Mon, Sep 30, 5:36 AM CDT

Laying Down On The Job

Photography Flowers/Plants posted on Apr 13, 2012
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Description


...an ancient Redwood toppled over onto the forest floor now provides sustenance and shelter for new seedlings to take root and grow. ...seen from the splintered base end of the trunk. ...all part of the forest's ecosystem. Bill "If A Tree Falls..." thumb_2319233.jpg

Comments (31)


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dbrv6

9:34PM | Fri, 13 April 2012

Fantastic Capture.

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Adobe_One_Kenobi

9:37PM | Fri, 13 April 2012

You got some great captures Bill, I love the textures here.

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Richardphotos

9:45PM | Fri, 13 April 2012

when I visited the smaller red wood forest near San Jose, I was very impressed with the beauty.outstanding photography

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jocko500

9:56PM | Fri, 13 April 2012

this is wonderful looking

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Faemike55

10:08PM | Fri, 13 April 2012

and a very cool system it is Great capture Bill

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kgb224

11:01PM | Fri, 13 April 2012

Stunning capture Bill. God Bless.

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netot

11:27PM | Fri, 13 April 2012

Life does not end, it is only transformed!What a beautiful place, this serie is great!

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jayfar

12:26AM | Sat, 14 April 2012

This is a beautiful illustration of nature at work. Super shot Bill.

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awjay

1:29AM | Sat, 14 April 2012

nice shot

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durleybeachbum

1:35AM | Sat, 14 April 2012

Not just seedlings but a mouthwatering array of invertebrates! A poke around with a macro could be most rewarding!

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auntietk

2:00AM | Sat, 14 April 2012

Nothing is wasted. Nature is the ultimate recycler! I like the sharp focus on your subject and the delicate ground cover in motion in the slight breeze. A thoroughly satisfying image!

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bazza

2:31AM | Sat, 14 April 2012

Great capture Bill that looks like it was a big tree..

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blinkings

3:25AM | Sat, 14 April 2012

Great. The closest I have come to seeing these types of trees were the giant Sequoias at Mariposa Grove. Very humbling.

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morningglory

5:55AM | Sat, 14 April 2012

A photographers paradise for sure. Awesome shot.

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T.Rex

6:15AM | Sat, 14 April 2012

Looks almost like a troll on all fours. I love the colors in these photographs. I wonder how deep the hole in the ground is? It looks very deep indeed. As for seedlings, I received a small wood barrel with a redwood seed for my birthday 1978. The seedling came up, grew to 1 inch, but unfortunately then died (I don't know why, but it made me quite sad, being a natural California gift). I wish I could get another. Have you looked at the dead wood for insects and other life? Would be interesting to see what's living in/on the wood. Keep up the good work! :-)

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X-PaX

6:41AM | Sat, 14 April 2012

Very nice capture.

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jendellas

6:45AM | Sat, 14 April 2012

I wonder when that fell, lovely capture!!

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flavia49

8:33AM | Sat, 14 April 2012

magnificent shot

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bobrgallegos

10:02AM | Sat, 14 April 2012

An amazing capture of nature at work! Outstanding series Bill!

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helanker

11:15AM | Sat, 14 April 2012

It is such a stunning forest and so is this shot.

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dochtersions

12:27PM | Sat, 14 April 2012

A fantastic capture of nature here. Thanks for sharing!

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thecytron

1:37PM | Sat, 14 April 2012

Stunning green color!

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RodS

5:56PM | Sat, 14 April 2012

That really looks HUGE - what a shot, Bill! It must have fallen some time ago judging by all the plant life growing on it. I love that fern on top of it!

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goodoleboy

6:00PM | Sat, 14 April 2012

Cycling and recycling. Lovely forest shot, Bill. I was thinking that if a huge redwood falls in the forest, that could provide an echo-system of several decibels.

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Blush

12:55AM | Sun, 15 April 2012

Wow This is some forest with some awesome big trees and luscious shade as well Def a fav with me and a 10 for the image.......** Hugs Susan~

angora

5:26AM | Sun, 15 April 2012

still enchanting! loveee the carpet!!!

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MrsRatbag

11:18AM | Sun, 15 April 2012

I'm fascinated by the springy green undergrowth, what a gorgeous place you found!

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Chipka

9:03PM | Mon, 16 April 2012

I'm always amazed at the efficiency and beauty of Nature, especially since a single dead Redwood Tree can become it's own small ecosystem. Gorgeous colors. I really like the sense of calm quietude in this shot as well. Oooh, and ferns! I like those things!

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anahata.c

10:02AM | Fri, 20 April 2012

a most complex & fascinating view. I mean, you have the looming opening in the trunk, and the branches shooting out from it, but your pov puts it right in our face, from the base; and it's hunkered right into the treeline, which makes it anything but a normal 'showcase' of the thing: in other word, a photographer's eye at work. And the massive network of the felled trunk suddenly---in this highly 'foreshortened' view (a Renaissance term)---becomes a compacted, with everything crammed into a massive clump. In fact, we can view it like a big 'fortress' going back into the forest. A great angle, Bill, and most unexpected. Also, your eye guided you to the carpet of leaves, which undulates its way like someone put it there as a welcome-mat for the tree. Overall, from the high trees to the rest of the shot, it's a really creative pov of something that reaches well into the back of the shot. Muscular, compacted and of course beautiful. More fine work in this series. (And btw, should you say that you had no choice because there wasn't another convenient place to stand...well it looks like there are other places to stand; but also, one would have to say that your eye chose this because a lot of photographers would pass it by simply because the angle is so difficult. So it's a choice all the same.) Bill, if you're not familiar with 'foreshortening', here's an example (here). It's by Mantagna. It's not the most dramatic, but it at least makes its point for now. In the Renaissance, artists explored f.shortening for all its drama, its unusual sweep, and the illusions it created (illusions equals challenges). In the Mantagna, you see how the body is 'fore-shortened' (shortened-before) and therefore distorted, making it seem as if it were bulkier & more squat than it was. Thereby, it gives the dead Christ a feeling of great & strange mass. So you can see, then, how your shot of the tree trunk creates that same distortion and "condensing of form"---making it an unusually massive presence. That's the power of foreshortening, if you're interested...

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danapommet

8:02PM | Sun, 03 June 2012

Beautiful! I can'tget over the lush ground cover and even a fern growing on top of the fallen redwood!

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Photograph Details
F Numberf/4.5
MakeOLYMPUS IMAGING CORP.
ModelE-30
Shutter Speed1/6
ISO Speed160
Focal Length60

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