Unknown's avatar

Atlantic Beach NC 2014

I had been DYING to go to the beach so I spontaneously (well, spontaneously within two days), decided to take a drive south and visited a beach belonging to the Southern Outer Banks (I guess Nags Head and the like are the “Northern Outer Banks,” I’ve always just called it OBX).

I stayed in Atlantic Beach, which is at the other end of the better known Emerald Isle; both of which are a part of the North Carolina coast aptly named The Crystal Coast.

DSCN2665 DSCN2662 DSCN2650

The view from my room wasn’t the best, but I also didn’t pay for the best because I was only there for one night. You can kind of see the ocean, just above and next to the pitched skylight (that little tiny strip of blue). Lovely view of the courtyard though!

DSCN2395

The sun was setting just as I was climbing out of the water, but I managed to catch a shot or two from my room. I was particularly awed by the tiny rainbow effect on the left.

DSCN2400 DSCN2407

I had dinner on the pier and it was…pier food, nothing special. But nothing can beat that view and the sound of the waves crashing.

DSCN2410

I woke up early the next morning so I could catch the sunrise. I didn’t actually see it though because not only was it overcast, but it was behind me! I’ve never gone to the beach and not seen the sun rise over the ocean! What the what?

But nevertheless the ocean was still beautiful and it was refreshing to start my day on the beach.

DSCN2439 DSCN2418 DSCN2416 DSCN2426 DSCN2431

I then took a walk up and down the beach to collect shells and saw a couple of interesting things.

Horseshoe crab (dead, obviously)

DSCN2421

One of many seagulls

DSCN2434

And lots of shells!

DSCN2861

I added a couple of pens for perspective/size. The shells at the top were by far the largest whole ones I’ve ever found. I think I also found my first piece of sea glass! It’s that tiny square piece of green on the right side. The red stripped ones above it are also some of my favorites. I found a lot of good ones!

And of course Snickers had to come check out what I was doing.

DSCN2859

After the beach I cleaned up, checked out and drove a couple of miles down the road to the North Carolina Aquarium at Pine Knoll Shores. I can’t miss an opportunity to see an aquarium!

DSCN2440 DSCN2443

They had salamanders, lizards, frogs and coy in the first exhibit.

DSCN2448 DSCN2450 DSCN2451 DSCN2452

And lots of fish!

DSCN2458DSCN2555

The aquarium has a “living exhibit” outside where you can see the marshland and wildlife.

DSCN2489 DSCN2478 DSCN2482 DSCN2491 DSCN2498

They also had a dinosaur exhibit which was cute.

DSCN2472 DSCN2499

Back inside were alligators, the ray touch tank and seahorses.

DSCN2504 DSCN2509 DSCN2521 DSCN2544

If you look closely, you’ll see the pink face of a seahorse in between the grass blades.

DSCN2547

One of the biggest draws in the aquarium is the Living Shipwreck where you can sit and watch fish, sharks and a turtle swim about.

DSCN2589 DSCN2568 DSCN2591 DSCN2582 DSCN2584 DSCN2585

He’s really hard to see (they must like it dark, every octopus exhibit I’ve ever seen was practically pitch black), but this is an octopus, you can see his suckers on the glass.

DSCN2603

I’ve never been able to get a good shot of a Lionfish, but I think I finally did :)

DSCN2610 DSCN2621

And of course, no aquarium would be complete without jellyfish!

DSCN2622 DSCN2632

While there isn’t much to do in Atlantic Beach, it is the perfect place if you just want some R&R. Quiet and quaint with warm, clear water, it has definitely become my favorite beach destination.

Unknown's avatar

Flagstaff & Sedona AZ

I went to college in Flagstaff, Arizona, and I really wish my penchant for photography had blossomed when I was there. I developed a curiosity for it during my Black and White Photography class (pun intended!), but that was in my Sophomore year and was back in the day before digital cameras.

Now that I have a strong passion for photography, I really want to go back! Most of these were shot with my Ricoh, the SLR my mom bought me for my photography class, and scanned in, so the quality is not anywhere near what I wish it were. Which is why I want to go back ;-) That and I miss the west side.

This is a shot from my dorm room window my freshman year. Miss those mountains!

PD_0293

Snowbowl – Yes, it snows in Arizona. Campus was around 7k ft up and I think Snowbowl, at the top, was around 11k.

PD_0295 PD_0306

Lake Mary

PD_0269

Lots of Aspen trees in Flagstaff.

PD_0297 PD_0291 Fall Road

Sedona is about an hour south of Flagstaff. I spent many Saturdays driving down there and enjoying the scenery. It has the most amazing colors you will ever find in nature. These pictures in no way shape or form do it any justice. MUST GO BACK!

