Opportunities for Maples

AlanLichty

Moderator
I posted a shot yesterday from the lower area of the North Fork of the Smith River with some elk resting at the edge of a pasture area. This is a 2 shot panorama that is just to the left of that shot. I was originally thinking of stitching all three shots but I didn't like the distortions that came out when I put them all together. This area was amongst the earliest to get logged when Euro-American settlers first arrived since the hills have gentle slopes and the logs could easily be floated down to the port towns of Gardner and Reedsport along the Umpqua River. The resulting forests have little in common with what you find when you follow the river up to its headwaters in the deep old growth forests surrounding Kentucky Falls. Deciduous trees are the first to get started once an area is disturbed by either fire or logging but if left alone the conifers will eventually form a canopy over the shorter maples and alders and shade them out. The maples and alders in this scene are just about at their peak and the conifers can be seen poking through the leaves as they start to take over again. On the one hand clear cut logging sucks but if the conifers hadn't been cut down this display of fall colors wouldn't exist.

I had spotted these colors along the lower parts of the river the day before when I drove up this road to shoot the falls but the direct sunlight wasn't ideal when I was going up to the falls and was even worse when I was driving out late in the day. On the day I shot this I drove up the road that follows Sweet Creek and then kept going on forest roads that connect up with the ones along the North Fork of the Smith River and decided to keep on going back to this spot. The old growth forest areas are roughly 32 miles up the river from this spot. As a crow flies Kentucky Falls is only about 3 or 4 miles from Sweet Creek but driving on single track USFS roads will take a couple of hours at best and lots longer if you are a photographer looking for places to stop and shoot :)

Two frames at 70mm.

DJI_M3P_70_NFSmithLowlands3102825.jpg


C&C always welcome.
 

JimFox

Moderator
Staff member
Awesome Alan! So you did go in closer with your drone! I liked your wider image, and this compliments it well as we get to see a bit more detail in the colors.
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
Awesome Alan! So you did go in closer with your drone! I liked your wider image, and this compliments it well as we get to see a bit more detail in the colors.
Thanks Jim - this is actually a much wider view than the shot with the elk but I didn't do a pano crop on this one. I was already a fair distance from the pullout I launched from which is why I dialed up the 70mm telephoto lens/sensor to shoot a bit closer. Finding places to pull off the road is ironically more difficult down in the flats where there is a two lane road vs. the single track forest roads since the forest roads have lots of pullouts so cars can pass each other.
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
Nice view. That road looks like there are no places one can pull off to shoot from.
Thanks Jameel - you are correct about the lack of turnouts as most of them were someone's driveway. Often I would spot a scene I wanted to shoot and then had to drive for another mile or two to find a place to get off the road. Also the case that on several occasions while I was looking for a spot to pull off I had some local yokel in a lifted Bubba Truck(TM) tailgating me because they wanted to drive this road at 70+mph :rolleyes:
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
Thanks for the excellent narrative with this amazing image Alan. Looks like a beautiful spot for sure.
Thanks Trent - I like the fall colors but far and away prefer the old growth forests deep in the forests upstream from where this was taken. This area is almost entirely private land quite thoroughly posted with signs saying that trespassers will be violated.
 

Trent Watts

Well-Known Member
Thanks Trent - I like the fall colors but far and away prefer the old growth forests deep in the forests upstream from where this was taken. This area is almost entirely private land quite thoroughly posted with signs saying that trespassers will be violated.
You are correct Alan.. There is nothing like old growth forests. I have mostly seen them on Vancouver Island.
Your comment about trespassers reminded me of a sign I once saw on an organic farm: "Trespassers will be composted".
 
Top Bottom