Showing posts with label Film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Film. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Rockhouse Canyon Wildflower Blooms in May - ABDSP

Gary and I spent 4 days backpacking in Rockhouse Canyon a couple weekends ago and I was suprised by all of the bright, beautiful wildflower blooms we saw. Most were at and above the 3,000' level or so, mainly starting around the base of the Santa Rosa ridge line but some extended down into Rockhouse Canyon Valley area. We got rained on 2 days and endured heavy winds most of the trip but it was fun, backpacking in Rockhouse Canyon never gets boring. Water at the springs was lower then normal which was a surprise.

Color photos taken with Garmin Montana 680t GPS.
B/W taken with an Olympus XA 35mm & TMax 100 film developed Pyrocat-HD.



























Happy Mothers Day, I found this balloon heading back to our cars, literally on Mothers Day..!!










Total Mylar Balloons this trip - 9


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Saturday, January 9, 2016

Santa Rosa Mountains / Martinez Canyon 12 Days of Backpacking Christmas Trip

Long overdue are some trip reports for Dec 2015 and the first quarter of 2016. Over the Christmas/Winter/Holiday (take your pick) Break I managed to get almost 12 days of backpacking in the Santa Rosa Mountains and Martinez Canyon area. Most of these photos are from a small Olympus XA film camera I picked up just for backpacking trips. It is a small lightweight 35mm film camera that takes very sharp pictures. Fuji Velvia 50 slide film provided lots of color and an old school look that I love so much in photos.

Sort of an Ansel Adams moment atop a razor sharp and crumbly limestone ridge
Pinyon Tree ABove Ash Canyon

A panorama from the same ridge looking towards Cochella (click to see full size image)
Ash Canyon - Santa Rosa Wilderness

This is a small area of the now dried up Lake Cahuilla shoreline. The years gone by have left an easily seen water line on the rocks
Ancient Lake Cahuilla Water Lines

Personally I prefer to just squat over a hole in the ground but if you gotta sit while taking care of business then this would be your best friend
Cowboy Crapper

Moon rise from an unnamed canyon we camped in


Lots of Bighorn Tracks and body parts




Those old time cowboys really knew how to party, Gallo Wine and Hostetter's Stomach Bitters
Hostetters Stomach Bitters

There are also a handful of photos from my new Garmin Montana 600 GPS, it surprised me with how good of photos it can take and it is able to evaluate some tough low light exposures pretty well (sunrise/sunset).

Early morning sunrise looking at Toro Peak, yes, those are patches of snow on the ground, it was cold at night up on the mountain range!


Randy is hauling a hefty pack up several thousand feet of climbing in one day, I am not sure how he does it, especially with the light snow all over the place making it very slippery


The snow we had for a couple of days made animal tracking lots of fun and we did not need to carry much water since we could drink/eat the snow


Sunrise over the Salton Sea. I have to say that waking up in the morning and looking out over the Salton Sea from anywhere on the Santa Rosa mountain range is without a doubt one of my favorite parts of any trip up there, it is just magical


There are probably dozens of airplane wrecks in the Santa Rosa mountains, we found one










Gary & Randy enjoying some morning Starbucks looking out over Cochella Valley, damn it was cold..!!


Up near Rabbit Peak we could see down into Borrego Springs and Clark Lake


I hope you enjoy these photos of Martinez Canyon area and the Santa Rosa Mountain range










Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Overnight Backpack in the In-Ko-Pah Mountains

Just a quick overnight backpack trip around the In-Ko-Pah mountains to explore Fingertail Spring. Temps were in the high 90's during the day and high 70's at night if not low 80's. The spring was dry and we didn't see much wildlife, fairly uneventful but the rugged terrain is always beautiful to see and be a part of. Most of the photos are from my Olympus OM-1n and some expired Ilford FP4 plus film,

Tom, the Mastermind behind our trip, Sombrero Peak in the distance and Whale Peak way off
Tom and Sombrero Peak

Fingertail Spring, located above Rockhouse Canyon in Carrizo Gorge
Fingertail Spring

This is looking down at Rockhouse Canyon and Carrizo Gorge, Carrizo Mtn and the Coyote's are off in the distance
Carrizo Gorge & Rockhouse Canyon View from the In-Ko-Pah Mountains

Tom at the Palms at the spring, I have been here a couple of times and not found any surface water
Fingertail Spring and Tom

If you have ever hiked in the massive boulder area of McCain Valley and the In-Ko-Pah mountains you will have seen many interesting shaped boulders that change with the time of day
Desert Pinnacle

Desert Pyramid

Modern Rock Art
Modern Rock Art

These are a coupe of water troughs nestled in near one of the old and now inaccessible vehicle roads along the ridge line above Rockhouse Canyon. There is an older cement trough broken in half and another newer metal one full of bullet holes near it. I toook this photo with a 4x5 large format view camera
In-Ko-Pah Mountains Wildlife Water Tanks. Old cement tank and a newer steel tank, both non operational. Carrizo Mtn in far distance. Photo taken on 4x5  Arista EDU film and Anba Ikeda Field Camera, f/22 150mm, Red 25A Filter . Developed in 1:100 Rodinal @60minutes

Total Balloons This Trip - 4
Balloons

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Sunday, May 31, 2015

Carrizo Gorge Wilderness Backpack - ABDSP

Gary and I spent the long 3 day Memorial Day weekend leisurely traversing the Carrizo Gorge Wilderness with no more of an agenda other than getting back to our trucks sometime by the end of the day Monday. Mr Tom was kind enough to drop us off at Jacumba on Sat morning and was going to hike with us for the day but the weather was kinda cold and blustery and I guess his jacuzzi and booze back home sounded better so it was just Gary and I.

