Western Wild

Dave Showalter's Conservation Photography Weblog

The Archives

August 2012




  • Colorado, Energy, Politics

    Another Haliburton Highway?

    August 23, 2012 | Permalink | 4 Comments

    Flowering rabbit brush lines a two lane road in the Thompson Divide area, near Carbondale, Colorado. This entire area is leased for natural gas development.

    In “Drilling The Roaring Fork Valley. Really?” I highlighted yet another plan to turn a truly special place into an industrial-scale gas field. Marla and I have traveled to the Aspen/Carbondale area quite a few times, usually to hike around Mount Sopris or photograph the aspen forest on McClure Pass near Marble. I recently learned that the entire area north and west of Carbondale is leased for drilling and could become an industrial wasteland. The Thompson Divide is the only buffer between Carbondale and the Piceance Basin, a mega-field sacrificed landscape, industrial complex in northwest Colorado. Along the Thompson Divide, ranchlands and rolling sagebrush give way to aspen and conifer forest in the shadow of towering Mount Sopris. Crystal River pours from the high peaks, cutting through the valley to its confluence with the Roaring Fork in Carbondale. The Roaring Fork is a significant tributary of the Colorado. The Thompson Divide is important mid-elevation habitat for migrating deer and elk, the Crystal River irrigates hay meadows,and it’s a hiking, mountain biking, wildlife-watching, fly fishing, photography and hunting mecca; providing year round revenue for surrounding communities. The Thompson Divide Coalition, with 3,200 members, is advocating for protection of the entire area and I fuly support their position. This simply isn’t the place for a massive fracking industrial park, with the thousands of truck trips, toxic chemicals threatening air and water, and pressure on rural towns. I made a trip last week to make images that I hope will support the opposition – click more to continue: (more…)

  • Colorado Mountains, Photography

    Moosy Morning

    August 20, 2012 | Permalink | 4 Comments
    bull moose, front range

    Bull Moose Portrait : Prints Available

     A large bull moose feeds on willows on an August morning. Moose have just recently migrated to the eastern side of the Continental Divide along the Front Range, long favoring the wet side of Rocky Mountain National Park. On this morning, I watched a bachelor group of six large bulls feeding in the willows. 

    There’s a bachelor group of very large bull moose on the Front Range, magnificent creatures all feeding in harmony until rut starts next month, when they’ll battle for the right to mate. For now the bulls are fattening up on willows before they spend a lot of energy during mating season. Moose were a very rare sight on the eastern side of the Front Range until the last few years; you had to go over to the Kawuneeche Valley in Rocky Mountain National Park or Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge to have a decent chance of spotting moose. Cow sightings are now common near Estes Park and I’m hopeful that the rut will happen in the general area where I photographed today. The photo experience included an 8 foot step ladder with my Kirk window mount on top, turning the whole rig into a “ladder pod.” Without the ladder, I’d just be looking at antlers sticking out of willow; you can only make so many of those abstract moose images. I used a Nikon D3s camera body, which has great low light capability and both a 600mm lens and an 80-400mm. The moose passed right by me and two other photographers on their way to the forest – next time I’ll have a wide angle lens in my pocket. What a thrill! (more…)

  • Kinda Funny

    Coffee Mmmmm!

    August 17, 2012 | Permalink | 7 Comments

    With coffee there IS hope! Mmmmmm! At Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge, Colorado. Ed Abbey used to call it “well-built coffee.” :)

  • Colorado Mountains, Photography

    Colorado 14ers – On The Cover!

    August 13, 2012 | Permalink | 4 Comments

    I’m honored that my Crestones Sunrise image is on the cover of the Skyline Press 2013 Colorado 14ers Calendar! I’ve worked with Todd Caudle at Skyline on a number of projects, including the award-winning 14,000 Feet and my Prairie Thunder book, also a Colorado book award winner.

    The Colorado 14ers Calendar is a celebration of Colorado’s 54 highest peaks that invites top photographers to submit their very best mountain images for a place in this top-notch calendar. I’m stoked to be on the cover and have my Eolus goat shot in the calendar. Thanks to my friend Todd Caudle for your great work at Skyline and support of Colorado photographers!

  • Colorado Mountains, Ranching

    Culebra Peak, Colorado’s Private 14er

    August 8, 2012 | Permalink | 12 Comments
    culebra peak, cielo vista ranch

    Culebra Sunset : Prints Available

     Warm sunset light turns sagebrush gold below Culebra Peak (14,069') on Cielo Vista Ranch. We were paying guests of the ranch, there to climb the only Colorado 14er on private land. 

    The 3rd and final chapter of this Sangre De Cristo story…

    I wasn’t sure we’d ever be here, but Annie invited us via Steph, who’s down to her last three 14ers, and well, here we are outside of the gate to Cielo Vista Ranch with plans to climb the only Colorado 14,000 foot peak on private land. We’re just a few miles from New Mexico and there’s a festive atmosphere, with climbers setting up camp, cooking, and talking about 14ers. A lot of climbers save this one for the end, choosing to climb all of the free mountains on public land first. This one costs $100 for camping and a day of climbing – another $50 if you want to tackle Red Mountain, and surrounded by like-minded folks, I’m warming to the experience. There’s no logical explanation for paying to climb, Colorado has thousands of beautiful peaks on public land; but if you want to summit all of the 14ers, you’ll wind up here eventually. Landowners these days are diversifying all sorts of ways, and we had just come from Zapata Ranch, where dude ranch hospitality compliments bison and cattle ranching. Cielo Vista opens the gates of the 77,500 acre ranch to paying guests climbing Culebra and private elk hunts in fall. Hunters pay ten large for the chance at a trophy elk. Our plan was to camp out as guests of the ranch, meet Carlos, the ranch manager at 6 a.m. when he opens the gate, take care of formalities, and climb the peak the next day. (more…)

  • Ranching

    Zapata Ranch Ahhhh!

    August 2, 2012 | Permalink | 7 Comments
    sangre de cristo range, rocky mountain bee plant

    Bee Plant and Crestones : Prints Available

     A wet July leads to a breakout in the Rocky Mountain bee plant bloom on Zapata Ranch. The high peaks of the Sangre De Cristo Range form a rugged backdrop.

    Part 2 of 3 – Sangre De Cristos

    Needing a shower, chef-prepared meals, and a comfy bed, we naturally headed for Zapata Ranch, just down the road a piece from Crestone. It was great to see friends from previous visits while teaching at Zapata and view the ranch in a green summer season, with everything in bloom. After a month and a half of 90+ degree days on the Front Range, low 80′s with an afternoon shower felt great! We enjoyed Chef Mike’s gourmet creations and met nice folks from all over the country – even a group from Ireland. Zapata is a Nature Conservancy working ranch managed holistically by the Phillips family. They were running a woman’s horsemanship clinic led by Cam Schryver. The clinic is one of many special events on the year-round calendar at Z-ranch. I’m fortunate to be able to teach a sandhill crane photo workshop with Michael Forsberg in the spring, another Z-ranch special event. I was hoping to get Marla on a horse – she loves to ride and it’s been too long – what I didn’t know was that I’d be riding too… on a cattle drive. (more…)