BistiArt > 2007 Bisti Fall Digital Tour Schedule
BistiArt > Fajada Moon

Fajada Butte is a famous Anasazi landmark at the south entrance to Chaco Canyon, New Mexico.  Chaco Canyon was a site of ceremonial Pueblo development and is now Chaco Cultural National Historical Park, a World Heritage Site.  Habitation ranged from 850-1200 AD.  

Recent discovery and interpretation of solar and lunar light projections on spiral petroglyph's on Fajada Butte have led to an interesting interpretation for celestial influence on building orientations at Chaco.  The Solstice Project has shown equinox, solstice, and lunar minor standstills contribute to observations of regional building orientations.  These complex relations are noted in numerous publications about the Sun Dagger; the famous Fajada petroglyph.

Galen Rowell is noted for his remarkable photography at the top of our world.  As he observed rapidly changing light at Magic Hour, the phrase 'Edge of Light' was coined.  The Edge of Light is that distinct band of color change between direct sunlight, which is pink, and indirect sunlight, which is blue.  The subtlety of such changes can truly be remarkable.

This Fajada Butte image was taken slightly after sunset one day before full moon in the spring.  Several features are of keen interest; the Edge of Light is clearly apparent North of the Butte, Fajada stands in bas relief relative to Chaco Mesa (background), and the moon, moving rapidly, is delicately balanced in the upper right-hand corner.

The composition is simple, yet elegant!  There was just enough sun left to enhance Fajada.  The Edge of Light can be noted near the top of the vertical cliff on Fajada's North face.  The upper portion of Fajada is outlined by faint, pink direct light.  Fajada's base, called the dip slope, is outlined by indirect violet light to the North and darker Chaco Mesa to the East and South.
The Sun Dagger is at the very top of Fajada on the back side of this shot.

Noted photographer Efrain Padro awarded Fajada Moon 3rd-place in a judged digital photo competition at Enchanted Lands Camera Club recently.
BistiArt > God’s Hand

An early autumn morning begins the next epoch, nearly 2 years later.
New Mexico's summer had been unusually rainy.  We were to have autumn in a calmer mode.
Yet, filmy, first tendrils of an incoming storm riveted my eye!  Knowing the clouds might not last very long, I scrambled among Hoodoos, seeking precarious foothold, camera angle, and dramatic expression.
Indeed, I only had time for a few precious images with such a delicate central cloud beckoning upward in an evocative, alluring manner.

I've been shooting the Bisti now for several years.  I've learned you return for light changes, mood changes, and superbly enhanced drama.  I've learned to return often to hone my photographic skills.  I've learned not to carry a point-and-shoot in one hand, but to carry a heavy pack with camera, lenses, batteries, food, GPS, etc., safely stored, always at the ready!  In ways, shootin' the Bisti has become a digital pilgrimage, a land in which I try out new, additional photographic learning skills!
Bisti Hoodoos, water carved images from the Creator's hands, by themselves, can be rather spectacular.  But, when you can combine them with startling clouds, delicate sunrise or sunset, or surreal Moonrise, they become stunning backdrops.

As fast as the clouds were moving, I scrambled just to find a hand-held position.  Click, one image in the bag.  Quick examination; in my haste, the shutter speed was wrong ~ the image was blurred.  Hurry!  Click, and this fantastic image literally sprang onto the flash card.
In that literal instant between shutter-clack and green-light card flash, I knew the name for this image 
"God's Hand...!"

The new photo gallery BistiArt.smugmug.com, has a facility where viewers can click on a Green Thumbs UP to show their individual approval for an image, placing it in the Most Popular Photo category.  For the past 30 days, God's Hand has received high marks, typically being in the top number chosen.
So I thought, "Let's submit God's hand to a camera club digital image judging contest!"

On Thursday, January 18, 2007, God's Hand received a judge's vote for 2nd Place in the digital image contest!

But, that's not all!
During development of BistiArt, an interested bystander decided to add it to her collection of black-and-white prints.
So, it would seem the public likes it whether in dramatic color or startling black-and-white!

And, on another road...
Robert Frost's paraphrased immortal lines
I took the road less traveled,
And that 
...has made all the difference!"
I'm now leading sponsored tours for photographers into the Bisti Badlands.  Check out the Bisti Tours section at BistiArt.smugmug.com.

