On Aviation and Photography:
"You haven't seen a tree until you've seen its shadow from the sky." -- Amelia Earhart
“You don't take a photograph, you make it.” - - Ansel Adams
UPDATED: September 19, 2010
Hi, My name is Bill and I am updating my homepage to reflect a wonderful event in my life...marriage, September 18, 2010, to my best friend Tara...known to many of you as auntietk here on Renderosity.
We "met" shortly after I joined Renderosity in August 2008. We share a love for photography and indeed all types of art.
We live north of Seattle and enjoy getting to share photographic excursions and information with other Renderositians ( is "Renderositians" even a word? ). LOL
As for me, it seems like I've been taking pictures all my life but I didn't get serious enough to purchase my first Digital Single Lens Reflex (DSLR) camera until May 2008. In May 2009 I upgraded from an Olympus E-510 to an Olympus E-30 with a wide variety of lenses.
My subject areas of interest include absolutely everything but with a frequent return to airplanes, cars, tanks, etc., ...or as Tara says, machines that make lots of noise;-)
If you are curious, I am pictured above in a Grumman Corsair on a taxiway of the Kansas City Downtown Airport. I used to fly and train others to fly airplanes. That will explain my frequent forays into the world of aviation. Last but by no means least, thanks to Pannyhb for introducing me to Renderosity. The moment I saw it I was hooked.
Fine print: Yes, the photo above is a photo manipulation:-)
Hover over top left image to zoom.
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Comments (19)
Otto1969
Great landscape, well captured !
auntietk
The ultimate contrast in transportation options! Well seen, and a great shot, hon. :*
bugsnouveau
Beautiful scene...your words make it fascinating...very cool presentation
goodoleboy
Wow, a fisheye foto in reverse of this historical landscape, Bill. What a trip that must have been back in the 1850s.
RodS
OK, Bill.... How much did you have to pay that pilot to fly exactly along the Oregon Trail?? :-D
This is a wonderful look at the advance of history and transportation - and a great photo as a bonus!
durleybeachbum
This is a perfect example of how image and words more than double the interest of each other. Very clever!
jayfar
All lined up perfectly Bill and a really lovely shot.
I can imagine the wagons going along here and all the hardship that entails.
kgb224
Amazing capture Bill. God bless.
CavalierLady
What a great story this image tells! And the contrast of travel times between old and new along with the con trail is just the right place is amazing! Wonderful image, Bill.
flavia49
excellent capture
X-PaX
Very nice capture Bill.
helanker
A really stunning landscape, Bill. A wonderfully clear shot and the sky is breathtaking.
jendellas
How easy it is to travel today, how difficult, way back when. Lovely pic.xx
MrsRatbag
I have seen the wagon trails, and was amazed when I learned what they were. I can't even begin to imagine making that harsh journey. Fantastic capture of then and now, Bill!
kenmo
Stunning vista....
moochagoo
I love that kind of dirty road, but, once our car was out of control and it cost me 2000$ because my insurance didn't want to pay.
Richardphotos
it was amazing the hardships faced by early travelers. great desert-scape
anahata.c
lol, Rod...you'd have completed the story if you'd gone back in time and paid the original wagon trailblazers to make their trail for you too...anyway, I agree with others that your historical background is great for this shot, and it's a splendid shot, period, Bill. The trail is in perfect sync with the contrail. And the surrounding is vast, scruffy, and grand. I love the scale here---I assume those are full size trees? I mean, they don't have bonsais in Idaho...it's just, the trees seem very small; so, if they're full size, that trail is quite broad. Either way, the brush and plants in the foreground are prickly and beautiful, and the detail is grand. You're really made for that camera (and for a full frame camera, period). And you shot the background almost compressed to make a "border" for the foreground, with absolute clarity in the peaks and the clouds. A piece of beauty from top to bottom---I mean, even the high cirrus's (those are cirrus clouds, right?)---have such smoothness and beauty. These landscapes were made for you. Beautiful shot, Bill. It would be wonderful wall size...
wysiwig
Spectacular contrast, jets and wagons. I've been through country like this and can understand the phrase "men of iron' (and women too). I learned about the Oregon Trail in the fifth grade. I still remember a saying from my reading; "The cowards never started and the weak died along the way." I think I would have stayed in St. Louis.