Carrizo Gorge is one of those easy to get to wilderness areas that just never gets old and it has a long history with the railroad and the now famous Goat Canyon Trestle. The trestle seems to be growing exponentially in popularity and I suspect that will continue until the railway patrols pickup again. This particular trip we saw as many as 10 motorcycle adventurers in addition to all of the usual hikers and MTB'ers.

There is something about the Gorge that seems to beckon film photography and I always enjoy taking at least one older analog camera with me. The B/W photos here are from my Fuji GW690 6x9 medium format camera and the film is Fuji Acros 100 developed 1+2+100 in PMK Pyro @13 minutes. A few of the photos I took were an attempt to mirror photos found in the The Impossible Railroad book.

Carrizo Gorge with Sombrero Peak way off in the distance to the right
View of Carrizo Gorge Anza Borrrego Desert State Park from the Railroad Tracks

Following the tracks, some of the trestles are in good shape, others not so much
Carrizo Gorge Train Tracks near Tule Spring in Quad 19 USGS Maps

One particular set of railway cars that has been out on the tracks for several years now has been heavily vandalized.
Inside one of the railraw cars abandoned on the tracks. It has suffered quite a bit of vandalism over the years, When I first saw it there was no graffitti or broken windows.

On page 36 of The Impossible Railroad book there is a picture showing the Young & Crooks Camp 1 and all of the workers tents and the compressor plant equipment. This is the roughly the same photograph but the only thing you can still see are foundations of cement and many of the cleared areas that were built up with rocks to form a tiered foundation for the large tents they used
Young & Crooks Camp 1 in Carrizo Gorge. This view is looking straight down at the camp area and was me trying to capture the same image as on page 36 of the San Diego And Arizona Railway Impossible Railroad book

Gary at a few of the railroad camps
Gary at Railroad Camp near Indian Hill

This workers camp overlooks the gorge and has approx 5-6 built up tiers for large tents. Most of it is overgrown with cholla now though.
Gary standing on an overlook at tunnel 17

When building the Carrizo Gorge Railway sections the workers would build camp sites on the bypass roads for the tunnels. Some of the rock wall foundations are still visible and are quite elaborate

Here is another photo from The Impossible Railroad book
on page 40 showing tunnel 15 where they eventually gave up on that tunnel and built the tracks around it
Carrizo Gorge Tunnel 15a near Goat Canyon Trestle. This tunnel was abandoned after multiple collapses and the tracks were built around the side of the mountain. This view was me trying to capture the same image as on page 40 of the San Diego And Arizona Railway Impossible Railroad book

We found a huge horseshoe, looked more decorative than useful
We found a large horseshoe at one of the railroad camps, it looks decorative and not functional

This is one of the cooler tunnels out there
This is a cool tunnel built deep into a large boulder mountain

Gary heading into tunnel 16, this one has a history of fires and collapses which is evidenced by the tweak on the top. The inside supports you see in the other tunnels are missing which I am guessing is from the 1986 fire that burned it out
Gary walking towards tunnel 16

What would a trip thru the Gorge be without a photo of the Trestle
Goat Canyon Trestle in Carrizo Gorge

Eventually we found our way to the East Fork and the Carrizo Palms. There was some water and lots of wildlife tracks
One of the several palm groves in the East Fork of Carrizo Gorge

Unfortunately this poor gal was not able to make it to the water source. I was able to go out a few days later with a Fish & Game Biologist to perform a post-mortem and the cause of death was determined to be from disease
Dead Ewe we found in a remote canyon. Cause of death was most likely dieasese as evedince of horn and foot dieasese was present. The collar indicates she was about 13 years old.

Rock Art
Carrizo Gorge Pictographs


I did manage to get some digital shots as well, love the sunrise photos with a super zoom
Sunrise over the Coyote Mtns

The Goat Canyon Trestle has several "catwalks" built in to facilitate repairs and maintenance duties and there is also an elaborate fire supression system built into the trestle with many pipes and valves that lead up to the water tanker on the hillside above. This photo is looking straight thru the first catwalk and some of the water pipes are visible. I can't recommend walking these catwalks at all, they are sketchy at best
Photo & Video Sharing by SmugMug

Gary enjoying some of the water at Carrizo Palms
Photo & Video Sharing by SmugMug

Reptiles were out and about, we found 2 in the same spot with head injuries, pretty strange, anybody have any ideas? We were thinking hawks or such
2 dead snakes with their heads bitten into

Bloody head of one of the snakes

This guy was chilling in the shade of the tunnels
Snake in a dark tunnel

Railroad camp debris, re-purposing a shovel for something?
Curious hole cut out of a shovel

This is more my speed, a real fifth bottle of whisky
A real fifth of whisky

Anyways, thanks for reading, hope you enjoyed...time to turn in.....
Sleep setup in the Gorge



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