Skip to content

Eastern Sierra Photography Workshop in June

Eastern Sierra wildflowers

Spring Lupine in the Eastern Sierra

“The Traveler sees what he sees. The Tourist sees what he has come to see.” – G.K. Chesterton

The first week of June is amazing for the Eastern Sierra for so many reasons. Some snow remains on the Sierra Nevada (and possibly the White Mountains) to catch alpenglow, and there can be a fresh snowfall around the end of May to refresh that surface. Several species of wildflowers are starting to bloom, profusely in some areas.

Eastern Sierra Mules Ears
This year the new moon and Milky Way shooting timing coincides with the wildflowers, and we have the possibility of a late spring storm from the northwest for interesting sunrises and sunsets, or warmer monsoon moisture from the Baja coast that could bring dramatic afternoon clouds, showers and rainbows, or evening thunderstorms.

I used to be nervous about the thunderstorms interfering with night photography, but I’ve learned through experience in Bodie and the surrounding area that convection-driven storms tend to break up or blow east by the time the sky is fully dark around 10/10:20, so they’re really just bonuses for sunset and twilight shooting, even when rain showers interfere locally for an hour or so (and even then they often give way to rainbows).

Afternoon Storms in the Eastern Sierra

We’ll start around lunch time on Thursday, pursue wildflowers and weather during the day, have an early dinner, and head back out for sunset at Mono Lake.

Untitled

We’ll pick from a number of spots for Milky Way shooting, and arrive by the time it’s fully dark, when the galactic center of the Milky Way has already risen a few degrees, perfect for placing it in our compositions, and for Milky Way arch panoramas.

Mono Lake Tufa Panorama

Friday we’ll catch sunrise at Mono Lake before the weekend crowds arrive.

From Here to Infinity

Later we can shoot different wildflowers, maybe explore some interesting geology or head up to Tioga Pass if its open for snowier views. Another sunset spot, More night photography, and turn in not too late since most of us are continuing on to Bodie the following night.

Lollipop Tree and Milky Way

Workshops take me out of the field as I work on permits, itineraries, write descriptions, set up payment / registration buttons, and I perform a some kind of marketing to get them seen, if only a mention or two on social media.

I have to be efficient and pack as much opportunity as I can into my time in the field. Every day has the sun rising and setting. Some weeks have wildflowers. Fall colors may be peaking in a given location for only a few days to a week. The Milky Way is available during a few weeks of the year, a moon rise at sunset or moon set at sunrise about a dozen times each. So I am careful to hold my workshops in a prime season, and I then select the most likely peak days and times, including astronomical considerations.

I’m not going for volume, and I personally lead all of my workshops, so they are designed to place you in a stunning place, in a peak season, as the exact best time.

Along Yosemite's Tioga Pass Road

Tioga Pass Road sunset reflection, May 2016

Plans are all well and good; I frequently plan something as simple as a sunset moon rise composition weeks in advance.  But landscape photography is about light, so if you’re on a workshop, you want a leader have enough depth in detailed regional knowledge to be ready to ditch all plans and react to the weather and light if there’s more potential 20 or 30 miles from where you are.

So leave the tourists behind, stuck to their fixed itineraries, and rather than a traveler who reacts to the weather and looks for a place to shoot it, you can travel with a local who knows the opportunities in every direction, and anticipates the conditions before you pick the next destination and hop in the car to arrive there just in time.

Sunset Rain Clouds Over Mono LakeEarly June in the Eastern Sierra offers an annual convergence of so many factors which could make photography conditions stunning.  Photography is more fun shared, so I can’t wait, and all the better that I get to share all of this bounty with old and new friends!

Spring is Coming to the High Sierra!

So rather than those huge cattle call workshops from out-of-towners, consider a smaller, more intimate workshop in the Eastern Sierra with a local, award-winning professional photographer.

Bodie's Standard Mill

Bodie Milky Way Arch & Reflection

Eastern Sierra landscape photography workshops

Eastern Sierra wildflowers, late May

Mono Lake in Location International 2016

Mono Lake image published in Location International 2016, distributed at the Cannes and Sundance Film Festivals

Cover, Location California 2017, Cannes Film Festival

Cover, Location California 2017, distributed at the Cannes and Sundance Film Festivals

Astrophotographer Jeff Sullivan

Want to take award-winning images?  Learn from an award-winning photographer!

Connect with me in all of the usual places for photographers: Flickr, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Google+YouTube, 500px, Tumblr, or my Web site.

Comments

12 thoughts on “Eastern Sierra Photography Workshop in June”

  1. +Josh Blaha Death Valley was amazing this spring, and I'll add a workshop in December too once I get these earlier ones announced. Death Valley was one of the earlier chapters that I finished for my "Photographing California Vol. 2 – South" guidebook, but I've been continuing my research on photography sites there. I'm up to well over 150, so I'll start releasing them in the +SNAPP Guides app for smartphones and tablets. Having seen the effects of visitor traffic on sites, I'm pretty sensitive though about impacts, so the ones that make the cut may be closer to 100 or so. I've been visiting the park several times a year for 10 years, and it's big enough that I probably have another decade or more of places to explore.

  2. +Jeff Sullivan Wow! That's incredible and exciting. I look forward to it. Being new here, I am realizing how big California is and how much there is to explore. So, even after your saying that makes me realize that I may be here a while and still never see all that lies in wait to be explored.

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 ...