Bristlecone Eclipse (Portrait)
The Ring of Fire Solar Eclipse taken at Great Basin National Park. I took these in a grove of Great Basin bristlecone pine trees, which are the world’s oldest living organisms. These trees were alive thousands of years ago, when people believed eclipses were caused by the gods or magic. I woke up at 2:30am on Saturday to drive 4 hours, hike 4 miles, and then scout my perfect tree. I did this after driving 6 hours the night before. It was [slurring my words] worth it.
Free shipping
Printed on Kodak Endura Lustre paper from Miller's Professional Imaging Lab
Print only; frame and mat not included
Can be cropped into a 5x4 landscape, if requested at purchase
The Ring of Fire Solar Eclipse taken at Great Basin National Park. I took these in a grove of Great Basin bristlecone pine trees, which are the world’s oldest living organisms. These trees were alive thousands of years ago, when people believed eclipses were caused by the gods or magic. I woke up at 2:30am on Saturday to drive 4 hours, hike 4 miles, and then scout my perfect tree. I did this after driving 6 hours the night before. It was [slurring my words] worth it.
Free shipping
Printed on Kodak Endura Lustre paper from Miller's Professional Imaging Lab
Print only; frame and mat not included
Can be cropped into a 5x4 landscape, if requested at purchase
The Ring of Fire Solar Eclipse taken at Great Basin National Park. I took these in a grove of Great Basin bristlecone pine trees, which are the world’s oldest living organisms. These trees were alive thousands of years ago, when people believed eclipses were caused by the gods or magic. I woke up at 2:30am on Saturday to drive 4 hours, hike 4 miles, and then scout my perfect tree. I did this after driving 6 hours the night before. It was [slurring my words] worth it.
Free shipping
Printed on Kodak Endura Lustre paper from Miller's Professional Imaging Lab
Print only; frame and mat not included
Can be cropped into a 5x4 landscape, if requested at purchase