Just because the autumn leaves are on the ground does not mean the season of color has gone. Some of the most appealing intimate landscapes of fall can be found only when the leaves have loosened their grips on the stems that have held them since spring and allowed themselves to settle on the forest floor. Turkey-tail fungi grow from spores that have attached themselves to twigs and branches recently released from their arboreal homes. Think of them collectively as Fall Color Act II, and the show will go on.

With a focal length of 250mm from about 3′ away, I placed my camera so that the broken twig ran diagonally throught the frame with the single cluster of turkey-tail nearly on the upper left power point and the longer row of fungi on the inside. This gave me the angle-of-view and element placement I wanted and a fair amoumt of magnification. An aperture of f/20 focused on the long pale oak leaf provided depth-of-field; and a shutter speed of 2.0 seconds at ISO 100 gave me a medium overall exposure. Using a polarizing filter allowed me to reduce the glare from the surfaces of all elements.

Great Smoky Mountains National Park is the public land of my home. Like most public lands currently there is a huge backlog of deferred maintenance running in the multi-millions of dollars.  It not sufficient merely to tell some government entity to “fix it.” We all have a part to play, even if it’s only to visit respectfully.