After passing through a wonderfully forested and lightly farmed portion of Alger County, County Road H58 turns northeastward to skim the boundary of the eastern reaches of Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore on its run to Hurricane Beach and beyond to the village of Grand Marais. As it begins to parallel the waters of Gitche Gumee, H58 wanders through a beautiful forest of white birch and aspen, whose floor is a carpet of bracken fern. It is one of my favorite places in the Pictured Rocks, an intimate landscape photographer’s dream.

In the somewhat overcast, but reasonably bright daylight, my settings were chosen mostly to keep my shutter open as long as was needed to accomplish my preconceived goal. A focal length of 125mm gave me the angle-of-view I wanted, which, when the camera was at the height of its movement, did not include sky. An aperture of f/20 provided depth-of-field and contributed to the potential for a sufficiently long shutter speed. And at ISO 100, the shutter speed engendered was 1.6 seconds for an overall medium exposure.

With my camera on a tripod for better control and the self-timer function set for 5-second delay, I released the shutter and began slowly and slightly raising and lowering the camera/tripod vertically until the shutter opened. As the shutter continued open I continued the movement and then lowered the tripod to its stable position before the shutter closed. This allowed the camera movement to be contained in a blurred vertical plane as the image was exposed.

Even though we have led our last workshops in Pictured Rocks, I believe we will find a way to work there again, for PRNL and Hiawatha National Forest are two of our favorite public lands. Please join with me in supporting our common wealth treasures and national heritage.