# 6910-15 / around the house • kitchen sink • flora • fauna • landscape ~ same as it ever was

all photos ~ (embgiggenable)

If a day goes by without my doing something related to photography, it's as though I've neglected something essential to my existence, as though I had forgotten to wake up.” - Richard Avedon

SINCE MY RETURN FROM NEW MEXICO / DENVER, 20 days ago, it was until 3 days ago that I made my first photograph here at home. Oddly enough, it wasn’t until I made the photograph in this entry that I realized that so much time had passed since my last picture making. That realization made it plain that I had, in fact, been feeling “it's as though I've neglected something essential to my existence.” That written, it should be noted that all of those 17 photograph-making-less days were spent doing something related to photography––i.e. processing my travel photographs.

Over past 2 days I have made a couple more photographs and begun to realize what it was that caused the back-to-home photo making lull; apparently, or so it seems, while in New Mexico, my picture making sensitivity intuitively(?) transitioned to the landscape mode. A mode in which shapes, texture, color, line, and tone found in the natural world are very different from the same values in a more urban / domesticated / man-made environment.

I can not write that I was consciously aware of that change but I was most certainly aware of the fact that reverting to the “rules of composition” was not going to be productive in the cause of avoiding making touristy / calendar pictures. It was that thought that got me off on the right foot when, from the get-go, I decided to make photographs from the passenger seat of our rental car.

# 5808-09 / landscape•ku•fauna ~ f8 and be there

(embiggenable) • iPhone

(embiggenable) • iPhone

I AM CERTAIN THAT IT HAS BEEN SAID that the iPhone is not suited for making wildlife pictures. To which I write, "HA!" Just have the cojones-or, perhaps, the lack of common sense-to get out of the car walk, slow and quiet, up to the subject like you own the place. Easy, peasy.

Pictured in this entry are; 1. Rocky Mountain Bighorn Sheep. That picture was made in close proximity to their place of residence, the 2. Rio Grande River Gorge (just a ways outside of Toas, New Mexico). At this location, the gorge is 800 ft deep.

The sheep, which were driven nearly to extinction in New Mexico, were reintroduced to a 50 mile(?) section of the Rio Grande gorge a few decades ago (?). There is now an established herd of approximately 350-400 animals. Yesterday, apparently a few of the herd emerged from the gorge for a late afternoon snack and I was just in the right place at the right time.