|
Our visit to Joshua Tree was part of a trip to the
"Desert Parks of California", and included stops a Death Valley, The East Mojave
National Preserve, and California's big State Park of Anza Borrego. Of the four,
Joshua Tree was the most spectacular (at least to us).
We'd decided to go after reading
a "New York Times" article and April seemed like a good month, so off we went.
"National Geographic's Guide to the National Parks", described "Keys
View" as "the park's premier vantage point for motorists", so we marked it
on the map, and decided that sunset would be a good time to get there. Located at
the end of a six mile spur off the main park road, it's well worth the ride.
We got there just as the good light was beginning and went
through at least a roll and a half of film, shooting frame after frame as the sun
approached the horizon and dropped below it.
Horizontals, verticals, with the tree, without the
tree. You name it, we tried it. We figured that somewhere, among all those
frames, there'd be at least one outstanding one. We actually wound up with about a
dozen. <g>
We sat for awhile after we were done shooting, listening
to the stillness and letting our thoughts wander. It's hard to believe, but there're
still those who see places like this as just so much wasted land that could be
sub-divided, parceled out, and developed (read exploited). What a shameful and
tragic squandering that would be.....Izzy
|
|