So, come to the Bist and 'make all the difference!' 

©2004-2007, Images and Text, Chopawamsic LLC, All Rights Reserved
BistiArt > Bisti Badlands

One autumn mid-afternoon, my path branched and I began a new road.  As I look back now, it's very reminiscent of Robert Frost's immortal lines,
"Two roads diverged in the woods,
And I,
I took the one less traveled by,
And that 
...has made all the difference!"

A point-and-shoot camera, mid-afternoon, a gorgeous Bisti Badlands hoodoo, and the luck of the Irish ~ these components would make such a tremendous difference.
A hoodoo is created when erosion removes a soft shale underpinning from a delicate, yet stronger sandstone cap.

At first, with an eye level near 6 feet, I could only see the hoodoo and the faraway background, just not together.  I moved around it several times, staring at it, wondering, "What's the best way to shoot this thing?"
Finally, I realized, "Why don't you just lie down and shoot that delicate Hoodoo's tip above those incredibly dramatic Red Dog Hills in the background?"
So, shot number 0890 zipped to the flash card... A year later, I would enter this JPEG image in the 5th Annual Photo Contest for the New Mexico Magazine.

One day, a friend walked in with the most recent New Mexico Magazine and pitched it on the table.
"Look at this...!"
I picked up the magazine, looked at the cover, then thought "I've seen this picture before."
Seeing my uncomprehending look, excitement rampant in her voice, she said, "It's your picture!"
Dumbfounded, I looked on page 3.  It said something to the effect 'Out of a thousand photos submitted to the contest, they chose Bisti Badlands for their January, 2006, Cover...'

The Bisti Badlands is a small, hidden jewel inset in the Four Corners Country, land of the ancient Anasazi, south of Farmington, NM.  Once site for shoreline of an inland sea, dinosaurs and rain forests inhabited this country millions of years ago.
Now, the Bisti is a wilderness, capturing various surreal art forms from the Creator's imaginative hand.  One out of every five visitors is international.  A superb photographer, recently trekking with me in the Bisti, said, "There's just no way I could've found everything you've shown me, if I were by myself here for just three days!"

The Bisti became my photographic laboratory.  Starting from a point-and-shoot with hand-held shots, I'm now in a professional 14 bit DSLR with better lenses and a panoramic head on a tripod.
Instead of shooting just daytime shots, I've graduated to much more complicated Moonrise shots at sundown, with Bisti Hoodoos carving spectacular epitaphs in difficult, multiple f-stop, bracketed images, and High Dynamic Range (HDR).  And I've move onward from Photoshop Elements 3 to CS3.

And, on another road...
I'm now leading sponsored tours for digital photographers into the ancient Anasazi ruins of the Four Corners area, SW United States. You learn how to shoot, whats the best CS3 workflow, and allow your imagination to run with HDR... Check out the Anasazi Adventures section at BistiArt.smugmug.com.

So, I think you can now more clearly see Frost's paraphrased immortal lines

"I took the road less traveled,
And that 
...has made all the difference!"

©2004-2008, Images and Text, Chopawamsic LLC, All Rights Reserved
BistiArt > Lunch Anyone?
If you were a horse, could you see the awesome beauty as you browse?
BistiArt > Horseman's Storm
This image was chosen by Sr Editor Dan Streeter and published in Paint Horse Journal, July, 2005.
The accompanying article was entitled "A High-Desert Jewel, New Mexico's Bisti Badlands Sits in the Heart of Anasazi Country"
BistiArt > Afternoon's Gambol
That old man is 80, his horse is 20, and he's truly enjoyin' a horseman's Bisti Outing...
BistiArt > 'Died and Gone to Heaven...'
Not your normal Back Country Horsemen relaxing weekend, eh?
BistiArt > Peace and Tranquility
At maximum optical tele, these peaceful horses captured my imagination, cast as couriers before the magnificence of a Red Dog Hill...
2007 Bisti Fall Digital Tour Schedule
BistiArt > 2007 Bisti Fall Digital Tour Schedule
2007 Bisti Fall Digital Tour Schedule
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Contact Joe at BistiArt@geocompa.com for more Anasazi Adventure Tour & HDR Workshop Details!
©2004-2009, Photos and Text, Chopawamsic LC, All Rights Reserved.