mountains is going home; that wildness is a necessity - John Muir

Two years ago, to the day, I found myself staring at the end of a long dirt road weaving by a gushing creek of ice-cold melt-water. Silver-capped mountains gleamed in the distance. My destination for that night was somewhere there, deep amidst the towering peaks in a beautiful valley pine forests, vast open meadows and lush green hills.

That excitement and giddiness of hauling all my clothing and gear up into the mountains apart, it made me wonder why I made the decision of heading to this mountainous heartland of Central Asia. I already knew the answer: I love being amidst the mountains. And that was why I was relocating back to the west coast after that trip, where mountains are not just a dot on a landscape, but a region with innumerable nooks and crannies waiting to be explored and photographed.

I could not think of a better place to enjoy my last few days in this amazing country, for in going to the mountains, I was going home.

Altyn Arashan

Kyrgyzstan

Delights of Bryce

Seven years ago, I had stepped foot in a fairytale. Tall red hoodoos in impossible shapes and crimson shades towered over the trail and every turn in the corner brought out even more mystical shapes. The vibrant red and orange landscape was peppered with deep green pine trees somehow surviving in this orchre terrain. It was like walking through nature's recreation of a medina, complete with tiny alleyways lined towering houses painted in an coat of orange.

Climbing out of the aptly named peekaboo canyon, I got to look upon this fairytale land, a land which impressed upon me how water can act in mysterious ways.

Bryce Canyon National Park

UT USA

The Unspoilt Coast - Part II

From the distance, I could see rock formations lining the shore. As I got closer, I realized that these were sea stacks. These tall formations, capped by a few pine trees, stood stoically out in the middle of the bay, sentinels guarding the pristine beach through the hardiest of storms.

At one point, they wold have been connected to the mountainous coastline, but the erosive power of water would have slowly scoured these fingers of earth until all that remained were a few sea stacks. In a few hundred years, they will most likely crumble away as new ones form from the land slowly giving away to the powerful ocean.

For now, they remain out there in the hundreds and thousands, waiting for the day of their timely demise.

Olympic national Park

WA USA

The Unspoilt Coast

The rugged Pacific coast of the Olympic National Park is an unique jewel of that National Park. Here, once gets to see rocky sea-stacks topped by conifers stand just a few hundred feet from flat sandy beaches which disappear into the thick temperate rainforest that characterizes this lush and pristine environment.

I am excited to spend a couple of days exploring the nooks and crannies of the rugged coastline in the northwest corner of this National Park. Hope your weekend plans are just as colorful.

Olympic National Park

WA USA

High Above Nicaragua

The volcano was mired in clouds and fog as we were climbing up during the wee hours of dawn. Not that we could have enjoyed the views - the steep sprint up slushy terrain, rocky scree, and thick vegetation had left us pretty exhausted. And the possibility of not having any views from the top of the Concepcion volcano in Nicaragua had dampened our spirits as well.

Then, just we were about to descend, the skies opened up. Lake Nicaragua, the largest inland water body in the country, stretched before us, with the mainland visible far in the distance. Puffy white clouds were floating lazily above the lake and the distant landmass. And it was only now did we appreciate the steep ascent we had made, and the steep descent that we were about to face.

Volcan Concepcion

Rivas, Nicaragua

Regrowth

The first day of spring is one thing, and the first spring day is another. The difference between them is sometimes as great as a month. And up here, high in the alpine terrain of the Canadian Rockies, where large icefields give birth to glaciers, spring starts in July, and summer only lasts a month. Yet, plants thrive in this harsh environment, albeit barely. And reward us with beautiful pastel colors on a soft green carpet.

Canadian Rockies

AB Canada

The Best of the West

This landscape is animate: it moves, transposes, builds, proceeds, shifts, always going on, never coming back, and one can only retain it in vignettes, impressions caught in a flash, flipped through in succession, leaving a richness of images imprinted on a sunburned retina.

- Ann Zwinger

Of all the National Parks in the southwest, Bryce has some of the most unique geological formations - the amphitheater of hoodoos. While hoodoos (irregular columns of rock) exist on every continent, the largest concentration found anywhere on Earth is at Bryce. Hiking in and through these hoodoos and observing them from below and above, I had marveled at the innumerable canyons, gullies and gorges that changed this landscape over the geological timescale. And I am excited to be returning to this amazing park after over 8 years, and I can't wait to shoot the morning light over the cavernous amphitheater or the glowing reds of the hoodoos at sunset.

Bryce Canyon National Park

UT USA

Journey of Time

Many men go fishing all of their lives without knowing that it is not fish they are after.

- Henry David Thoreau

It seems we are all involved in a rat race, chasing a mystical dream in our daily lives: money in the real world, fame in the virtual world, and popularity in the social world. But what we actually need is time in the physical world. Our short lives are but a scintilla of light in the forward journey of time, and to be able to not just make a mark on it, but to experience that journey in the fullest should be the dream we should chase.

How are you chasing that dream this bright weekend?

Columbia River Gorge

WA USA

Summerland

Europe is a remarkable continent, where a 100km is a long distance and a 100 years is a short time, where kingdoms and civilizations have crafted a diverse set of cultures and communities, where haute couture in tourist hotspots stand shoulder to shoulder with quaint bucolic villages and picturesque countrysides, and where sensible urban design and vast expansive greenery are juxtaposed on one seamless landmass. Every trip to this continent rich in history and culture makes me giddy with joy in seeking out the hidden gems away from the tourist traps.

And I can't wait to go back again this summer, to seek out more of what this continent has to offer. Just like this peaceful meadow I found while exploring the Black Forest region of southern Germany.

Schwarzwald

Germany