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 (10)
delaorden_ojeda
Hi Jodie ! how i would love to know this place , one of my dreams, nice view and excelent composition !
bmac62
Beautiful. Been reading about this entire area sitting on top of a huge volcano. Let's hope it stays VERY quiet for a long time:)
duncanlong
What a fantastic vista. Great shot.
lizzibell
Beautiful view...
MrsLubner
The pools are a lovely way to "walk" the eyes through this valley. Stunning work.
kgb224
Such a wonderful scenic view.Wonderful capture Jodie.
anaber
Never-ending! Wonderful,Jodie!
goodoleboy
Beautiful and placid countryside in this shot, Jodes! Buffalo gals must be out there somewhere. I'd say more but I'm running late today.
elfin14doaks
This is gorgeous and big.
anahata.c
I assume not an easy shot for a fine photographer; because, although long expanses have a certain poetry that lend themselves to the camera, there's the danger of sameness, monotony, and the 'obvious' (the 'obvious' being the appeal of a low sweeping landscape, which is easy to capture but hard to capture articulately). And everyone sees how beautifully you captured this: It's in their comments. For me, it's no surprise: I remember when I first saw this, I knew from the thumbnail that you'd get this fully. The generous amount of grassland in foreground makes the river all the more apparent; and your pov flattens it so that it becomes a ribbon of light breaking through the grass. Maybe you had no choice (maybe no high place to stand), but you got a gentle sheen in the river and it feels like a painter's stroke washing through the green. You also got variances in the grass itself (yellows, bare spots, etc.). And, as you so often do in your broader landscapes, you capture a lot of activity starting in the middle or background areas, as if things picked up a whole new energy back there. That's wholly right for this part of the country, because that's what these vistas do as you move back into them with your eye: Ie, trees appear, hills appear, and then mountains, etc. But then, the most dramatic part of the shot: the sky. A beautiful sky capture, with blue tones as clear as can be and clarity in the sweeping forms. Another wonderful capture from you, and another teaching vehicle for me & others on how to handle this type of vista...because it's one thing if the vista is dramatic, but another to find music in a vista like this. This takes music in the photographer herself. Beautiful & plaintive, a very fine capture. I took notes...