Grand Tetons National Park
EXIT
The rapids below Inspiration Point on Jenny Lake. Tam and I came a day early to do some hiking before the photo shoot started.
On the trail around Jenny Lake we came upon this Marmot.
John Moulton barn. Long abandoned, these structures are somewhat maintained by the park service for the benefit of photographers.
John Moulton Homestead
This is one of 27 homesteads established by the Mormons between 1890 and 1940s. Today it's referred to as the Mormon Row.
That's ground fog over the Snake River in the background.
John Moulton Barn
John Moulton Barn
John Moulton Barn - It's hard to take a bad picture here with the Tetons as a backdrop.
Mormon Row - The ground fog in the backgound is over the Gros Ventre River
Mormon Row - The ground fog in the backgound is over the Gros Ventre River
Tom Moulton Barn
Tom Moulton Barn
Oxbow Bend - One of the most iconic shots in the Grand Tetons. That is Mount Moran in center.
Oxbow Bend
The scene changes dramatically when the sunrise is blocked. Add the ground fog over the Snake River and the scene becomes mystical.
Snake River Overlook made famous by Ansel Adams
Pronghorn
Seen several times in the 1953 motion picture Shane, this cabin and homestead is commonly called “The Shane Cabin”.
The view through the window of "The Shane Cabin"
The Shane cabin
View from the top of Signal Mountain. That's Jackson Lake in the distance.
A grouse in the tree at Signal Mountain Overlook
The Teton Park road near Pothole Junction
The Teton range as seen at Pothole Junction
The upstairs lobby of the Jackson Lake Lodge with its wall of windows overlooking the Teton Range
View from the patio of the Jackson Lake Lodge
The Tetons as seen from a hill just east of Moran Junction
Mount Moran
A fawn on the side of the road.
Bison with her calf referred to as a "Red Dog"
Don't mess with moma!
Part of an abandoned Dude Ranch that is frequently shot by photographers.
Part of an abandoned Dude Ranch
Blacktail Ponds overlook
Blacktail Ponds overlook
Schwabacher Landing
Schwabacher Landing - This is a beautiful shot when the surface of the pond is like a mirror. That was not the case when we were there.
Schwabacher Landing
The view from the Cunningham cabin
In the 1880s, John and Margaret Cunningham staked a claim for the Bar Flying U Ranch. Cunningham built his cabin in 1888 in the Appalachian style, commonly called “double-pen” or “dog-trot.” John lived in the cabin until 1895 when he finished his main residence, and it later became a smithy and barn.
The view from inside the Cunningham Cabin
The red hills east of the park on Gros Ventre road.
The red hills east of the park on Gros Ventre road.
11 - 44
<
>