Focus on Photography
Photo of the Week "Fast flying western snowy plovers" by Bob Crum. Photo data: Canon 7DMKII camera, manual mode, Tamron 16-300mm lens @300mm; Exposure ISO 250, aperture f/11, shutter speed 1/250th of a second.
Photo of the Week "Fast flying western snowy plovers" by Bob Crum. Photo data: Canon 7DMKII camera, manual mode, Tamron 16-300mm lens @300mm; Exposure ISO 250, aperture f/11, shutter speed 1/250th of a second.
Best not to think!
Bob Crum
Bob Crum

I received 391 replies regarding last week's mystery tree contest, but not one correct answer. So I win a scoop of scrumptious Baskin-Robbins ice cream.

The photo presented itself about three weeks ago when I went to Sespe Creek to shoot the muddy torrent. Clouds offered a dramatic background. After the photo shoot, I began to walk back to my vehicle. On the way, I passed a large rainwater puddle. Without thought mind you, I noticed a tree reflection in the puddle.

I instantly recognized the tree reflection on the puddle as a photo op. I didn't think: “Oh, how lucky can I get? Look at this phenomenal photo op. Wait, I must stop and take a picture. Click! Got it! OK, nothing else to see so must hurry back to the vehicle.”

The photographic process involved a series of shots before I got the desired composition I envisioned. This creative aspect of photography is extremely satisfying and immensely gratifying. And addictive!

In the previous column, I wrote: Regardless of the destination, a mindfulness phenomenon is unavoidable. Mindfulness is the practice of maintaining a nonjudgmental state of heightened or complete awareness of the surroundings on a moment-to-moment basis. Try it!

Seeing the tree reflection in the puddle is a typical example of awareness moment to moment. After years of photography, mindful awareness has become mostly an automatic function. Don't confuse this with thinking. It's not a thinking process. Thinking is a deleterious and pernicious habit. Worse, the instant the mind starts 'thinking,' awareness dissipates. Secret: Walk without deliberately thinking! You'll be amazed at the photo ops you'll 'see' that seem to appear magically.

At the scene, it took considerable maneuvering to get the desired composition. Move here, move there, up, back, ah, this will work - click! I made several photos before I got the money shot.

Keep in mind that I am seeing the top of the tree at the bottom of the puddle, the end of the puddle nearest me. I left a little of the dirt around the puddle in the composition.
Back home, I post-processed the image by first cropping slightly. Notice all the little white objects around the tree? They are stones in the puddle but in the reflection, they create a surreal image of the cosmos, IMO. But also in the puddle were some large stones that ruined the overall cosmos effect. I removed them using Lightroom's (LR) content aware tool.

Done in LR, I exported the image to Photoshop Elements for a few minor exposure adjustments with NIK. And executed one last but essential function: flip the image 180°. This created an image with the tree now upright. The dirt that was at the top of the puddle in the original image is now the ground at the bottom for the tree. Voila! A magnificent tree reflected in the rainwater puddle. So much fun!

The photo of the week is a flock of, I think, western snowy plovers. I was at a favorite beach location hoping for a glorious sunset. Didn't happen. But as I was shooting back-lit waves with the sun on the horizon, a speedy flock of the little birds flew by. I had only a second to capture a photo of these fast-flying birds before they were out of range; proof that there's always something interesting to photograph on the coast. Just saying.

Last Saturday, the Fillmore Volunteer Fire Foundation and the Parks & Recreation Department sponsored a 5K run & walk event and a cornhole tournament. See my photo/video of the event on youtube here: https://youtu.be/2K_97KjFN-U

Send comments, suggestions or questions to: focusonphotography@earthlink.net