Why You Should Take Up Backpacking

HIKING THE HIGH SIERRAS

To get the shots I really wanted, I went out and bought a backpack. A tent. A stove. A mattress. A headlamp. A small pillow. A Jet Boil. A knife. Extra camera batteries. Matches.  A wine bota.  If you want to shoot in the golden light, miles from the nearest road, you’re just going to have to pitch a tent and spend the night. It’s difficult to shoot around sunset and high tail it back to your car in the dark especially if you have to negotiate dangerous terrain. I’ve tried that in the past and ended up getting lost in the dark by losing the trail. The shots below were taken during various backpacking trips.

HIKING OUT OF HAVASUPAI CANYON
You have to backpack 10 miles to get to Havasu Canyon. There aren’t any roads to the Indian Village at Supai. But it’s worth the effort.

HAVASU FALLS AND POOLS

MOONEY FALLS

MT. WHITNEY RANGE IN MORNING
To get to the top of Mt. Whitney in California, it’s a 22 mile round trip death march as a day hike with a 6,000 foot elevation gain. I’ve completed that but also a 3 day backpack where you can move slowly and plan some great shots such as this one early in the morning.

Sunrise at Mt.Whitney Trail Camp

HIGH SIERRA SUNRISE

WHITNEY RANGE IN REFLECTION

LOOKING NORTH FROM TOP OF MT WHITNEY
From the top of Mt. Whitney. You can’t drive your car to this spot. No gondolas either.
PANORAMA TRAIL VIEW OF HALF DOME
Backpacking on some of the lesser-used trails at Yosemite gives you different looks of the iconic Half-Dome. We were  nearing the end of a 65 mile backpack and the last mile was all uphill. Figures.
GRAND TETON SUNSET
Camping in the back country at Grand Teton National Park will afford some epic sunset shots.
HIKING IN THE ANDES
Trekking through the Andes in Peru gets you to spots that most people can’t access. This is the Salkanty Pass at around 15,000 feet
NEVADO SALKANTAY
Couldn’t chew enough cocoa leaves to counter the effects of the altitude. That’s Nevado Salkanty at over 20,500 feet. No roads here either. There were Peruvian women selling Snickers bars and warm beer along the 30 mile route. You dunk the Snickers in the beer.
COYOTE GULCH
Utah’s Coyote Gulch provides a passage through tilting sandstone cliffs and water-carved alcoves. The next shot of Jacob Hamlin Arch produces  fiery reds and golds but only at sunset

Jacob Hamblin Arch

GREBE LAKE SUNSET
And when you arrive at your destination, you can slip off the pack and enjoy the sunset. Grebe Lake, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming

 

 

 

 

4 responses to “Why You Should Take Up Backpacking”

  1. harrienijland Avatar

    Wonderful landscapes and photo’s!

  2. stockresearch52 Avatar

    Nice pictures

  3. Kathy Samuel Avatar

    Beautiful locations where lighting is everything as you say. Good work!

    1. Michael Just Avatar

      Thanks for the nice comment Kathy

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