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Photography:
A Merger of Your Senses, Words & Photo Skills
to Create Photo Memories

by Noella Ballenger


 

Photo of San Andreas Fault line
Copyright © Noella Ballenger 2010

 

As we were nearing sunset, we stopped to view the actual San Andreas Fault line.  It is wildly impressive as you imagine the amount of movement and energy released as it bent and buckled the earth’s surface in such a dramatic manner.

 
 

Photographers—we do enjoy sharing our vision of the world and I’m no exception.  But it’s not just about the vision. We also hope to invoke an emotion in our viewers, and on occasion, if we're lucky, we can have special photos trigger wonderful memories from a time in their past.

 

As a photo instructor, I enjoy staying in touch with my former students.  I’ll share photographs with them when I have seen or done something special and I encourage them to occasionally reciprocate by sending me an image or two.  I look forward to hearing from them and seeing their photographic progression.

 

So I would like to share what turned out to be not just a special moment for me, but a moment that caught the attention of one of my former students.

 

Recently I traveled to an area in California called the Carrizo Plain.  This is a large and very special valley that is about 35 miles west of Bakersfield and is used as grazing land for free roaming range cattle.  It is sandwiched between the ridges of mountains that we loosely call our Coastal Mountain Ranges … specifically, the Temblor Range and the Caliente Range.  On the southwest side lies a salt crusted bed—Soda Lake.  One of the magnificent geologic features of this valley is that the famed San Andreas Earthquake Fault can easily be seen there.  This fault is the boundary between the Pacific and North American Tectonic plates and is about 700 miles long, stretching almost the entire length of California. 

 

Characteristically and during most months of the year, the valley is very hot and dry. Then the Spring rains come and transform the area into a gigantic mud hole, making it difficult or impossible to traverse.  But once the mud dries, it’s as if a fairy came flying in, waved her magic paint wand and Voila!  It becomes a wonderland covered in beautiful blankets of vibrant colored flowers.

 

 Photo of Carrizo Plain

Copyright © Noella Ballenger 2010

 

The hills were beginning to come alive with the hues and tones of flower fields.

 

So, out I went with the anticipation of capturing photos of this year’s incredible colors—the wildflowers that bloom sometimes only for a matter of a few days or several weeks.  And I was not disappointed.  I loved what I saw and had a wonderful time.  When I returned home I quickly processed a couple of panoramas and shared them with some family, friends and former students.  And there were many positive responses, but there was one reply that touched me deeply.  Those photos did what we as photographers so hope for—they engaged the viewer not only on a visual level, but on an emotional level, bringing forth memories that had been stored away in the mind.

 

Leo Gallo is a photographer that took several of my “Elements of Design” classes with me.  As a photographer he did some really lovely work … as a writer, he “blew my socks off”!   Let me share with you his comments.

 

It was an early lesson when my wife and I went on our honeymoon: back packing in the Colorado Rockies.  We got off the plane in Boulder, got our rented car and within a few minutes were in the 'wilds'.  We were city kids.  Inside of an hour, amidst our oohing and ahhing, I had snapped 2 rolls of Kodachrome in my Nikon F2.  You can imagine my disappointment 2 weeks later when the images didn't come close to the experience.  Had it been today, when the software is there and the technique is known, I might have not been so disillusioned.
 

I looked for a long while at your images.  I stretched them across my 2 big monitors, stuck my face into them and imagined I was there.  I like each of them for different reasons, but I think the most poetic one is the Panorama-1.  What is it about fences that stretch for miles along huge plains?  I guess I like how it puts us in perspective--presumptuous often and trite.  Maybe this is grazing land and the fence is necessary.  Maybe it's an egoist that just wants to say "Lovely, huh?  It's mine!"   Another thought about the fence is that it's there running counter to the fault.  Thanks so much for telling me that.  It brings a sense of awe to those hills.  A rent in the fabric of the earth, just as that fence is a rent in its majesty.  The image and the thoughts bring tears to my eyes.  Not sad tears, but tear of Awe!

 

Click on the photo to see the enlarged version.

 Panoramic photo of wildflowers and San Andreas Fault line
Copyright © Noella Ballenger 2010
 

Panorama 1: A dusty, dry lake during most months becomes a field of blue flowers in spring.  The low stretching white hills are the up thrust of the San Andreas Earthquake fault that runs for almost the entire length of California.

 

The other images are interesting too.  I like the textures in Panorama 2 and the shock of yellow in the foreground of Panorama-3.  I especially like the mountains and fault line in 3.  They look etched into the image.  Were you going for that effect?  The patches of flowers on the hills and the up-close-and-personal patch in the foreground and near background knit it all together.  I don't begrudge the human presence in the image.  I like the structures on the right.  I imagine them to be houses, but I don't see any roads to them.  I imagine them as witnesses, abiding as long as they survive.  The car kicking up dust could have been me and Laurie 35 years ago, desperate to bring it back home.


 

Click on the photo to see the enlarged version.

Panoramic photo of wildflowers and San Andreas Fault line 
Copyright © Noella Ballenger 2010

 

Panorama 2: Looking toward the Caliente Mountains, the low hills are a riot of color. 

 

 

Click on the photo to see the enlarged version.

Panoramic photo of wildflowers and San Andreas Fault line 
Copyright © Noella Ballenger 2010

 

Panorama 3: There are few paved roads in the Plains area and the dirt roads are always dusty.  The up thrust of the San Andreas fault can be seen in the background.  This geologic formation was formed when the North American Teutonic Plate and the Pacific Teutonic plate moved past each other.

 

 

~~~~~
 

Would you like to learn more and become an even better photographer?  Be sure to join Noella in one of her online classes presented through Apogee Photo.  You'll want to get signed up today - just click here.

                       

 

 Visit her site at www.noellaballenger.com or send her an e-mail at Noella1B@aol.com   Write to her at P.O. Box 457, La Canada, CA 91012, call: (818) 954-0933 or fax: (818) 954-0910 for more information on her workshop/tours.


 

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