To the Spanish explorers of the Eighteenth Century along the Old Spanish Trail through what is now Moab, Utah, they were the Sierra La Sal, the Salt Mountains. Twenty-eight million years ago they were igneous intrusions into the less resistant sedimentary rocks of the Colorado Plateau. As the surrounding sediments eroded away, the fire-born La Sals remained, with heights reaching near to thirteen thousand feet. Some years ago a runaway fire above the community of Castle Valley roared up the lower reaches of the mountains badly scorching the extensive forest of Gamble oaks spread across the flanks. The oaks are recovering, but there are reminders of their ordeal everywhere you look. I wanted to vertically isolate a section of burned trunks interspersed by the fall foliage now showing in places where new growth has sprouted. It became an abstract pattern of lines and shapes highlighted by color. Southeastern Utah is not all desert, as the La Sals remind us. A moderate telephoto focal length of 180mm allowed me to isolate the forest without mountainside or sky in the frame. An aperture of f/20 provided depth-of-field; and a shutter speed of 1/5th second at ISO 100 gave me an overall slightly darker-than-medium exposure.