High Winds and Misdemeanors

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When most people think of Monument Valley they see it in their mind’s eye as the place where they take those beautiful calendar pictures of the rugged reddish buttes and mesas jutting up into nearly cloudless, cobalt blue skies, or where the shots of the wide vistas often shown in the old John Wayne movies like Stage Coach, The Searchers and Fort Apache, to name just a few, were taken. There is a peace and serenity within these views that makes you feel a quietude so vast and deep, it resonates with its silence, while the distances and depth in the images show the vast panoramas of the Southwest.

But the valley has another face that is rarely shown in those images. That’s when the hot, sand-laden winds come blowing up out of the South to race through the valley blasting their names on the sides of the monoliths that mark the valley floor. This morning the sun has just risen and is shining through the sand cloud as it begins it journey. Soon even the largest of the sandstone formations will be just a pale shadow within the depths of the wind-driven storm as the grains of sand are picked up, to gather and join and rise into a huge moving cloud that obliterates the view of everything in its path.

This is a time when man and beast alike hunker down, staying out of the sandstorm’s blistering winds and the sting of the sand against their exposed skin until the storm runs its course. Today it looks like this could build into a big one. The horses will turn their rear ends into the wind, put their heads down, and wait it out huddled together for protection. The sheep make their way to the sheltered areas at the base of the huge rock formations to be out of the brunt of the wind, and the wild things each have their own ways to stay alive.  People, well people do what ever they feel like doing. The smart ones stay home though.

Even the photographers get it and seeing the magnitude of the storm stay out of weather. But not before they grab a few shots of this different look of Monument valley.

RainbowNomics

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click on image to see it larger

Since everyone is budget conscious these days I’ve decided to indulge in a little RainbowNomics. For those of you who are not familiar with the concept, it goes like this. Its very simple really, whenever you order a rainbow make certain that the little box called “make it a double please” is checked and you get two rainbows for the price of one, thereby doubling your investment and your enjoyment at the same time. Why settle for one garden variety rainbow when you can have two spectacular, incredible, stupendous rainbows just as easily and for the same amount of effort. It just makes good sense. Any questions? OK then, Let’s everybody do it and really help the economy.

This picture is actually a panorama of 18 separate images taken one after the other from the left to the right then stitched together in Photoshop to make one very wide picture. A panorama shows the entire scene much closer and clearer than if you took a single image with a wide angle lens. How come? well in the wide angle lens image the subject, the rainbow, would be further away due to the magic that happens inside the lens and you wouldn’t be able to see the rainbow as well as it would be smaller and kind of puny looking. If you read my authors page then you know that I told you that occasionally I would sneak some technical stuff into these posts and there it was. National Geographic will do it sometimes too, take panoramas and then tell you about it. I want to give you the same quality information here. This scene was shot from our deck looking out over the plains right after a small rain storm went through. We frequently got rainbows before only they’ve always been the single ones, but since we began practicing RainbowNomics we now get these fantastic double ones absolutely free. Isn’t it great to be an American.