PD_0276 EK_0015 EK_0019 PD_0275 PD_0282

Bell Rock – probably the most recognizable formation in Sedona. This is maybe the only shot I have that actually comes close to the awesomeness that is Sedona.

Sedona

Slide Rock – exactly like it sounds, a free, natural water park ;-)

first part of slide rock slide rock2

Grasshopper Point – a popular place to go cliff diving. That was one of my roommates jumping. It’s exhilarating, to say the least!

EK_0030

Also nearby Flagstaff is the Grand Canyon. I would have gone more often, but the $20 entrance fee was a little steep for a poor college student. Again, NEED TO GO BACK AND TAKE BETTER PICTURES!

PD_0310 Lone Tree Grand Canyon PD_0311 PD_0308

I went back to Arizona a couple of years after I graduated to go to a college roommates wedding (the jumper!) and a classmates’ baby shower. Even after living there for four years, I never made it to Lake Powell or Antelope Canyon, places I ended up driving to on a whim while I was back in town. WHY DIDN’T I SPEND MORE TIME EXPLORING WHEN I LIVED THERE?!?!

They are right on the border of Utah.

PD_0325

I’ve never seen a lake that color before.

Lake Powell Final poster

There is an upper and a lower canyon. I don’t remember which I went to, but I do know it was the less popular of the two. The other one has the famous light streaming through it into a cave. Not.the.one.I.went.to! But the one I hiked was amazingly beautiful. Broken record; I neeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeed to go back!

PD_0324 Ant. Canyon 4 Ant. Canyon 2 Ant. Canyon 1

College would have been super boring had it not been for the beauty of Arizona.

Unknown's avatar

Charlottesville/Shenandoah – Jones Run Falls May 2011

On one of my random, just for fun, days off, I didn’t know what I was going to do. I didn’t want to just lounge around the house, but I also didn’t exactly have a bunch of money to spend on doing something grand (like taking an actual vacation somewhere). So on a whim (well, I planned it the night before), I decided I wanted to go for a hike in the mountains and see a waterfall! I researched some trails and found one I thought I could do.

I gassed up the car and set off towards Charlottesville to one of the entrances to Shenandoah.

It was a little overcast that day, but I like having clouds in my pictures, it adds texture to an otherwise flat, blue sky.

DSC06775DSC06777

I took my time driving to the designated parking lot, stopping here and there whenever I felt like it to take a picture.

DSC06743

DSC06749DSC06753

I arrived at the lot and started off on the trail.

DSC06912

The description of the trail on the website is as follows: Jones Run Falls is at mile 84.1 in the South District of the park. Do you want a waterfall that will soothe your spirit and bring you peace? Try this one. The hike is 3.4 miles roundtrip, with a climb of 915 feet (Moderate). But the climb is gradual, so you may find it easier. The waterfall is a jewel—a cascade of 42 feet, surrounded by rocks, moss, and bushes. While sitting on flat rocks right in front of it, you become part of the scene!

The climb down was nice, it was a little humid at first but the further I descended and the further into the trees I got, the cooler it became. I had to hop, skip and jump over several small, and not so small, streams.

DSC06805 DSC06821 DSC06824

I had to watch my footing at all times. Not just from rocks and branches, but from the little critters walking along the trail as well. Kind of creepy, but fascinating at the same time.

DSC06811DSC06813DSC06837 DSC06839

I started to hear loud, rushing water and knew I was getting close! All of a sudden, there it was!

DSC06860DSC06857

So worth it! I walked around, took some video, explored some of the smaller run-offs and finally sat and enjoyed the peace and serenity.

DSC06853 DSC06879

That is until other hikers and campers came around and dislodged my harmonious state of being. Ah well, it was getting late and I had a hike and drive ahead of me.

I started back the way I had come and, well, those descriptions should be more descriptive. What they should explain is that when they say the climbs are easy, moderate, or strenuous, that they are referring to the way either an “average” person or an “athletic, in shape” person would handle the climb.

They should have disclaimers that say if you have extra baggage around your mid-section and are sadly out of shape, you should probably take that into consideration before you begin your adventure. So when most people see this “moderate, gradual 915 foot 3.6 mile roundtrip hike” they think no problem. Voluptuous women such as myself should read that as “you’ll need to stop every 20 feet or so to double over and catch your breath on the way back up.”

“And keep in mind that females can pull groin muscles…when they still have a mile left to go…and don’t forget that the incline was the steepest at the very beginning…meaning the very end, of your hike.”

But it was totally worth it! And I would do it again. Haven’t been back since, but I would love to hike to a waterfall again. Maybe I’ll find an “easy” one next time ;-) Until then, I’ll stick to driving and stopping at each viewpoint to enjoy the views.

DSC06916