Well, if I were to "plagiarize" an image, I would not be putting my name on it, rather something like AA or EW, to make big bucks off of it!!!
Steve K
Well, if I were to "plagiarize" an image, I would not be putting my name on it, rather something like AA or EW, to make big bucks off of it!!!
Steve K
I thought the Merced River flowed backwards (uphill) so that you can't get to it without paying the Park entrance fee.
and i never did.Originally Posted by aaron siskind
merg, plenty of peepol find tripod holes there's nothing wrong with that
j
"Landscapes exist in the material world yet soar in the realms of the spirit..." Tsung Ping, 5th Century China
I thought you already knew that the water of the Merced flows uphill, Vaughn. Isn't Mystery Spot down in the Santa Cruz redwoods part of your Bigfoot haunts? Water flows uphill there too, at least as an illusion. But as a species of wildlife, you never did have to pay to be in Yosemite Park boundaries; and being a geezer, I get in free. Ferdinand up at the Tioga Pass entrance would often let me through free for hauling surplus piles of Don't Feed the Bears pamphlets etc to the south entrance. Nobody has the courage to feed a Sasquatch, so these brochures never mention that particular risk. I've always wondered why tourists run screaming out of certain carbon print AA gallery openers down in the Valley. Even bears run. Must be a high ceiling in there to accommodate that specific wildlife. I mainly photographed the lower reaches of the Merced, the Mother Lode hill country, but was way up on the Lyell Fork three summers ago. One of my nephews lives near the lower Merced. My place was on the San Joaquin canyon further south. No bigfoot species there except one. But that's a different story. It's amazing how fast some backwoods campers can climb a tree when confronted with a Hollywood-quality King Kong suit eleven feet tall.
No, its Confusion Hill, along the Eel River just south of the Humboldt County border.
"Landscapes exist in the material world yet soar in the realms of the spirit..." Tsung Ping, 5th Century China
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