Posts Tagged ‘natural bridge’

Two-Birds Bridge

Two-Birds Bridge

A bit of drama at Death Valley… After leaving the Devil’s Golf Course area on April 11, we headed to the Natural Bridge trailhead – no kidding, the bridge is named ‘Natural Bridge’.  I suppose that they were saving their poetic energies for some other bridge?  Anyway, we arrive at the parking lot only to discover that…WAH!!!  A tripod is missing.  And not just any tripod, friends, ‘the tripod’, as in FrankenPod II, Son of FrankenPod.  It got left behind at the Devil’s Golf Course!  We race back to the Course to find that it’s gone, of course.  Gads.

The HP sez let’s head down the road and see if we can find any of the people that were at the parking lot – maybe one of them saw that you left it, and snagged it for safekeeping.  If anyone out there wonders after the source of my apparent limitless optimism, you needn’t ponder any further…  Okay, whatever – a 0.1% chance at best.  So, we’re off down the Badwater Road to the next stop – Badwater.  Pulling in, the HP sees a truck that she recognizes and decides to stake it out in hopes of interrogating the occupants.  This is just too desperate for the dude.  I’m taking a stroll westward to the end of the beaten path, contemplating the loss of FrankenPod.  I’m heading back when I spies the HP jogging toward me – right, she found out who snagged the pod and so we gotta go find them – but wait, nope, she’s way more excited than that – and by now I see that the HP is holding none other than FrankenPod!!!  Seems these two lovely old birds recognized that it was a sweet pod and swept it up with the plan to turn it into the lost & found somewheres.  Anyway, the HP got it.  Yeah, this is why we have the HP.  Awesome!

With the tripod to beat all other tripods returned, we headed back to the natural bridge.  I decided to change the name to a more fitting appellation; which is ‘Two Lovely Old Birds Bridge’, in honor of the grand dames who saved the pod – No, that’s too long, we’ll name it ‘Two-Birds Bridge’.   The bridge itself is pretty modest, but definitely worth a visit.

The image at the top of the entry was recorded on April 11, 2009 at about 12:45 PST, using the Nikon D700 and the AF-S NIKKOR 24-70mm f/2.8G ED at 35mm.  Exposure was f/16 with a shutter speed range covering 6 EV.  The tone-mapped HDR image was converted into tif format using Photomatix Pro 3, and blended (30%) with an exposure-blended version of the image.  I’ve noticed that the rendering on this image is unusually monitor-dependent – I may lighten this a bit more.

Sipapu Natural Bridge

Sipapu Bridge

Sipapu Bridge is the northern most of the three major bridges in Natural Bridges National Monument.  The bridges were discovered by a miner named Cass Hite in 1883.  Sipapu is a Hopi word that means ‘place of emergence’.  Bridges are the result of erosion due to water flow, and these structures are distinct from arches that are formed by freeze/thaw action and seeping moisture.  The bridge is almost directly in the center of the image.  In real life as here, it can be a little difficult to discern the bridge.  Sipapu is one of the world’s largest bridges, with a span of ~225 ft and a height of ~144ft. For more information on Sipapu and other natural bridges and arches, check out the web pages of the The Natural Arch and Bridge Society and UtahArches.com.

The image was recorded on 2/14/2009 at 13:00 MST (UTC-7)with the Nikon D700 and the PC-E NIKKOR 24mm f/3.5D ED set at -6 mm shift.  Exposure was f/16 at 1/125s with an ISO of 200.  White balance was established using the WhiBal card and was set in ACR5.2 at a color temperature of 5700 and tint of -14.