As the autumn in the Southern Appalachians began to shed its foliage and the temperature ranges between day and night began to stretch themselves toward extremes, the valleys of Pisgah National Forest in Transylvania County found themselves regularly filled with tidal fog, a moving sea of air sloshing between the low places and the surrounding uplifts and high country. Pounding Mill Overlook on the Blue Ridge Parkway became, on these occasions, a seaside vantage where light and cloud joined as morning light washed in another new day.

A focal length of 135mm, still short-telephotoland, gave me the angle-of-view I wanted, to include the spur ridge below the overlook and a considerable swatch of the fog-filled valley floor. An aperture of f/18 provided depth-of-field from a camera-to-subject distance between two hundred yards and several miles; and with an ISO of 500 allowed for a shutter speed of 1/50th second so that I could freeze the movement of the ocean moving below me.

Pisgah and Nantahala National Forests are part of the common wealth of Western North Carolina, part of the wonderful public lands heritage that is our solemn obligation to protect and preserve.