Hello! My name is Jodie. I live in Minnesota where the temps can fluxuate by 20 degrees in one day. Most of my photos have been taken very close to my home, a 10 acre hobby farm., where I raise Alpacas and chickens. I am a band director, a musician/singer and a photographer/adviser on the yearbook committee. My camera of choice is a Nikon. I have a D90 and a D70. I also have a SB800 flash and favorite lens is Nikon 18-200mm AF-S, with VR. Revisiting the visual arts is something I should have done years ago. If I see something remarkable, I just try to capture it. Nobody else will ever see it quite that way again so I hope you try that, too. This is just like expensive therapy for us. Thank you for visiting and may you have a peaceful day!
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Comments (26)
artgum
Impressive capture!
KatesFriend
This is also (if I remember correctly) the alien landing site in 'Close Encounters Of The Third Kind'. Great to see it in a natural state and glad to see it has not been damages too much by mans intrusion.
goodoleboy
Yes, I'm sure this is the same tower they used in the 1977 movie, Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Richard Dreyfuss kept making miniatures of it in his home. And the tower is where the Earthlings and ETs make contact. Terrific POV, clarity and raw awesomeness in this shot, Jodie!
myrrhluz
Can't see it without seeing Richard Dreyfuss sculpting it out of his mashed potatoes. Beautiful capture! Would love to see it in person.
TomDart
Mine was made of cold grits...thick enough to stack well. Odie, thanks very much for this view. I love it and would love to make the trip.
tofi
A delightful glimpse of this monument! Awesome perspective and lighting!
MrsLubner
We have a similar thing here in California that I have always wanted to see...the Devil's Postpile. This is really magnificent and I can feel the excitement of being there.
Katraz
Great shot, watched the film, now I've seen the original,thanks.
bazza
Great capture, nice to see the original after seeing the movie, well done...
Garlor
Pleeased to se it is a real place not CGI, good view point
stuart83
Excellent capture of this magnificent structure formed by nature
PD154
"If everything is quiet on the dark side of the moon, play the pipe tones" Love this place, I was saying to honey a while back, will have to visit this!
kgb224
Wonderful capture Jodie.
MrsRatbag
Geology is so fascinating! What a cool rock formation, and a great capture!
jocko500
a wonder here on how it is. this is a wonderful shot of it too
TwoPynts
I'd love to visit this place. Awesome capture Jodie!
delaorden_ojeda
hi Jodie ! , nice to see you , great image and superb composition , really fantastic !
danapommet
Phenomenal capture and narrative. Dana
Hubba1
What a spectacle! Awsome shot
anahata.c Online Now!
more than 4 favs in one sitting is extra—you'll get a bill, lol. I get the feeling from your photos that these sights in the Dakotas are like separate entities, each rising out of the ground completely on their own. Most of them aren't that high (maybe 1000 feet or so), but they have a monumental presence. The shot is beautiful—again, clarity mixed with your modulated light & shade; and the tone of the trees is poetry & so are your proportions. (You got the peak just where it should be, it's imposing & yet it feels almost touchable.) Another natural vision from you, it feels like we could touch it & hold it in our hands even though it's so monumental. Beautiful work, Jodie. And fascinating background too: Thanks, I had no idea that's how the rock got this way. Amazing how many wonders there are out west... If you don't know it, there are Native American legends about this peak. One of them says that children were playing when a huge bear saw them. So the children climbed this peak, and the bear—hungry & mad—clawed at the rock till it got its present shape. Frustrated, the bear lumbered away, and the peak was called "Bear's Claws" because it looked like a peak carved away by a bear. The children, btw, were left stranded & couldn't get down. So a great eagle came & rescued them; and it's said that, once up there, it's very hard to get down. The formations on the side are its natural protection: It's meant to commune with the sky, not be scaled by climbers...
drace68
the first white man to stand on top, parachuted from a plane before WWII. they played hell to get him down. In the early 1960s you could still see the boards the rescue team jammed into the crevices. On of the cafes in Sundance, Wyoming (a dozen or so miles east of the Tower, had a photomural of the parachutist with his collapsed chute (the pic taken from an airplane). I,too, have read the Native American legend. The rock cooled in columns with hexagonal cross-section. The material has an almost bell-like ring if you tap it with metal (phonolite).
anaber
Powerful in all ways!!!Your photo is wonderful.I love the point of view!
tennesseecowgirl
Truly outstanding photos you've been showing.. this one is great.
busi2ness
What a magnificent view of the geological wonder. This is history elevated to its rightful place. Excellent POV.
Chipka
This is amazing. Of course whenever I see Devil's Tower, I think of Close Encounters of the Third Kind and the character, Roy Neary building this in his living room and on his dinner plate out of mashed potatoes. Anyway, this is a magnificent photo. You caught a true sense of the scope of this thing...Wonderful.
Cosme..D..Churruca
really impressive!