Skip to content

Valley of Fire State Park, Nevada

Spring is a good time to visit Valley of Fire. I used to pass through the park on my way to and from Southern Utah in the fall and spring, and in 2012 +Lori Hibbett and I met a bunch of G+ photographers there in early April, but I think we'll try late March to revisit the area this year.

This presentation was mostly auto-created by the Story function on G+. To find your Stories, drop down your Home menu (blue icon towards the upper right of your G+ screen), select Photos,Drop down your Home menu (blue icon towards the upper right of your G+ screen), select Photos, then drop down the menu at the top, and the first item on the list is Stories. Select that, and you'll see the Stories you have to choose from. to edit, then share.

Basically The Story function looks at all of your G+/Picasa photos (and Blogger and Panoramio if the accounts are linked), and it identifies trips or events, and puts them in the format you see when you follow a link like the one I shared. The owner of the Story has the ability to select "Edit" to choose different photos from the trip.

If you want to add photos, and they're not already visible when you select Edit, you can put them on G+/Picasa and ask for the Story to be regenerated, or you can tell a G+ Photos process to back up photos from your phone (I don't) or from your Windows desktop, and it will try to create stories as photos are added to those locations (each private until you share them I assume).

So I added folders to my Windows desktop specifically to have the photos found for potential Stories. I think it had 40+ potential Stories for me, going all the way back to trips I took in 2004. Then drop down the menu at the top of your Photos screen, and the first item on the list is Stories. Select that, and you'll see the Stories you have to choose from. to edit, then share if you want.

Basically the Story function looks at all of your G+/Picasa photos (and Blogger and Panoramio if the accounts are linked), and it identifies trips or events, and puts them in the format you see when you follow a link like this one. The owner of the Story has the ability to select "Edit" to choose different photos from the trip.

If you want to add photos, and they're not already visible when you select Edit, you can put them on G+/Picasa and ask for the Story to be regenerated, or you can tell a G+ Photos process to back up photos from your phone (I don't) or from your Windows desktop, and it will try to create stories as photos are added to those locations (each private until you share them I assume).

So I added folders to my Windows desktop specifically to have the photos found for potential Stories. I think it has 40+ potential Stories for me to share, going all the way back to trips I took in 2004.

I have a more comprehensive album of Valley of Fire photos on G+ here: https://plus.google.com/photos/+JeffreySullivan/albums/5980066400693096545

#ValleyofFire #valleyoffirestatepark #landscapephotography
+Las Vegas Photography Workshops www.JeffSullivanPhotography.com

Comments

17 thoughts on “Valley of Fire State Park, Nevada”

  1. Very nice story. especially the beautiful photos of wildflowers that grow in impossible conditions and wild animals find a blade of grass that means a lot to them. Motif is a great full moon to photos, also the colors and shapes of rocks. Photos town us back to real life. That nature is the greatest artist. +Jeff Sullivan

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Loading Facebook Comments ...