HOW
I GOT THE SHOT: Nature has many
nuances. An hour can stretch a shadow, a week can open a blossom, a month can
transform a dull and bristly patch of parched earth into a canvas of color to
be devoured with the eyes for hours. Likewise, from year to year, the vagaries
of wind and weather or a diesel-powered plow can alter the character of a
specific site. Last year, an abundance of rain nourished the upper Judean
Desert and these almost-always brown hills just east and below Jerusalem were
greener than they had been in recent memory. And purpler, too, if you knew
where to look.
Please share
this email with all the photography buffs in your life.
I was
nearly startled as I drove up from the Dead Sea and noticed these lilac
blankets of Diplotaxis acris, or wall rockets, that flourish in rocky
Mediterranean desert terrain. I returned early one morning a few days later and
climbed up on foot to capture this view. I am fond of using lines to energize a
scene and move the viewer through the photo and I like the way the strong
diagonals in this composition lead into the landscape and give depth to the
photo. Because I was on a hill directly adjacent to the highway, I had to work
hard to find a perspective that excluded the highway, the houses of Mitzpe
Jericho, and a nearby Bedouin encampment. Proof positive that in Israel, the
desert really is a-bloom.
TECHNICAL
DATA – Camera:
Nikon D700, tripod mounted, manual exposure, center-weighted metering mode,
f/16 at 1/125th sec., ISO 200. Raw file converted to Jpeg. Lens: Nikon
28-105mm zoom at 28mm. Date:
Feb. 21, 2013, 7:43 a.m. Location:
Judean Desert near Mitzpe Yericho.